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Sunday
20 May 2012

Bear Pays California Homeowner A Visit

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SOURCE: Los Angeles Times/National Geographic

A resident in Monrovia got quite a surprise Sunday — a bear climbing high in an oak tree in her backyard.  Loretta Keener spotted the bear in her yard in the 200 block of West Greystone around 10:30 a.m.

Keener’s granddaughter, Kari Nicolas, took video of the bear climbing down the tree.  Keener called animal control, who came and left because the bear was too high up the tree.  They advised her to stay out of the backyard until the animal left.

Keener said this wasn’t the first time this particular bear has turned up in the neighborhood.  Some other area residents spotted the bear in a backyard on Monroe Place after it left Keener’s yard.

Apparently, black bears have efficiently adapted to the urban couch potato lifestyle, according to a recent study that compared urban and wild land bears in the Lake Tahoe region of Nevada.

Given a readily available and replenishing food resource—garbage dumpsters—the urban bears are nearly a third less active and weigh up to thirty percent more than bears living in more wild areas, biologists with the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society report.

“A lot of people suggested [bears] might alter their behavior in the presence of humans. We went out and specifically tested some of these hypotheses with rigorous science,” said Jon Beckmann, a biologist with the society’s Eastern Idaho Field Office in Rigby.

Beckmann and colleague Joel Berger report their findings in the current issue of the Journal of Zoology. The Wildlife Conservation Society biologists were at the University of Nevada, Reno, when they conducted the research for the study.

In addition to seeking grub in dumpsters behind fast-food joints and suburban neighborhoods instead of foraging for wild berries and deer in the mountains, urban bears have also become night owls, whereas wild land bears are active during the day.

Mike Mitchell, a U.S. Geological Survey bear researcher who teaches at the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences at Auburn University in Alabama, said the findings are pretty much what he would expect.

“Bears are extremely efficient foragers and so intelligent, resourceful, and adaptable,” he said. “They’ll figure out a good food resource almost instantly and make the best use of it as quickly as they can.”

Mitchell added that urban bears are not lazier than wild land bears, just more efficient. Since they live in a garbage-can-rich environment, they expend less energy than do bears that have to forage in untamed lands for hours to get the same caloric intake.

Wild Land Impact?

Beckmann and Berger present evidence in their study that more and more bears are relocating to the cities, leaving wild lands sparsely populated by the big, furry carnivores. They question what impact this change in behavior is having on the environment.

“It’s possible that if we change their behavior, we can lose the ecological processes they are involved in,” said Beckmann. “For example, bears that now have a reliance on garbage may not be doing the things bears have historically done in those systems.”

While the ecological role of bears is poorly understood, biologists believe they may be important in decomposing felled logs, dispersing seeds of berries, and removing rotting flesh from the forest floor.

Mitchell said that he is not certain of the extent to which non-urban bears are moving to the cities, and if they are what sort of an effect the re-location would have on the untamed environment.

“In principle, one has to believe that an effect exists, but defining that effect clearly and quantifying its magnitude might be very difficult to do,” he said.

Bear-Proof Garbage

Regardless of the impact an exodus of bears from the wild lands to the cities might have on the environment, the researchers all agree that a population of bears relying on food from garbage cans is not a healthy situation.

There is no evidence to suggest that the garbage itself is a bad diet—though Beckmann said he can’t imagine it’s good, either—but the increase in urban bear populations has resulted in an increase in bear mortality, primarily from collisions with vehicles.

The dumpster-diving bears are also quick to learn where the food in the garbage cans comes from, and incidents of bears breaking into cars and homes when people are asleep are on the rise.

“Such conflicts rarely work out well for the bears,” said Mitchell. “It is hard to imagine the development of a stable, commensal relationship between high density populations of bears and people.”

As a remedy to the problem, Beckmann and Berger suggest that city planners and county commissioners require individuals and businesses to purchase and use bear-proof dumpsters.

“We know they work,” said Beckmann. “Once they go into a homeowners association, the bears no longer visit.”

Mitchell added: “As focused as bears are on food, and as capable as they are of finding it, the less that bears associate people with food, the better for both bears and people.”

