Here’s a little Before and After exercise that spans five to six months. Observe birds who are in your neighborhood all year long. Song sparrows and cardinals are two good choices.
Before: On a hot day in August notice how plump or thin the birds are. Even better, take a picture of a bird in the heat.
After: On a cold day in winter, again notice how fat or thin the birds are. Take a picture of the same species out in the cold.
The song sparrows above were photographed by Steve Gosser on a warm October day and on a snowy day in early March.
If you aren’t already avoiding black-legged ticks (Ixodes scapularis) because of Lyme disease, yesterday’s announcement is another reason to be very careful.
The Allegheny County Health Department has announced that the first human case of Powassan virus disease has been detected in the area. It’s the first time the tick-borne virus has been seen in the county, and the first case in the state this year.
Powassan is a rare, but growing, disease that can only be caught from a black-legged tick bite. Initial symptoms can include fever, headache, vomiting, and weakness but it can also cause severe illness including inflammation of the brain (encephalitis) or the membranes around the brain and spinal cord (meningitis). This can result in long term neurological effects.
There is no treatment for Powassan and no vaccine. All that can be done is to wait for it to run its course and mitigate the symptoms.
It is no surprise that this happened at this time of year. Summer is when black-legged ticks are tiny nymphs.
Here’s how big they are compared to an adult. No wonder we don’t notice them sucking our blood!
There are two ways to prevent Lyme disease.
#1. Check your body for ticks after you’ve been outdoors. There may be ticks in your own backyard so check every time.
#2 Keep ticks off your clothes and skin. Wear long pants and long sleeves and spray your clothes with permethrin. Some suggest using DEET on your skin (if you wear shorts) but I can attest that long pants sprayed with permethrin is much better.
Just because an animal has UV receptors in its eyes does not mean it can see ultraviolet light. A recent BBC video, below, reveals some surprising things about the use and perception of ultraviolet light in starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) and raptors, especially golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos). For instance:
Starlings and golden eagles both have UV receptors in their eyes.
Female starlings have feathers that reflect UV. The more UV a female reflects the more successful she is at breeding. Male starlings like the glow we humans cannot see.
UV light scatters more. If you can see UV light, it makes images blurry.
Raptors have UV receptors in their eyes but they cannot see it because their lenses filter it out. The golden eagle’s vision is sharper because he cannot see UV.
Scientists used to think kestrels hunted by seeing the UV reflective paths of rodent urine. Nope. Kestrel eyes filter out UV so that theory has been disproved.
Interesting conclusions:
Because I thought that raptors could see UV, I used to wonder how flashy UV-reflective songbirds managed to evade predators. Answer, the predators cannot see that flashy stuff!
UV light damages the eye so there is an advantage to not seeing it for most of one’s life.
Human eyes have UV receptors but we cannot see it because our lens filters out UV. There are exceptions based on age and lack of lenses.
Exception#1: Young people up to age 30 can see near UV, the wavelengths closest to our visible color range, per a 2018 Univ of Georgia study.
Exception#2: Those without lenses in their eyes can see near UV. This includes those born without lenses and those who had cataract surgery in the early days. Claude Monet had cataract surgery in 1923 with no lens replacement and could see near UV.
On 31 July my sister watched more than two dozen tree swallows swarm over her yard in Tidewater Virginia. They were feasting on flying bugs for about 20 minutes, and then they were gone.
After they finish breeding, tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) gather in ever-growing flocks in July and August and begin their southward migration. In transit they seek out swarms of insects that may include true flies (Diptera), dragonflies and damselflies (Odonata).
Peak tree swallow migration occurs in early to mid-fall. I was at Cape Cod on 1 October 2017 when I witnessed a huge flock at West Dennis Beach. Abundant bugs attracted the tree swallows; abundant swallows attracted a falcon who captured one in his talons (top right of photo below).
If you live in the Mississippi or Atlantic flyways, or at their wintering grounds in Florida or Louisiana, there’s still time to see swarms of tree swallows. Watch their annual movements in this weekly abundance animation from eBird.
It looks like a skeletal sailing ship and in a way it is. Except that it walks. Like a giant bug.
Strandbeests are created by Dutch physicist turned artist, Theo Jansen, who has worked on them since 1990. He named them strandbeest which literally means “beach animal” in Dutch. They are native to the Netherlands.
Every year Jansen experiments in summer and designs new ones in winter in a constantly evolving process. Though the beests have existed for more than 30 years they became known only after he posted videos on YouTube about a decade ago. Since then the beests have been on tour. They came to the U.S. in 2014-2016.
And yet they remain mostly unknown, especially to people like me who live far from the beach. I learned about them last week in this 11-minute video that tells their story.
This week a flower garden caught my attention with bright yellow-orange cosmos flowers. The plants were in three stages: flowering, going to seed, and seeds formed.
Cosmos suphureus petals are quite showy to attract pollinators to the central disk. When the small flowers inside the disk are fertilized the petals fall off and the disk begins to develop into long thin seedpods.
