Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Small Signs of Hope


  1. Red Wolves are doing fine in North Carolina. The picture at top is your hero at a North Carolina road sign last week. Nearly wiped off the face of the planet, the last Red Wolves were trapped, bred, and released back into nature at the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge in North Carolina where they have added to their own numbers and now seem to have settled down to a more-or-less stable population of just over 100. More Red Wolf introductions have been tried in other locations with less success (they need a big area without too many humans which is hard to find on the East Coast), but a small pocket of Red Wolves may have naturally shown up along the West Virginia/Virginia border (Shhhhh! Tell no one!). The Red Wolf, is a naturally occurring and stable hybrid of the Grey Wolf and the Coyote. If anyone tries to tell you stable hybrids do not occur in nature, tell them nonsense. Of course they do, and the Red Wolf is a perfect example.


  2. Blue whales have been discovered singing off the coast of New York. The voice of a singing blue whale has been tracked just 70 miles off of Long Island and New York City. A second blue whale was also heard singing offshore in the far distance. There are only about 600 blue whales in the Atlantic and only about 15,000 across the globle.


  3. Four Fish Stocks Rebound. NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, has reported to Congress that four stocks — Atlantic bluefish, Gulf of Mexico king mackerel and two stocks of Atlantic monkfishhave been rebuilt to allow for continued sustainable fishing.


  4. New Jersey Shorebirds are Adding a Little Weight. Sanderlings, Red Knots and other shorebirds that depend on horseshoe crab eggs to rebuild body mass lost after long migrations from South America are finally making weight again in time to head North on a normal migration schedule. Overfishing of horseshoe crabs, which started about two decades ago, resulted in a near total collapse of the Redknot population. With restrictions on horseshoe crab harvests, however, the population of that ancient creature is just starting to rebound, and with it the food sources of migrating Redknots and others shore birds. We have a long way to go with the Redknot, but we may have reached the bottom of the decline.


  5. Shad runs in the Potomac are inching back up. American shad populations in the Potomac River are on the rebound thanks to a successful shad restoration program launched by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. The numbers are still far, far below what they once were, but the fishing is pretty good just below my house, none-the-less.
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5 comments:

Miki said...

Wow. There really is some good news out there.

Thanks.

Anonymous said...

There is even a little hope of a respite from unremitting stupidity from the European Union, who are now grudgingly admitting that a fisheries policy that forces fishermen to throw back dead a large proportion of their catches might just be a little bit silly.

The policy of Iceland is much different; a fishing boat there has a set quota for how much fish it can catch in total; everything it catches must be brought onboard and landed and nothing may be thrown overboard. This leads to fishing boat captains being very, very fussy about what they catch being saleable fish and not immature rubbish, which leads to fish stocks being preserved. Admittedly this is an island of sanity in the midst of Iceland's sea of insane financial policies, but it does demonstrably work.

Who knows but the EU might copy the policy, if only out of self interest since the Icelandic fisheries policy increases overall yields.

Anonymous said...

No wolves in WV. Those are just big Eastern coyotes.

PBurns said...

Where a Red Wolf stops and a "big Eastern Coyote" starts is a point of debate. As noted, the Red Wolf is just a hybrid, as is the Eastern Coyote.

Take a look at this >> http://www.easterncougar.org/pdfs/ecw_mon_camera04.pdf

These folks set up a LOT of camera traps all over the Monongaghela, got a lot of picture of coyotes, bears, deer, fox, etc. and then they got ... well look at page 34. Is that a pure coyote? Compare it to any of these Red Wolf pictures >> http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=Red%20Wolf&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi

Like I said, there is a contiuum here, and I am not sure where we slip over from one to the other. The camera trap folks clearly had questions too.

P

Marie said...

Thanks for the spread of some good news, there is hope for humanity yet.

Marie