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MY TAKE: I’ve got a funny bear story to tell as well.  I worked for a manufacturing company in Oregon a few years ago.  They made rivets for True Religon jeans.  I ran the call answering services center for their customer line. I also worked part time for a cleaning services DC on the side, but mostly I provided all the data support for the answering services for the jeans company.  Anyway, a bear got stuck in the dumpster and I can promise you he wasn’t looking for Mek jeans.  He was after our food scraps and he got stuck in there for about six hours.  Usually bears only want your food or your water, and sometimes your pets.  Be sure to never throw anything at a bear.  That makes them angry and they will charge!

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Other Resources

Maintaining a Black Vehicle

Making a dark car look great can take a lot of time because there is the expectation that such a vehicle will require extra cleaning to keep it looking nice even if a dual action polisher is used to bring out a true shine. One thing to remember about removing the dirt from the surface of a vehicle is the idea that it can’t be simply power hosed off with a spray machine and must actually be buffed out with a cloth. Of course, on that same note, the cloth used should be of high quality to avoid scratching the surface.

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Wolves Back In the Crosshairs

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SOURCE: Associated Press

Two decades after a $2 million federal program for reintroduction of gray wolves to the Northern Rockies, lawmakers say it’s time for Congress to step in again — this time to clamp down on them due to concerns of ranchers and others.

To do so they are proposing to bypass the Endangered Species Act and lift protections, first enacted in 1974, for today’s booming wolf population.

Critics say the move would undercut one of the nation’s premiere environmental laws and allow for the unchecked killing of wolves across the West.

But bitterness against the iconic predator is flaring as livestock killings increase and some big game herds dwindle.

And with state efforts to knock back the predators’ expansion stalled in court, senators from Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and Utah want to strip wolves of their endangered status by force.

“When they brought wolves to Idaho, the Legislature voted against it, the governor didn’t want it and the Congressional delegation didn’t want it,” said Idaho Republican Sen. James Risch. “We didn’t want them in the first place. But we are prepared to deal with them as we see fit.”

Following the reintroduction study, 66 wolves were brought from Canada to Central Idaho and Yellowstone National Park. The population hit the original recovery benchmark of 300 animals a decade ago, yet they remain officially endangered.

At least 1,700 wolves now roam parts of six states.

Yet wildlife advocates warn the attempt to strong-arm a public hunt through Congressional action would set a dangerous precedent for other endangered species — and unravel a wolf recovery program that has cost $30 million to date.

“It’s comparable to throwing an individual species off of Noah’s ark,” said Doug Honnold, a Montana attorney representing groups that won an Aug. 5 court ruling that returned wolves to the endangered list.

No state has proposed getting rid of wolves entirely, despite calls to do so by individual ranchers. Montana and Idaho have plans to reduce their populations by 15 percent and about 40 percent, respectively.

Those states and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service appealed the August ruling last week. A final ruling could take years.

There also are proposals to hold wolf hunts with the animals still listed as endangered. That idea has gotten a cool reception from federal wildlife officials.

State officials say intervention by Congress may be the only viable option remaining.

Environmentalists have vowed to lobby hard against several wolf bills introduced in the past two weeks. And the measures face another hurdle: Lawmakers are split along party lines over which states should be allowed to hunt wolves.

A measure introduced by Senators Max Baucus and Jon Tester, Montana Democrats, would leave wolves endangered in Wyoming, which has a shoot-on-sight law for wolves across most of the state.

That Wyoming law played a pivotal role in the August court ruling and another in 2008 that reversed a previous attempt to take wolves off the endangered list.

“If Wyoming doesn’t want to put forward a management plan that works, that’s Wyoming’s fault,” Baucus said. Tester said Wyoming “hasn’t wanted to play” and suggested that Montana could not wait for its southern neighbor to change its mind given ongoing livestock losses from wolf attacks.

Republicans have sponsored more sweeping measures that would delist wolves across the lower 48 states, including Wyoming. Idaho’s delegation has yet another bill, described as a fallback plan, that includes only that state and Montana.

Senators from both parties and across the region met last week in part to resolve the Wyoming issue. But a common front has yet to emerge.

Wolves were off the endangered list for over a year before the latest court ruling. In that time, hunters in Montana and Idaho killed 260 of the animals.

Environmentalists decried the shootings as unprecedented for a species just off the endangered list. Among the wolves killed were members of a well-known Yellowstone National Park pack that crossed onto Montana land.

Yet those managed hunts were a far cry from the days when bounty hunters known as “wolfers” poisoned, shot, trapped and burned the species to near-extinction early last century.

A count at the end of 2009 showed the region’s wolf population rose slightly last year despite the hunts. Wildlife officials heralded the increase as proof the states could show restraint.

