The rookery – Part 2

It is a wholesome and necessary thing for us to turn again to the earth and in the contemplation of her beauties to know of wonder and humility. (Rachel Carson)

A torrid sun simmers from a cloudless sky.  Moist air rests on the skin like wet cotton.  Where the shade of trees gives respite from the heat, it likewise proffers habitat for a handful of mosquitoes looking to feast on unsuspecting people.

Hover flies dance in dappled sunlight filtering through the treetops.  Ants march one by one.  A robin flits to the ground to feed its squawking child as a squirrel nibbles on a newfound treat.  From somewhere deep within the motte a blue jay screeches.

A cacophony of alien voices fills the area, a menagerie of languages reminding me of the cantina scene in “Star Wars.”  Birds as large as space ships and as small as stones seem anchored to the ground by eerie shadows dragged beneath gossamer wings.

All the while, the sound of automobiles rumbles from every direction…

When nature learns to thrive where concrete and steel have replaced grass and trees, the aware mind can discover great magic.  The spell cast by such places provides urbanites a glimpse of what has been forgotten.  The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center rookery brings within the city walls a source of awe and power unlike any other place in the DFW metroplex.

The school reports annually to Texas Parks and Wildlife on the nesting season.  This is an excerpt from last year’s summary:

2008 nesting summary for the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center rookery

Multiply those numbers by two for an understanding of the total bird population before chicks are born.

A white ibis (Eudocimus albus) perched in a tree (2009_06_13_023014)

Although the UTSWMC rookery lies 300 miles/480 kilometers from the the Gulf of Mexico, it still attracts coastal species like anhinga, tricolored heron and white ibis.  They join year-round residents such as great egret, black-crowned night-heron and cattle egret, as well as summer residents like little blue heron and snowy egret.  But only the gregarious need apply: the solitary great blue heron and the secretive green heron visit only in rare cases, and neither would dare nest in the vicinity of such a boisterous crowd.

A brown thrasher (Toxostoma rufum) lurking in the understory (2009_05_17_019865)

Large birds account for the most obvious inhabitants even though smaller birds occupy the area as well.  Hawks also know of the UT Southwestern Medical Center rookery and the smorgasbord it offers, and it can be a sight indeed when a buteo sweeps in and captures a meal.

A little blue heron (Egretta caerulea) in thick foliage (2009_05_17_019677)

Already there is new life.  And death.  Nesting boils down to a numbers game: the more children you have, the more you can lose while still being successful at procreation.  Accidents, predation, disease, environment and competition take their toll on adults and chicks alike.  Thus is the way of things.

A cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis) in the treetops (2009_06_20_023922)

In this tiny plot of land surrounded by urban mayhem, habitat loss has given rise to adaptation.  So little natural space is left for such creatures.  That might explain the glut of species packed tightly together in the middle of the city, each vying for a chance at survival as seen through the eyes of future generations.

An anhinga (a.k.a. water turkey or snakebird; Anhinga anhinga) on its nest (2009_06_13_023050)

To again quote Rachel Carson: “Like the resource it seeks to protect, wildlife conservation must be dynamic, changing as conditions change, seeking always to become more effective.”  The birds in the rookery seem to understand this concept.  But do we?

[While I have sent multiple requests to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center asking for comments about the rookery, I have yet to receive a response.  I’m now utilizing the back door for that effort.]

— — — — — — — — — —

Photos:

[1] White ibis (Eudocimus albus)

[2] Brown thrasher (Toxostoma rufum)

[3] Little blue heron (Egretta caerulea)

[4] Cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis)

[5] Anhinga (a.k.a. water turkey or snakebird; Anhinga anhinga)

[cross-posted to The Clade]

Lazy days

There are many days when I envy The Kids their worry free lives, their long naps, their want for nothing.  Mostly, I envy their lazy days that have no obligations save those they set for themselves.

Vazra and Loki lying on the bed (2009_03_01_011814)

As Vazra and Loki demonstrate, that usually entails ample time in the lounging position.

Incarcerated

The old cliché is true when it comes to road trips: Half the fun is getting there.  Sure, driving hours on end can be tedious, a chore sometimes regretted when it’s already too late to turn back.  But more often than not, traveling the highways and byways offers great possibilities for discovery.

I can stop when and where I wish, never worrying about missing something that caught my eye, and the adventure unfolds so easily because I have no schedule, no rigid agenda, nobody to answer to.

So last month as I drove toward the southernmost part of Texas (on the same weekend I saw the ocelot), I found myself on some obscure two-lane thoroughfare leading through beautiful hills and plateaus.  About three hours of sitting in the car demanded I pause to stretch my legs.  So I pulled off onto the shoulder and slowed to a stop.

