Showing posts with label Nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nature. Show all posts

August 02, 2016

Isolated Woolly Mammoths Wiped Out By Pursuit Of Drink


                                                                   



Scientists have worked out what killed off a side branch of woolly mammoths that survived 6000 years longer than most of their species after they became ­marooned on a remote Alaskan island. 
Researchers say mammoths persisted for about 8000 years on St Paul Island, a chilly speck north of the Aleutian Islands, after rising seas engulfed the land bridge between Siberia and Alaska.

Quarantined from the stone- age hunters who helped push mainland mammoths to extinction about 12,000 years ago, the prehistoric beasts shared their windswept home with arctic foxes and shrews. But they eventually drank themselves to death, trashing their island liferaft in a desperate hunt for water.

The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offers a new explanation for the demise of isolated mammoth populations in the Bering Strait.

The extinction of plant-­eating megafauna elsewhere, including Australia, is usually blamed on the effects of climate change, which ­reduced vegetation, and early hunters.

But the research team found no evidence of human presence on the island until 1787, while the composition of the vegetation remained “stable” during the ­period when the animals are thought to have vanished.

Instead, the researchers ­believe a drying phase in the ­climate concentrated the availability of drinking water in a handful of lakes. This forced the animals to congregate nearby and strip the surrounding areas of vegetation.

“Like elephants today, when the water became cloudy and turgid, the mammoths probably dug holes nearby to obtain cleaner water,” reported Penn State University, which led the study.

“Both of these things increased erosion in the area and helped fill in the lake, decreasing the available water even more.”

Mammoth remains found on the island have been dated to about 6480 years ago, but other animals may have lived more ­recently. The team analysed sediments from the bed of one of the lakes to pinpoint when spores from fungi that grow on large animal dung had disappeared.

The researchers also studied “water isotope signatures” from the remains of aquatic organisms living in the lake, and ­nitrogen isotopes from the bones of 14 newly discovered mammoth skeletons.

All of them suggested ­progressively drying conditions.

“Multiple reinforcing lines of evidence indicate that reduced freshwater availability triggered the extinction of St Paul mammoths,” the paper says. They vanished 5600 years ago, give or take a century, making their ­disappearance one of the “best-dated prehistoric extinctions”.

By John Ross
With many thanks to The Australian

Picture shows mammals of the Pleistocene era. Artwork showing wildlife believed to have existed in the Northern Iberian Peninsula during the Upper Pleistocene era (125,000 to 10,000 years ago).



Related:
Woolly Mammoth DNA Inserted Into Elephant Cells

Columbian Mammoth Skull, Tusk Unearthed in Idaho



July 23, 2016

Men And Wild Birds Communicate To Collect Honey


                                                                    





                                                                     
African tribesmen have learned to converse with a nondescript brown bird, in a rare case of “mutualism” with wild animals.
A Cambridge University-led study found the Yao people of Mozambique have developed a specialised language with bush birds, known as “honeyguides”, as part of a hunting pact that benefits both species.

The birds guide the tribesmen to hives hidden high in tree crevasses, then wait while the bees are smoked out and their nests broken open. The birds help themselves to the wax after the men have taken the honey.

Using animals as hunting assistants is nothing new, with dogs and falcons harnessed this way for millennia. But partnerships with wild animals are extremely rare, with the only other cases thought to involve dolphins herding fish and whales.

“The relationship involves free-living wild animals whose interactions with humans have probably evolved through natural selection, (possibly) over the course of hundreds of thousands of years,” said Cambridge bird ecologist Claire Spottiswoode.

The partnership with the honey­guides was first recorded by a missionary in 1588, with tribesmen elsewhere in eastern Africa found to have forged similar bonds. The new study, reported today in the journal Science, teased out the two-way communication that seals the deal.

The researchers found the men summoned the birds using a distinct call — a loud trill followed by a grunt. The birds replied with a distinct call of their own, then flitted from tree to tree pointing out hives. The researchers recorded the hunters’ calls and played them back to summon the birds. Compared with other recordings, the call doubled the chances of securing help from birds and more than tripled the odds of finding honey.

