“TIS THE SEASON TO EAT DUCKLINGS,
Fa la la la la, they’re good for you.” This just might be the spring song at the top of the Coyote Hit Parade. Ducks have been breeding for the past several months in the Pacific Northwest, and there...
View ArticleODONATA EMERGENCE – A CHANGE IN VENUE
Dragonflies (including damselflies, both in the order Odonata) are aquatic as larvae and terrestrial (and aerial) as adults. These are very different environments, and organisms need different...
View ArticleKINGS OF THE INSECT JUNGLE
Many insects are predators on other insects. Dragonflies and damselflies (order Odonata) come to mind immediately, as all of them eat smaller insects and spiders. But put them up against robber flies...
View ArticleTHE SHOREBIRDS ARE BACK
In fact, southbound migratory shorebirds have been back in the Pacific Northwest since the last week of June, but it is timely to write about them, as they are probably at their peak at the beginning...
View ArticleJELLYFISH AND THEIR PREDATORS
Jellyfish are amazing animals. Almost entirely made of water, without a brain or central nervous system, they manage to get around the oceans very successfully. One of the common species in the...
View ArticleRETURN OF THE JUNCOS
People who feed birds in the Pacific Northwest look forward to the return of flocks of Dark-eyed Juncos (Junco hyemalis) to their feeders every year. Great numbers of them descend on our towns and...
View ArticleBROWN PELICANS IN WASHINGTON
When I moved to Washington in 1967, Brown Pelicans were rare in the state. Formerly common and widespread on all coasts of the US, their populations had crashed over a period of decades. Only after...
View ArticleWHITE PELICAN—ANOTHER SUCCESS STORY
Just as happened with their cousins the Brown Pelicans, American White Pelican populations fluctuated greatly during the 20th Century. Having bred at Moses Lake and probably Sprague Lake in the...
View ArticleSEA STARS WINKING OUT
Sea stars (you may know them as starfish) are prominent features of the marine environment all over the world. They are especially prominent in Pacific Northwest waters, where our species are among...
View ArticleTHE PACIFIC NORTHWEST IS SLUG COUNTRY
With our very wet climate (favorable for terrestrial mollusks) and our relatively acid soils (not so favorable for forming snail shells), we furnish great habitat for slugs. The ones most of us see...
View ArticleWATCH OUT, IT STINGS—OR DOES IT?
We all know when yellowjacket season rolls around, with pesky wasps that bother us on every picnic. You can usually chase them away easily, but they come back again and again. They are relatively...
View ArticlePELAGIC BIRDS ARE OUT THERE
Most people have heard of albatrosses; few people have seen them. But every summer they are common offshore visitors to the Pacific Northwest. Boat trips out of Westport, Washington, and Newport,...
View ArticleURBAN YARDS CAN BE WILDLIFE FRIENDLY
During their first lab, I used to take the students in my vertebrate zoology class at the University of Puget Sound on a walk in the urban wilds. After we had walked a few blocks, I asked them to tell...
View ArticleMERGANSERS, THE TOOTHY DUCKS
Mergansers are fish-eating ducks. They are closely related to Buffleheads and goldeneyes, but because they diverged sharply from their invertebrate-eating relatives, their anatomy has diverged sharply...
View ArticleBAND-TAILED PIGEON
You’ve doubtless seen the pigeons feeding in the city square or along the freeways roosting on light standards and nesting under the overpasses. These are Rock Pigeons (Columba livia), formerly called...
View ArticleA COMMUNITY OF SAPSUCKERS
North America has the distinction of being the only continent on which a group of birds has evolved the ability to tap into the sap of living trees. These are the four species of sapsuckers...
View ArticleAN INTIMATE AVIAN EXPERIENCE
For a unique and intimate experience with waterfowl and other birds, visit George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary west of Ladner, British Columbia. Reifel Refuge, as it’s called by many, is a...
View ArticleA WHITE BLACK BIRD
I look at a lot of birds every year, and I don’t see many that are as cool as this one, a leucistic Black Turnstone (Arenaria melanocephala). This striking bird is wintering at the end of Sandy Point,...
View ArticleLONG-HORNED BEETLES
Beetles are the most diverse animals in the world, with surely over a million species, although only about 350,000 have been described to date. Any collection of tropical insects contains undescribed...
View ArticleTOO MUCH WIND FOR BY-THE-WIND SAILORS
For more than a month now, Pacific Northwest outer ocean beaches have been the scene of a massive stranding of by-the-wind sailors, Velella velella. These little blue critters are washing up on our...
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