Unintentionally I found myself beside one of those jumbles of equipment used in the natural gas business.  Not wholly uncommon in Texas, these roadside menageries of metal tanks and cogs and pipes usually pop up once in a while along non-major roadways.  (For example, there’s one on the tiny rural route that leads to the family farm in East Texas.)

I was casually aware of the structure as I slipped the car into park.  The whole eyesore stood surrounded by chain-link fence, a sort of parenthetical notation on the side of the road.

Before I could get out of the car, though, movement near the fence caught my eye.  I glanced out the passenger window and saw this:

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) running along a chain-link fence (2009_05_22_020835)

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus).  The little devil was hunting along the metal barricade.  And it was quite active.

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) standing inside a fenced area (2009_05_22_020837)

So I rolled down the passenger window, put the car in drive and slowly followed the bird as it scurried along.

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) standing inside a fenced area (2009_05_22_020839)

Sure, I hate that the fence was in the way, but it was fun to be a stone’s throw from the bird without it worrying about me.  (Had I gotten out of the car, that situation would have changed.)

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) running along a chain-link fence (2009_05_22_020843)

I can’t imagine the fence was more than about 30 feet/10 meters long.  The bird was covering that distance quickly, dashing forward in fits and starts, stopping to investigate things in the grass, running ahead several steps at a time.

A greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) standing beside a chain-link fence (2009_05_22_020848)

Once both of us reached the corner, the roadrunner turned right and continued its hunt along the side of the fence stretching away from me.

I watched it a few minutes before driving ahead far enough to give the bird some comfort.  Only then did I finally get out and stretch my legs.

Aransas National Wildlife Refuge – Part 3

“A top climate scientist warned [in October 2007] that Texas faces a dual threat from floods and drought if global warming is left unchecked.”  Additionally, “scientists’ computer models indicate that the pattern of drier weather has already begun.”

Texas almost certainly faces a future of perpetual drought as bad as the record dry years of the 1950s because of global warming, climate scientists said in a study published Thursday [April 5, 2007].

The trend toward a drier, hotter southwestern U.S., including all of Texas, probably has already begun and could become strikingly noticeable within about 15 years, according to a study led by Richard Seager of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

Drought conditions are expected to resemble the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s and Texas’ worst-ever drought of the 1950s, Dr. Seager said.  Unlike those droughts, however, the new conditions won’t be temporary, the study found.

The warning is bleak: Prepare for an “imminent transition to a more arid climate.”

“In 2006, drought-related crop and livestock losses were the state’s worst for a single year, totaling $4.1 billion.”  In July 2007, “the state was declared drought-free for the first time in at least a decade” following the “wettest January to August period on record…”  By February of the following year, however, and despite “hurricanes Dolly, Gustav and Ike soaking Texas in 2008, almost every part of the state — nearly 97% — [was once again] experiencing some drought…”

Just this past week “it was noted that the most recent rains over the last several months have had little to no impact on the hydrology in the state, with rivers, streams, and reservoirs lagging as some locations have had improvements.  Many changes were made across the state this week, with [abnormally dry and moderate drought] expanded in the northern panhandle, [severe drought] improved in the southern tip of the state, [severe drought, extreme drought and exceptional drought] expanded in south central Texas, and [abnormally dry] expanded in central Texas.  Even in areas where some good rains fell during the spring months, agricultural and hydrological concerns are still having issues related to the long-term dryness in the region.”

In fact, “drought conditions … are so bad cattle are keeling over in parched pastures and dying.”  State agriculture officials pointed out in March 2009 “that ranchers in the nation’s largest cattle-producing state [had] already lost nearly $1 billion because of [the] ongoing drought.”

But what of nature’s own, the flora and fauna in the state?  Of more than 800 bird species in the U.S., “the official Texas State List [contains] 632 species in good standing,” and of “the 338 [bird] species that are listed as Nearctic-Neotropical migrants in North America (north of Mexico), 333 of them (or 98.5%) have been recorded in Texas.”  The state provides the only migratory route for the entire eastern population of monarch butterflies.  More species of North America’s wild cats live in Texas than anywhere else north of the Mexico border.  93 endangered species reside in the state.

Black-necked stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) hunting in what remains of the freshwater ponds (2009_05_16_018789)

“The lack of rainfall means freshwater marshes … that were inundated by Hurricane Ike are not being flushed of salt water.  That lack of flushing is killing plants and damaging soil chemistry.”