Dr Spottiswoode said people in other parts of Africa used different sounds for the same purpose. Hadza tribesmen of Tanzania recruit honeyguides with a melodious whistle. She said the honeyguide’s unassuming plumage belied its brutal interactions with other species.

“Like a cuckoo, it lays its eggs in the nests of other birds, and its chick hatches equipped with sharp hooks at the tips of its beak (that it) uses to kill foster siblings as soon as they hatch.
                                                                  


“(It’s) a master of deception and exploitation as well as co-­operation — a Jekyll and Hyde of the bird world.”

By John Ross
With many thanks to The Australian 


February 17, 2016

Experience the Magic of Redwood National Park


                                                                       

                                                                  
 Travel to Northern California's stunning Redwood National Park and see some of the tallest trees in the world. Production company More Than Just Parks showcases the diverse wildlife and landscapes found in this temperate rainforest in their short film, Redwood.

More Than Just Parks: https://www.morethanjustparks.com/

The Short Film Showcase spotlights exceptional short videos created by filmmakers from around the web and selected by National Geographic editors. We look for work that affirms National Geographic's mission of inspiring people to care about the planet. The filmmakers created the content presented, and the opinions expressed are their own, not those of the National Geographic Society. 


                                                              




Know of a great short film that should be part of our Showcase? Email SFS@ngs.org to submit a video for consideration. http://video.nationalgeographic.com/v...

#shortfilmshowcase @natgeo


                                                                      


With thanks to You Tube

February 11, 2016

The Elephants That Came To Dinner: Mfuwe Lodge, Zambia


                                                                 





At a five-star lodge in Zambia, a bizarre phenomenon is stumping wildlife experts and delighting tourists.

An elephant family, led by a matriarch named Wonky Tusk, is overtaking the lobby. Though elephants can be violent in the wild, here they climb the stairs of Mfuwe Lodge and grace past reception without bumping a chair. 

                                                                


                       

Why the paradox? Wildlife cameraman Nathan Pilcher is on a mission to find out. What he discovers may reveal elephants to be far more intelligent than we could've imagined.

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With thanks to You Tube     
                                     
                                                             

Africa’s Big Five Animals





                                                                 

December 18, 2015

The 2015 Sony World Photography Awards



                                                                           
                                                                   
                                                                   

Some great examples:
KANZI THE BABY GORILLA: A portrait taken at Melbourne Zoo. Picture: Peter Willingham, Australia. Professional and amateur photgraphers have until January 5 to enter the awards by visiting the 2016 Sony World Photography Awards.

UNDER THE RAINBOW: A boat carries a group of tourists under a rainbow at Niagara Falls in Canada. Picture: Fahad Abdualhameid, Saudi Arabia

SEA BABY: A baby fur seal captured near the Commander Islands in the Bering Sea, off the Kamchatka Peninsula in the Russian Far East. Picture: Andrey Narchuk, Russia

HOLIDAY BLUES: The view from a beachside hotel room in Waikiki, Hawaii. Picture: Joel Stafford, Australia

VIENNESE WALTZ: People enjoying themselves while dancing the Viennese Waltz. Picture: Dmitri Izosimov, Russia 

RASBERRY TASTE: A wild red squirrel eating raspberries. Picture: Geert Weggen, Sweden
HEAL THE WORLD: Young monks pray for peace at a monastery in Bagan, Myanmar. Picture: Chan Kwok Hung, Hong Kong

PEACE: Flamingos gather at Miankaleh Lagoon, a protected area in northern Iran that hosts a variety of animals. Picture: Hadi Mohsentabar, Iran. 2016 Sony World Photography Awards

With many thanks to the Australian



                                                                 














   

December 07, 2015

The Virgin Rainbow: World's Most Beautiful Opal


                                                                    



An opal so fine it has been valued at over $1 million is about to go on public display for the first time.

