Monday, September 18, 2017

The End of Summer!

  
This week, clouds and heavy thundershowers brought rain and hail to my neighborhood!  It poured rain for a solid hour last Tuesday and drenched everything, diminishing the ever-present threat of fire!  Yahoo!!

  It also really cooled off this week!  The daytime temps dropped from the high 90's to the mid 70's!  The nighttime temps dropped from the high 60's to the low 50's!  The crickets have stopped chirping at night and we're sleeping better!  

In just a few days, Sept. 22, Summer will officially end! 
Fall is definitely beginning!  It all happens so quickly!  

Western Gray Squirrel - Sciurus griseus

There are about 3 Western Gray Squirrels living close to our home, that have been busy burying Black Walnuts from our neighbors' tree.  They are called "scatter hoarders"  because they store small caches of  food in many different places, rather than one main location.  These caches are not what the squirrels solely subsist on in winter.  They actively search for food in winter, foraging for pine nuts, acorns, tree buds, and mushrooms.  

  Their nests are called "dreys" and are made of twigs, leaves, sticks, moss, lichen and shredded bark.  They prefer to make their nest in the top third of a tree, but will also nest in hollow tree branches or trunks.  During the winter, and in the nesting season, their dreys are covered on top.  In the summer they may also construct and open-air sleeping platform!

Like some birds, these squirrels molt twice a year!  The molt goes from head to tail in the Spring.  In the Fall, the molt goes from back to the front (excluding the tail)!    The tail only molts once, in the Spring, and the molted tail hairs are used to line the nests!  Pretty ingenious!  I wonder if they use their Fall molted hairs to line their nests for winter!  What do you think?
 
Douglas Squirrel or Chickaree - Tamiasciurus douglasii

There are 2 Chickarees that live right near our home!  They too have been busy storing seeds and nuts!  Unlike the Western Gray Squirrel, they will store lots of green cones for the winter in only one or two main areas.  During winter they will dig down through the snow to these caches, or "middens", and feast on the seeds in the cones!  They will also forage for food such as nuts, acorns, berries, tree buds, fungi, and insects!

In winter they mainly nest in hollow trees or abandoned woodpecker cavities.  They may also build a ball or cup-shaped nest 15'-20' up a tree, from twigs, moss, lichen and shredded bark.  In colder northern areas they may even dig a burrow underground, right under one of their food caches!

In summer their fur is reddish brown in color, in winter it is grayish brown. Like the Western Gray Squirrel, they molt or shed their fur twice a year, except for the tail!  The tail only molts once a year in the summer!   I'll bet they use it to line their nests, like the Gray Squirrels!

 Long-eared Chipmunk - Neotamias quadrimaculatus

Two of my biologist friends confirmed that the photo of a chipmunk I posted two weeks ago, is a Long-eared Chipmunk!  This is a new species for me!  Apparently it's pretty hard to identify chipmunk species, as they are so similar in appearance.  Knowing what elevation and habitat they are found in narrows down the choices.  I saw this one up at approximately 6500' in elevation, in a mixed conifer forest.
It was busy eating the seeds from green fir cones (above right)!  Unlike Western Gray Squirrels and Chickarees, Long-eared Chipmunks hibernate in an underground den during the winter!

Gray Foxes - Urocyon cinereoargentus

Gray Fox Update!

The foxes surprised me this week! There were three of them instead of two, and maybe even four!  I think I see another pair of ears just above the middle of the blurred green area!!!  Can you see them?  Wow!  The younger ones didn't stick around at all, and split as soon as they saw me!  The mom remained cool and calm as I slowly slipped away!  How exciting!!!  I sure hope to see them again!

River Update!

The river has dropped quite a bit and cooled off a lot!  My time IN the river has definitely shortened.  Brrr!  The good thing is that the algae on the underwater rocks is diminishing, so it isn't so slippery when you walk on them!
 
