Gleanings of the Week Ending June 3, 2017

The items below were ‘the cream’ of the articles and websites I found this past week. Click on the light green text to look at the article.

Top 25 Wild Bird Photographs of the Week #88 – My favorite is the roadrunner with the lizard!

American Trees are Shifting West – Based on analysis of tree inventories done between 1980 and one finished in 2015 and included 86 species of trees.

New York Marine Life Revealed at Brooklyn Photo Exhibition – Underwater views by photographer Keith Ellenbogen….raising awareness of the conservation needs of local marine wildlife and their habitats.

An inside view of Hong Kong’s hidden rooftop farms – Born out of fear of contaminated food! Fresh, locally grown vegetables are a luxury in the big city that imports more than 90% of its food.

Monarch butterflies: the problem with herbicides – Research that looks at the many factors that contribute to the decline of this migratory insect. I know that in our areas of Maryland there are a lot fewer Monarch butterflies than 20 years ago.

It’s Not Easy Being a Hatchling – 3 osprey hatchlings…growing fast….the live cam feed is available here.

New Online Database Catalogues 20,000 Threatened Archaeological Sites – Armed conflict, looting, tourists, construction….there are a lot of sites at risk. The link is an introductory article; the site itself is here.

The future of employment – There are quite a few categories of jobs that will be done by computers rather than people in coming decades. Some – like registered nurses and teachers – will still be performed by people.

Extremely Detailed Macro Portraits of Colorfully Exotic Insects – Insects….done with one shot, not stacked images.

Vacation at Toadstool Geologic Park – Sometimes out of the way places hold a charm found no where else!

Dupont Nature Center – Part 1

Last week, my husband and I attended a day of the Spring Delmarva Birding Weekend; I’ve posted (part 1, part 2) already about the birds I photographed at the Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge near Smyrna DE. The second destination was The Dupont Nature Center at Mispillion Harbor Reserve. The Nature Center itself was closed while we were there but we used the outside deck for the first half of our bird watching. Double-crested Cormorants were on pilons just out in the water from the nature center and on a sandy spit.

Zooming in on the sand spit that would be under water at high tide – Horseshoe Crabs are visible. Soon they will be laying their eggs – a feast for migrating short birds that need the burst of high energy food to complete their trek to the far north.

Tree Swallows and Barn Swallows were both flitting around near the Nature Center too. The Tree Swallows have white breasts and the Barn Swallows are rust colored; the Barns Swallows seems to be preening their feathers every time they sat on the pilons – hence the almost comical poses in the photographs below.

There was a female Osprey on a nesting platform.

Two American Oyster Catchers flew in and landed on the jetty.

A Royal Tern watched from near the fishing boats. The black feathers always look like a bad toupee to me!

A Black Skimmer swooped down low on the water…I didn’t quite catch the bird skimming.

This European Starling looks a scruffy but the iridescence of the wing feathers shows up with the bright sun.

Tomorrow I’ll write about a beach we visited near the Dupont Nature Center.