Our world produces some incredible rocks. Take the opal, a precious stone that forms out of silica, in the dark under the surface of the earth. When cut and polished, it flashes with a gorgeous array of colours, from pale milky hues to deep reds and blacks.

Now, an opal that has been named the finest ever unearthed will be making its public debut next month as the centrepiece of an exhibition opening at the South Australian Museum, Adelaide.

Called the Virgin Rainbow, it was discovered in the opal fields of Coober Pedy by opal miner John Dunstan in 2003.

It's actually an opalised fossil, from an extinct cephalopod called belemnitida that existed during the Mesozoic era. During that time, much of South Australia was under a vast inland sea filled with prehistoric aquatic reptiles called plesiosaurs. These died and sank to the bottom of the sea, buried over the millennia by sediment.

When the sea dried up and the land turned into a desert, the acidity levels in the shallow top layer of the sandstone increased. This released silica from weathering sandstone into the layer of clay beneath, where bones and pockets left by disintegrated bones lay buried, carried down via groundwater.

Further weathering lowered the acidity levels, which allowed the silica gel to harden into opals in the pockets and impressions left by decayed animal material, like cake poured into a mould, or to soak into bones and create a replica of the internal structure.

The famous Australian opal fields of Coober Pedy are located in this region. No other environment in the world is known to have undergone this same process, which is possibly why over 90 percent of the world's opals come from South Australia.
With thanks to You Tube
                                                                  
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October 03, 2015

Butterflies Drink the Tears of Turtles And Other Reptiles


                                                                      




Sodium-junkie butterflies, who apparently need the mineral for reproduction among other things, have taken to drinking the tears of yellow-spotted river turtles.
Salt is a rare commodity in the western Amazon rainforest, and some species have developed pretty unique ways of getting it.

As they are carnivores, the turtles typically get an ample dose as meat is naturally loaded with salt.

Butterflies, however, are clearly not equipped to chow down on a mammal, dead or alive, big or small.

Considering that their other sodium-rich options include animal urine, human sweat, and muddy riverbanks, tears probably sound pretty good.

The turtles don't seem too bothered by the butterflies, but bees, which also like the salty tears, are a different story entirely. Experts say it's probably because of the buzzing.

Nice, quiet butterflies, however, aren't known to cause any discomfort to the yellow-spotteds.

Plus, turtles have plenty to go around, especially since the butterflies take so little.

From a risk standpoint, the sheer spectacle of that many brightly colored, quickly-moving objects surrounding the otherwise subdued and slow creatures makes them stand out a bit more to predators.


                                                                    


With many thanks to You Tube 

Picture credits and more: One More Post       


                                                              

September 07, 2015

Newly Discovered Victorian Reef 'Teeming With Life'



                                                                          




                                                                       



Scientists say a reef discovered off the coast of Victoria rivals the beauty of the Great Barrier Reef.(below).
                                                                        
A remote-controlled vehicle was sent to depths of 100 metres by Parks Victoria to explore deep sea life in Wilsons Promontory National Park and what they discovered blew them away.
The $120,000 vehicle found fish species not usually found in Victoria, such as the Jackass Morwong, Australian barracuda and longsnout boarfish.
Parks Victoria marine science manager Steffan Howe told the ABC the extent and abundance of spectacular sponge gardens and corals was a particularly exciting find and that discoveries exceeded scientists' expectations.
Dr Howe said the reef habitats were teeming with life and home to abundant marine ecosystems comparable to Australia's better-known tropical reef areas.
He said the discovery of coral reefs and fish species followed previous research mapping the park's sea floor.
'The maps identified some amazing underwater structures very deep beneath the ocean, but we did not know what sort of marine life was there,' he said.
'These latest expeditions used cutting-edge technology, including underwater video cameras and a robotic vehicle to record the spectacular marine life found in many of the deeper areas of the park for the first time.'

With many thanks to Sky News