Load testing and a software test of the latest data on wolf populations is not cut and dry: Some states have to report their populations, others don’t.

Even without public hunting, government wildlife agents regularly retaliate against wolves that attack livestock, typically by shooting them from aircraft.

About 270 were shot last year under the program and more than 1,300 have been killed since Congress’ initial involvement.

“Government agents killing wolves with shotguns from helicopters — that’s not the model we had of conservation we had in mind,” said Carolyn Sime, the head of Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks’ wolf program.

“It took an act of Congress to direct the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to study reintroduction. Maybe that’s fitting as a way to resolve this,” she said.

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MY TAKE: I know people have big addictions.  Some like to play blackjack online, others like to hunt.  Personally if I had to chose one over the other, I’d spend my extra time and money on casinos online and let wildlife live as it was meant to.  They were here first.

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OTHER RESOURCES

Remembering a Service Contract

Regarding the ability to have items properly serviced while they are in use and being leased, negotiating a service contract is often something that can be done independently of the equipment leasing, but it’s best not to forget this aspect of the process because even if it’s a separate part of the overall negotiation, the company needs to make sure that their equipment will be covered for the duration of their time spent leasing such equipment. Sometimes it can be helpful to figure out whether the service contract will still be available and valid if the company chooses to purchase the equipment outright.

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Ancient Penguin Bones Found in Peru

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SOURCE: Associated Press

It’s possible, according to new research results, that some ancient penguins may have been twice as big as today’s Emperor penguin but didn’t have the black and white tux as a coat.

Researchers unearthed remains of a nearly 5-foot-tall penguin that roamed what is now Peru about 36 million years ago, and they also discovered fossilized feathers that show back then, the flightless bird was a more motley mix of reddish-brown and gray.

Thursday’s report in the journal Science is more than a curiosity about color. Analyzing the fossil led to a new discovery about modern penguins, which in turn raises questions about how their feathers evolved to help them become such expert swimmers.

It’s one of the largest penguins that ever lived, estimated to have been twice as heavy as the average Emperor penguin of today. The second species of giant penguin discovered in Peru, it was given the name Inkayacu paracasensis, or Water King, part of a cluster of now-extinct penguin species that apparently ranged over much of the Southern Hemisphere.

A stroke of luck helped paleontologists find the feathers. A student on the dig team, from the Museo de Historia Natural in Lima, discovered the fossil’s foot and noticed it had scales, evidence of soft tissue that’s rarely preserved. Maybe there was more soft tissue, and if so, they’d have to excavate extra carefully.

“We got incredibly excited,” said paleontologist Julia Clarke of the University of Texas at Austin, who led the team. “Moving really slowly, flake by flake by flake through this giant block,” they eventually uncovered a flipper with layers of small feathers and under it, fossilized body feathers, too.

On the surface, they’re shaped like the feathers of modern penguins. Popsicle-shaped wing feathers were densely stacked on top of each other to create a stiffened flipper, Clarke said.

When they looked more deeply, the feathers were far different. The outer shape apparently evolved before some microscopic changes that may play a role in penguin’s underwater prowess.

Pigment is long gone in fossils. But left behind in feathers can be microscopic packets called melanosomes that in life contained color-producing pigments — and the shape of those melanosomes corresponds to different colors. So the researchers compared a library of melanosomes from living birds with these fossilized ones.

The big surprise is that it turns out modern penguins have large melanosomes packed into grape-like clusters, unlike those of any other known bird, while the extinct giant penguin’s smaller melanosomes resembled those of other birds, Clarke said.

The scientists can’t explain the difference. But they say it probably has to do with more than the black tuxedo coloration of today’s penguins.

Melanin, the pigment inside melanosomes, helps feathers resist breakage. So one possibility is that the melanosomes got bigger during later penguin evolution as the birds became better underwater swimmers and needed a more hydrodynamic covering. Clarke is anxious to get back to Peru and see if more fossil finds will help tell.

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MY TAKE: This is a cool find. To know how the penguins got their adorable little tuxes is amazing.  I am a huge penguin fan. When I needed to find baby girl birth announcements for my daughter’s arrival I chose some very cute cards with photos of black and white baby penguins.  Not your typical baby announcements because there was no pink blue, no ribbons, etc.  Just a great black and white photo of baby penguins with their mothers.

