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Thursday, December 26, 2019

Christmas is for the Birds

This year is the 120th annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count. It began December 14th and runs through January 5th. The tradition started in 1900 in at the beginning of the conservation movement. Since the beginning, citizen scientists have used the information gathered to track trends in bird populations.
I took part on December 15th and had an eventful and cold day. Once again, I put my discomfort aside for the sake of nature. The day began at 4 AM with three hours of owling. My partner Chris drove us around to a few sites where we'd listen in the dark for owl calls. In an attempt to draw them out, he played owl calls on his phone. We heard a screech owl at one location and a pair of great horned owls in a duet at another place.
Great horned owl
After a pit stop around 7 AM we picked up the third member of our trio at sunrise and began our visual observations with nearly three dozen turkey vultures overhead near a roosting site. I happen to know about this roost because I drive past it on the way to and from work, and depending on my schedule I see the vultures either leaving for the day or returning for the night. Right away my presence paid off. In past years, Chris and John start their count headed the other direction.
Over half our time was spent in the car. Much of what we saw was from the road. We did some walking though, and it was tough in some places. Recent rain meant soggy ground. It's December and Pennsylvania, which is rarely a good combination. In addition to the cold, it was windy. The wind made for great raptor conditions, but bad for everything else. It was difficult to hear bird calls over the sound of the wind. Watching for motion in the trees and bushes was confusing because everything was moving.
Turkey vulture
This year we counted 47 different species, and a total of 735 birds. In 2018 we counted 38 species and 754 birds. Canada geese were the big winners this year, coming in at 266. However, they were mainly in two flocks. The birds we spotted the most times were turkey vultures and house finches. I look forward to counting more birds in 2020!
Canada goose

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Species of the Month

Christmas is upon us once again and in keeping with tradition, we have another festive Species of the
Month. American mistletoe, like its European cousin, is a Christmas symbol dating back to the arrival
of European settlers who brought their customs with them. The mistletoe association with Christmas
dates back hundreds of years before Europeans reached American shores. Learn more about this little
plant below!
American mistletoe

Scientific name: Phoradendron leucarpum
Kingdom: Plantae (plants)
Class: Magnoliopsida (dicots)
Order: Santalales (hemi-parasitic plants)
Range: Eastern and Southwestern US
Habitat: Forest, swamps, and desert
Diet: Sunlight and water for photosynthesis; xylem and phloem of host plant through parasitism
Predators: Birds and small mammals
Conservation Status: No special protection
Mistletoe berries
Other Information: While it may bring good luck to have mistletoe in your home during Christmas, it
certainly isn't lucky to eat the berries. They are poisonous to humans, though not usually fatal. Mistletoe
is hemi-parasitic, meaning it is a parasitic plant but can also photosynthesize. Berries contain a single
seed, which is spread by when birds defecate after eating the berry. The seed is sticky, and with any
luck the bird will be sitting in a tree when it passes. This sequence of events gave mistletoe its name.
"Mistle" the Anglo-Saxon word for dung, and "tan", the word for twig were combined, as folks in
those days noticed mistletoe grew were birds left dung on the branches. Because it seems to grow out
of nothing, mistletoe was thought to have fertility properties. Mistletoe acts as a parasite by growing
a root-like haustorium (your big word of the day) through the host tree's bark and tapping into its sugars
and water. Parasitization can cause the host tree to become deformed or distorted.
Pine tree with deformations from mistletoe

This week's pictures and information come from University of Wisconsin at LaCrosse.

Thursday, December 5, 2019

A Breath of Fresh Air

If you like fresh air, you're probably a big fan of the Clean Air Act and its amendments. While the air in many places is far from ideal, prior to federal legislation it was downright deadly in American cities. A clear gray sky on a summer's day in Philadelphia is a little off-putting, but it beats a smothering fog in the valleys outside Pittsburgh. After the deadly Donora smog in 1948 killed 20 and sickened thousands of others. Federal investigators were asked to come in, and determined that air pollution was in fact the killer, among other factors.
Donora smog, 1948 (Smithsonian)
The government prefers to take baby steps when implementing positive change, rather than jumping in feet first, and tackling air pollution is no exception. The first step came in 1955 with the Air Pollution Control Act, which provided funding for research and led to the Clean Air Act of 1963 and Air Quality Act of 1967. These provided the first air quality monitoring.
Pittsburgh in the 1940s (Citylab)
The Clean Air Act of 1970 was a major step forward. It developed limits on pollution and expanded federal enforcement powers. Among the controls included were auto emissions. States were mandated to implement plans to reduce pollution.
The Amendments of 1990 aimed to reduce air pollution linked to acid rain and ozone depletion.
Looking at a picture of the summer sky over Los Angeles, it might be hard to believe the Clean Air Act is working. However, the number of ugly sky days is lower than prior to enactment. Air quality monitors in California frequently show poor quality, and geography is partly to blame. Ocean breezes carry pollution as far as the mountains, where it gets stuck and sometimes builds up for days.
Los Angeles skyline (LAist)
Acid rain has been reduced as a result on the 1990 amendments. pH testing has shown freshwater pH levels in many areas have risen closer to neutral 7. Pure water is neutral, but in nature, water is rarely pure. Pristine rain is slightly acidic because of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere forming carbonic acid. However, the lowered pH in rivers and lakes nationwide was far lower than caused by carbonic acid. Targets of the 1990 amendments were nitrogen oxides (NOx) and sulfur dioxide (SO2). Emissions have been greatly reduced over the last 30 years, and ecosystems are continuing to slowly recover.

Visuals of higher pH meaning less acidic water samples
(National Atmospheric Deposition Program)

Information this week comes the EPA (Clean Air Act overview), Smithsonian Magazine (Donora), and more EPA (acid rain). For a great visual on showing higher pH and lower NOx and SO2, check out the National Atmospheric Deposition Program.

EPA: https://www.epa.gov/clean-air-act-overview/evolution-clean-air-act
Smithsonian: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/deadly-donora-smog-1948-spurred-environmental-protection-have-we-forgotten-lesson-180970533/
EPA: https://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/acid-rain-program
nm1 LAist: https://laist.com/2018/10/30/why_las_smog_has_been_extra_smoggy.php
nm2 Citylab: https://www.citylab.com/design/2012/06/what-pittsburgh-looked-when-it-decided-it-had-pollution-problem/2185/
nm3 Smithsonian
nm4 National Atmospheric Deposition Program http://nadp.slh.wisc.edu/data/animaps.aspx