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Scenes and sightings from Smithsonian museums and beyond


An impassioned view of what's worth looking at


Sketching the blueprints behind everyday things


A webcomic from the writer of "This is Indexed"


June 13, 2008

Leatherback Sea Turtle Returns to Texas

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Now there’s one more thing that’s bigger in Texas: the turtles. Andrew Revkin at Dot Earth reports that a leatherback sea turtle has nested on the Padre Island National Seashore for the first time since the 1930s.

Leatherback turtles are the largest sea turtles in the world, growing to nearly 10 feet long and weighing almost a ton. In other words, it’s a turtle the size of a horse.  Like many other sea turtles, they are highly endangered. Threats include altered beaches, unintentional catch in the fishing industry (sound familiar?), and floating, discarded shopping bags that resemble their main prey, jellyfish – yet another reason to carry a cloth bag with you to the grocery store.

Check Dot Earth for a shot of the massive mother’s 6-foot-wide tracks heading up into the dunes. Our pic opts for the other end of the spectrum, an hour-old baby leatherback making a twilight dash for the surf in Costa Rica.

Today’s turtle surprise is reminiscent of the unexpected return of a wolverine and a wolf we told you about earlier this year. We’re glad to hear it.

(Image: Charles Eldermire)





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March 6, 2008

Grainy Pics Dept: Return of the Carnivores!

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Ever since humanity made it past the large-animals-eat-us stage, history has not been kind to carnivores. But beginning in the mid-twentieth century – around the time Aldo Leopold famously watched a “green fire” die from the eyes of a wolf he’d just shot – some Americans began to regret the disappearance of the food chain’s brawniest and most fearsome rung.

Gradually, through habitat conservation, establishment of wildlife corridors, and painstaking reintroductions, we started to encourage the likes of grizzlies, wolves, Florida panthers, California condors, and peregrine falcons to return.

It’s been a long wait. But this week two bolts from the blue arrived. In California’s Sierra Nevada, a graduate student’s automatic camera took the first-ever photo of a wolverine in the Sierra Nevada. The ferocious, oversized weasels have been gone from California for at least 80 years. No one knows where this one came from – fitting considering these irascible animals’ reputation for roaming enormous acreages, mostly above treeline, looking to fight for their supper.

And three thousand miles away, in Massachusetts, a landowner shot a big gray dog, only to find it was the state’s first gray wolf in 160 years.

It’s a promising sign. Wolves tend to go walkabout when their home pack’s territory starts to get packed. They, too, have a tremendous ability to wander, as sightings in Oregon over the past several years demonstrate. Most arrive from Idaho, undeterred by the swim across the Snake River. In January, a female wolf made the trip while wearing a radio collar, putting to rest any doubts about where it came from.

No one knows exactly where the Massachusetts wolf came from – presumably snowy Canada. But Canada is a large place, which brings up another recent news item: tracing people through the analysis of stable isotopes found in their hair. The technique gives a rough idea of where an animal lived based on hydrogen atoms contained in the rainwater it drinks. Since the stray wolf has already been shot dead, could a little more analysis narrow down where it came from?

Hat tip: the Knight Science Journalism Tracker

(Image: wolverine by Katie Moriarty/ Oregon State University/ U.S. Forest Service)





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