When complete the seed pods resemble the hitchhiking seeds of beggar ticks (Bidens frondosa). Both are in the Coreopsideae tribe along with coreoposis, dahlias and many others.
Also seen …
It’s August and, as expected, deer are more visible in Schenley Park. Two does and two fawns approached Panther Hollow Lake on Friday. We can expect to see lots of deer lounging in the city parks in the days ahead. It is The Calm Before The Rut.
On the cloudy morning of 6 August, daisy fleabane (Erigeron annuus) was still opening its flowers in Frick Park. Fleabane petals respond to light levels. It’s part of Fleabane’s daily exercise program.
After all these years I’ve just discovered that horseweed (Erigeron canadensis) is a fleabane. (That’s what comes of learning plants on the fly.)
Two weeks ago you may have seen videos on the Internet of a giant swarm of dragonflies at a Rhode Island beach on 27 July. The swarms at Westerly and South Kingstown were thankfully brief.
Entomologists identified the bugs as blue dashers (Pachydiplax longipennis) which spend their lives at quiet freshwater ponds and marshes but will swarm to seek out new ponds when their population is high. The 27 July bugs were on the move to somewhere else.
Blue dashers are common in the U.S. and are expanding into southern Canada. The males are gorgeous blue with green eyes, while the females and young males are black and yellow.
NBC 10 WJAR explains why the bugs visited the beach with on-the-spot videos from the day of the swarm.
Bug Season continues this month as caterpillars pupate into adult moths and butterflies. What species have we found? The first step is to decide: Is it a moth or a butterfly? Clues include:
Antennae: Feathers vs Knobs
Flying: Night vs Day
Wing Position At Rest.
To make matters more complicated, skippers are considered butterflies but they break the butterfly Wings At Rest rule.
For simple pointers to use in the field, check out this vintage article:.
(*) Details about the top photo: According to Wikimedia, the tussock moths Halysidota tessellaris (banded tussock moth) and Halysidota harrisii (sycamore tussock moth) cannot be told apart in the east by a photo.
Spotted lanternflies (SLF, Lycorma delicatula) were a plague in Pittsburgh last year. This month their adult population is ramping up again. What’s their status now and how do their numbers compare to last summer?
I didn’t pay attention to the first adult spotted lanternfly in 2023 but this year I was ready. My first 2024 sighting was on 18 July. Interestingly I haven’t seen a whole lot of red nymphs and adults compared to last year so I went to a place that was swamped with them in 2023.
On Saturday I visited the Three Rivers Heritage Trail at Herrs Island back channel, a place that was overrun by red nymphs in late July 2023 and had so many winged adults in August and September last year that it was impossible for cyclists and pedestrians to avoid them. The bugs flew into us. It was creepy.
This year on 3 August I found adult lanternflies at the same place but not in an overwhelming number. I counted 16 red nymphs and 68 adults at the most densely populated location. The fact that they were countable is a sign there weren’t that many … yet.
This one tried to avoid being counted. Hah!
What I couldn’t count were the bugs above my head sucking sap from invasive vines and ailanthus trees. Their “honeydew” coated the leaves below and “rained” on me at one point. Yuk.
Last year the worst of the invasion ran from late August to mid September so we still have more to come. Will it be as bad as last year? CBS Pittsburgh provides some expert opinions.
There’s a tiny bat in the eastern U.S. that’s even smaller than the little brown bat. The tricolored bat (Perimyotis subflavus), formerly called the eastern pipistrelle, weighs only 0.16 to 0.23 ounces making it 30% smaller. Tricolored bats, like so many U.S. bats, are declining rapidly due to the fungal disease white nose syndrome and are Endangered in Pennsylvania. It’s pretty amazing that two of these tiny bats showed up in Downtown Pittsburgh in the past two years. We know this because both were rescued and rehabilitated at Humane Animal Rescue of Pittsburgh’s Wildlife Center in Verona (HARP).
To give you an idea of the tricolored’s size, here’s one roosting in a bat cave in North Carolina.
Before the two bats were found in Pittsburgh, there was no known record of their occurrence here. A female and a male came separately to HARP many months apart so there are probably more of them but who knows where?
Almost a year ago the male arrived at the Wildlife Center.
On August 22nd [2023] we received a male Tricolored Bat…a bat we never would have thought to ever come through our door! Tricolored Bats are an Endangered Species here in PA. Aside from being moderately emaciated and dehydrated, he sustained no other serious injuries. Weight gain was our main goal, he was 5.2grams at intake and the goal was to get him to at least 7.0grams before release.
He was fed the tiniest mealworms, gained weight, and was soon ready for release. HARP points out that bats cannot take off from the ground. “In order for a bat to fly, first it must climb to a high place and then it launches itself by intentionally falling into the air!” Here he walks out of the sheltering blanket, up the tree, and he’s off!
Sometimes we only discover that a species is near us when it needs our help.
(*) p.s. The bat is called tricolored because each hair on its back has three color bands, like a tabby cat hair. The bat is not striped. All the tips are reddish brown.