“…[W]ildlife die-offs of whooping cranes and deer have been reported.”  This past winter “the only migrating whooping-crane flock that exists in the wild lost 23 of its 270 members to hunger and disease brought on by the dry weather, said Tom Stehn, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service whooping-crane coordinator.”  And that loss came despite “the fact that the cranes’ diet was supplemented for the first time in 60 years…”

“…[L]ittle fresh water is available for use by mottled duck broods, and that will likely lead to a very low production of mottled ducks this season. […] They’ve been declining for the past 30 years due to habitat loss and other factors, so drought effects are adding stress to an already stressed population.”

American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) trying to remain submerged in what has become a salty mud puddle (2009_05_16_018767)

“…[A]lligators and amphibians are unable to recolonize areas inhabited before Hurricane Ike because of the salt water, and populations of these animals will likely remain depressed for the next several years.”

“Lack of salt-flushing winter rains along the upper and middle Texas coast have much delayed recovery of wetlands hit hard by Hurricane Ike and could … negatively impact health of estuaries crucial to marine life.”

“The coastal fishing industry also has been hit hard as salty conditions shrink populations of shellfish such as oysters and crabs.”

“Siltation from Ike smothered approximately 60 percent of Galveston Bay’s oyster beds.  Increased salinity caused by lack of freshwater runoff from rivers allows salinity-loving predators such as oyster drills and ‘dermo’ to prey upon remaining oyster beds.”  “Any further loss of oysters will have a hugely detrimental impact on the bay’s ecosystem…”

Male chital (a.k.a. cheetal, chital deer, spotted deer, or axis deer; Axis axis) searching for food on barren ground (2009_05_22_020413)

“…[T]here were reports of non-native axis deer dying from starvation coupled with cold weather earlier this year.  TPWD wildlife biologists report range conditions are in poor shape, prickly pear is thin because of the lack of water and feral hogs are looking very thin and drawn down.”

“…TPWD wildlife biologists observed a considerable drop in the pronghorn antelope population…”

Pregnant white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) grazing (2009_05_16_018596)

“Dry conditions threaten to negatively impact wildlife because of a lack of forage and cover from which to avoid predation.  Lack of ground cover could significantly limit nesting efforts of ground-nesting birds such as turkey and quail and reduce survival of deer fawns.”  “Native whitetail deer still appear in decent condition but may not last long if the situation continues.”

“If parts of Texas remain parched, particularly the south, experts say Rio Grande turkey breeding activity and nesting effort will be greatly reduced or nonexistent.”

Female pipevine swallowtail butterfly (Battus philenor) laying eggs on a dying sprout (2009_05_16_018875)

“[T]he bare ground — a lot of it covered only with dirt and rock — can’t support the microorganisms and insects that form the base of the food chain.”

Yellow-bellied bee assassin (Apiomerus flaviventris) in search of food (2009_05_16_018907)

This spring has resulted in “minimal rebounding of the ‘good’ vegetation necessary to support thriving natural systems.”

“Even weeds are having a hard time flourishing.”

Great southern white butterfly (Ascia monuste) feeding from bushy seaside tansy (a.k.a. sea ox-eye; Borrichia frutescens) (2009_05_16_018862)

— — — — — — — — — —

Sources:
Houston Chronicle (1, 2)
Associated Press (1, 2, 3, 4)
NOAA
U.S. Drought Monitor
Dallas Morning News
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University
Texas Parks & Wildlife Department (1, 2)
Texas Birds Records Committee
Wild Cat Species of North America
The Wall Street Journal

Photos:

[1] Black-necked stilt (Himantopus mexicanus) hunting in what remains of the freshwater ponds; the newly exposed ground is covered with crystallized salt

[2] American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) trying to remain submerged in what has become a salty mud puddle; a dozen alligators once occupied this brackish pond; now there’s barely room for one—and a juvenile at that

[3] Male chital (a.k.a. cheetal, chital deer, spotted deer, or axis deer; Axis axis) searching for food on barren ground; half the trees in this area are dead

[4] Pregnant white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) grazing in front of the refuge’s administrative buildings; I worry for her offspring’s future

[5] Female pipevine swallowtail butterfly (Battus philenor) laying eggs on a dying sprout; no pipevine (Aristolochia sp.) could be found by me or by the butterflies, so her eggs will probably give rise to caterpillars that will starve

[6] Yellow-bellied bee assassin (Apiomerus flaviventris) in search of food; with so few insects at a time when they should be plentiful, this predator will have a hard time locating sustenance

[7] Great southern white butterfly (Ascia monuste) feeding from bushy seaside tansy (a.k.a. sea ox-eye; Borrichia frutescens); the shrub now fills what used to be a salt marsh full of blue crab

[cross-posted to The Clade]

[Update] David Crossley brought to my attention an incorrect date reference in the original text.  That reference has been corrected.