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Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Firefly Recap 2020

The 2020 Firefly Watch is complete, and it's time to crunch the numbers. While many science opportunities were cancelled this year because of the coronavirus, standing in my parents' back yard at night was not affected at all. 


I started with this project in 2018 and chose to continue at the same location in order to monitor the same population. Protocol for Firefly Watch is to count the number of flashes in three periods of ten seconds each on the same night. We record the number of flashes, the color of the flashes, the flash pattern (single flash, J shaped, double flash, etc.), and weather data- temperature, wind, cloud cover, and precipitation. I chose to use the same dates every year. I ended observation when after being shut out twice in a row. This year observations ended on September 3, the earliest end date so far.

Observations got off to a slow start this year. By the time I got through the first observation of June, I only had three flashes recorded. By the end of June, things were picking up. Flashes peaked slightly earlier than previous years, and lasted slightly longer. The post-peak crash wasn't as steep this year. Despite the slow start, early finish, and missing two observations because of vacation, the 2020 total number of flashes was the highest of the three seasons I've done Firefly Watch. 2018 had 694 flashes, 674 in 2019, and 708 in 2020. The increases and decreases year to year are slight, and statistically speaking the population is stable. 


I blame the slow start on the weather. My first observation was May 21, which was less than three weeks after our last snow flurry of the season. A warm winter gave way to a cold spring, which probably delayed firefly emergence.

I will credit the coronavirus along with the weather for the higher number of flashes this year. Fireflies prefer a dark night so they can see each other better. Due to the virus, baseball games were cancelled at the park adjacent to my parents' house. No stadium lights, and the lights at the school next door were off late in the season due to school being digital to start the year. There was no rain during any of my observations this year, and that made for better flying weather. No lightning also makes a darker sky.


I am already looking forward to the start of the 2021 season. Observations will be on Fridays and Mondays next year. Three day weekend getaways might have to wait until September, but as long as firefly numbers remain steady or increase, it will be worth the wait.




Thursday, September 17, 2020

Species of the Month

The elk rut is upon us, so to that end the Species of the Month for September is the elk. In North America there are four surviving subspecies and two that are extinct. In Eurasia, where it is known as red deer, there are eight subspecies. 
Female elk herd

Scientific name: Cervus elaphus
Kingdom: Animalia (animals) 
Class: Mammalia (mammals) 
Order: Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates)
Bull elk

Range: Western North America, northern Europe, northern Asia, isolated reintroduced populations in eastern US, introduced populations in Ireland, Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, and Chile
Habitat: Open woodlands
Lifespan: Average 20 years, but difficult to gauge due to hunting
Diet: Grasses, sedges, forbs; woody growth in winter
Predators: Gray wolves, coyotes, mountain lions, bears
Conservation Status: No special protection 
Elk calf nursing

Other Information: The elk is known for the haunting bugle call of the male during the rut. Bugling is used for attracting a mate and advertising territory. Like other horned or antlered mammals, male elk will spar to establish dominance. Dominant males form a harem of females. On occasion, a lesser male will sneak in to mate with one or more of the harem. Elk are social and form segregated herds. Females and calves are dominated by a single alpha female. Males form a bachelor herd. The sexes mingle during the late summer/early fall migration and mating season. Following the birth of calves, mothers and their babies form a separate nursery herd away from the rest of their normal herd. Aside from being larger than deer, elk can also be distinguished by a larger head, dark mane, and large white rump patch. Like deer, elk are most active in early morning and late evening. Coming around a bend on the way to work and seeing the big white butt in the road is a great way to start the day, if given enough stopping distance. Elk browse on grasses and forbs in spring, summer, and fall. Their winter diet may include green woody growth. As ungulates, they have a multi-chambered stomach and chew their cud. Only male elk grow antlers, which they shed annually. Eastern populations of elk were extirpated in the 19th century. Several successful reintroductions of Rocky Mountain elk have since occurred, notably in Elk County, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky.
Bull elk showing off his rump patch

This week's information comes from University of Michigan's Animal Diversity Web. Stay tuned for a recap of the 2020 firefly season next week.

Thursday, September 10, 2020

The Ozarks

 Last month I visited family in Missouri. I'd been through Missouri many years before, and remember it being mostly flat. I was travelling out of St. Louis towards Kansas City then. This time, I went southwest out of St. Louis. The road was like sailing the ocean over the waves. Up down one hill then up the next. I always thought the Ozarks were in the southwest corner of the state. It turns out pretty much the whole southern half of Missouri is Ozarks. The undulation leveled out a bit once I reached the Springfield Plateau in the southwest. But it was nowhere near as flat as Illinois.

The wildlife in the Ozarks is different from what I'm used to in Pennsylvania. However, I didn't get to see very many new critters. There are freshwater clams in Stockton Lake. I saw plenty of armadillos, but they were all dead. No roadrunners, no rattlesnakes, no scorpions, and no tarantulas. I saw some insects that I have at home, like a wheel bug, a milkweed bug, and the ubiquitous deer. Southern leopard frogs in a spring house at a Civil War battlefield was a nice surprise.

Wheel bug

Bird poop moth

Milkweed beetle

Black swallowtail

Freshwater clam

There was more forest than I expected to see. I got to check out some oak savanna. Most of the land in the Springfield Plateau that I saw was farmland. There were some crops, mostly corn, but the majority was cattle pasture.

It was nice to see some butterflies finally. Compared to last summer, I haven't seen very many this year. Apparently once you leave Bucks County they are everywhere. The Flight 93 memorial in western Pennsylvania has quite a few grasshoppers too. Turkeys flew across the road ahead of me somewhere in that area. Elsewhere, the sky was full of turkey vultures and hawks that I couldn't identify. A fox ran across the road ahead of me in Indiana.

Dead luna moth

Fence lizard

Fritillary (left) and buckeye (right) butterflies

Southern leopard frogs

Dead armadillo

Even though I didn't set out to explore nature on this trip, it still happened. It happens everywhere I go now that I've been trained to see things everywhere. Next time you are out and about, take a look around and notice what you see.

Tiger swallowtail

Oak savanna


Friday, September 4, 2020

Hard Working Animals

Police dogs, draft horses, barn cats, and lab rats are all animals that could be considered to work a full time job. In a salute to Labor Day, here are a few wild animals that work just as hard as humans and domestic animals.
Earthworms are working hard to keep your garden healthy. Often overlooked because they remain unseen, these slimy little guys are tunneling all day, allowing air and water to move around the soil. They cycle nutrients by eating decaying plant matter, creating fertilizer that living plants can use. 
Earthworm (Christian Science Monitor)

Mound building termites built mud homes that can reach heights of 17 feet and displace a quarter ton of soil. It can take years to build, and a single heavy rainstorm can damage or destroy it. Worker termites are always on the ready to make repairs as needed. Additionally, they also farm a fungus as a digestive aid. The fungus breaks down partially digested cellulose from the wood and grass the termites had eaten. After the fungus does its thing, the termites re-ingest what the fungus broke down.
Termite mound (Journal of Experimental Biology)

Beavers are the best known engineers in the animal world. They build water tight dams out of sticks and mud. Ponds form behind the dam, and while the beavers selfishly build dams and create ponds for themselves, the important wetland habitat benefits many other species as well. Even humans benefit, as the wetlands filter water and serve as flood control.
Beaver preening


Beaver dam

While you're enjoying a long weekend, just remember the critters that work hard 365 days a year just to survive. This week's information comes from National Geographic for worms and termites.