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Lose the Fat and Live Longer

Health experts have found that one of the best ways for women to add years to their lives is to get rid of belly fat.  Want to look great in those Xscape dresses evening dresses?  Don’t fit into those evening dresses anymore like you did a few years ago? There are lots of products on the market that claim to make it easy to lose belly fat for women.  Don’t be fooled. The best options are to cut down on what you eat and get moving!

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Woman Catches 1,025 Pound Gater

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SOURCE:  Orlando Sentinal

Maryellen Mara-Christian of Massachusetts kills her first alligator on a hunt in South Carolina and she winds up hooking celebrity status in the process.

Hooking and killing the 1,025-pound, 131/2-foot gator has made her something of a celebrity.

“He was just a big old gator,” she said Friday by phone from a hotel in Washington, D.C., where she will be interviewed on a morning news show today. “The hunt of a lifetime, I’d say.”

The 48-year-old laid-off bank marketing officer from Fitchburg, Mass., was hunting Wednesday with her husband, Mark, who is a firefighter in Massachusetts and a part-time hunting guide in Maine, and Lake Moultrie guide Kevin Davis.

“I came down to South Carolina hoping for a 10-footer and I just lucked out to may have gotten one of the biggest ones people have ever seen,” Mara-Christian said.

Alligator hunting is part hunting, part fishing. Hunters use a regular fishing pole with a heavy line and a large snatch hook. They try to get several hooks in the alligator to get him close to the boat so they can shoot or harpoon them. It is illegal in South Carolina for a hunter to shoot a free swimming alligator.

It took about two hours for Mara-Christian’s party to secure the gator before they could shoot it. But the .22-caliber gun they had wasn’t powerful enough to put the animal down so Mara-Christian used a knife to sever the animal’s spinal cord at the base of its head.

“It was just shake, shake, shake,” she said. “I was shaking for a long time after, but that happens when you hunt.”

Meat processor Steve Drummond, owner of 301 Processing and Taxidermy, initially estimated that the gator weighed 900 pounds, but he and a friend were curious and procured a certified scale. Drummond, who has killed more than a dozen gators over the years, and processed the meat of many more, said it was the biggest one he had ever seen.

He said he has weighed gators that were just three feet shorter, but weighed less than 400 pounds.

“That is a very, very, very heavy alligator,” Drummond said. “That one there had gobs and gobs of fat on it.”

In fact, there was so much fat that only about 40 pounds of the meat is usable, he said. Drummond also will do the taxidermy on the gator so Mara-Christian can display it.

Only 1,000 licenses were given out for the month-long alligator hunting season, according to the South Carolina Natural Resources Department website. Each hunter can get one alligator a year. The state is divided into four regions with no gator hunting allowed in the northwest area known as the Upstate. Licenses are awarded by lottery and hunters must stay in the zone where they were selected.

Mara-Christian was hunting on the lower of the Santee Cooper lakes, which are about halfway between Columbia and Charleston.

Drummond and Mara-Christian had gone hunting the day before, stalking the gators while standing in about a foot of water on the edge of the lake.

“I was never afraid, I had to trust the two people that were in the water with me,” she said. “You have to be aware and smart. We just stayed along the edges. The gators are out ahead of us.”

Mara-Christian said she and her husband have hunted black bear, deer and other animals.
“Every animal that we hunt is a different experience,” she said. “It’s hard to compare one with the other. But this was truly a great experience, like I said, probably the hunt of a lifetime.”

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MY TAKE: Ok, I can think of about zero uses for dead alligator this size.  Are we making aviation gifts, personalized kids gifts, or clothing out the skins? What is the purpose of hunting these big guys? To put a picture on personalized cutting boards and send them out as Christmas gifts?  It seems to me these are about as useless as a set of wood propellers hanging on a wall. I often feel like Florida Keys fishing charter companies should do something to stop the gator killing. Keep Key West Florida deep sea fishing, and fishing anywhere else for that matter, to fishing for fish, not gators.

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Popularity of Wakeboard Towers

With wakeboarding finding a huge audience in recent years, wakeboard towers and other wakeboarding accessories have become extremely popular with things like films that feature wakeboarding, official wakeboarding events across the country, an official magazine with regular publishing about the sport, and even schools that teach customers how to wakeboard. In addition, wakeboarding has allowed many board manufacturers to delve into the wakeboard market allowing for the type of personalization and specially designed boards and graphics that other boarding sports have long enjoyed. With the business of wakeboarding seeing a boom in popularity, the sport will certainly grow in significance.

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