Water Strider Nymphs (?) - Gerridae sp.         Flame Skimmer - Libellula saturata 

In the shallows, the Water Strider Nymphs (above left) are still swimming around in groups!  They don't look much bigger than they were a few months ago!  It takes 60 to 70 days for the nymphs to mature to adults.  I first noticed them in late July, so they should be maturing soon!  One of my biologist friends thought that maybe these aren't nymphs, but rather the adults of a different Water Strider species!  I'll have to research that more and let you know what I find!

Right now, above and along the length of the river there are hundreds of big dragonflies zooming around!  They are probably catching and eating insects, as well as mating and laying eggs.  These adults will die off before winter, but their eggs will overwinter and hatch in the spring.  It is so beautiful to watch the metallic glint and gleam of their wings above the river in the late afternoon sun!

American Dipper - Cinclus mexicanus

This week I came across an American Dipper foraging for insects 
in the shallow rapids of the river!  


Instead of totally submerging itself, it was standing on the submerged rocks 
and only sticking part of its body underwater!  It was obviously finding 
insects to eat in the aerated rapids!  Wow!  


American Dippers are year-round residents, and will continue feeding in the river 
throughout this coming winter!

Garden Update!

The daylight hours are definitely getting shorter.  The sun leaves our garden by 
4:30 pm now, as compared to 7:00 pm in the middle of Summer!  I got the photo (above) of corn tassel shadows on corn stalks one late afternoon this week! 


Just last night a bear feasted in our garden!  This morning 2/3 of the cornstalks were broken down and all the cobs had been eaten!  The bear also broke up two squashes and ate all the seeds!  Luckily I had picked most of the squash yesterday afternoon!  The bear has also eaten most of the apples off our 3 trees, as well as some of the chicken manure we had in a bag!  I'm going out right now to pick the plums off our tree before it's too late!  That bear has an amazing appetite!

  
Lots of the dried Sunflower heads in our garden still have seeds, but the birds are leaving!  There's only a few Lesser Goldfinches still feeding in the morning!  The Bee Balm and most of the other flowers are past their prime and wilting.  We're down to 2 hummers, and we only see them infrequently now!  New birds are passing through!  I got the above photos of an unidentified Sparrow (left), a Yellow Warbler (center), and a possible immature American Goldfinch (right) one morning down in our garden!  I wonder how long it will be before the hummers are all gone!

What kind of bird is this?

If you guessed that last weeks photos were 
a Western Gray Squirrel's tail, 
and a Gray Fox's ears 
you're right!

Unless I happen to get a photo of a bat (highly unlikely!),
I probably can't figure out what kind of bats live here! 
 My apologies!

I've found out that Crayfish retreat into underwater burrows and enter a state of torpor in winter.  It's not winter yet, but maybe the colder water temperatures have affected them and that's why I'm not seeing them.


Where are the deer?

What birds are going to stay through the winter?

Did the fish fry mature?

Whose tail is this?

Check back next week for the answers 
to these questions and more!

Your comments & questions are greatly appreciated!  
Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com! 
or
Click on "no comments" below, to post a comment!
  Thanks!

Monday, September 11, 2017

Lightning Strikes!

Lightning strike near Lincoln Valley, Tahoe National Forest

This week we finally got some rain!  The newly dampened earth smelled heavenly!  Everything was so fresh and beautiful!  Unfortunately, we also got lots of lightning!  On Tuesday, Sept. 6th, there were 289 lightning strikes in the Tahoe National Forest, where I live!!!  Luckily, most of the lightning strikes were quite a distance away, mainly southeast of us.  Initially the lightning started 6 small fires, which the TNF Fire Crew immediately attacked.  So far no big fires have occurred!  We have more thundershowers in the forecast for next week.  Hopefully, the showers will be heavy.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed!

 Antlion larva - Myrmeleontidae  & two antlion pits

Antlions!

I've been noticing lots of small, 2"- 3" conical pits (above right) on the forest floor.  These pits are made by the larvae of Antlions (above left)!  The recent rain obliterated the pits I had photographed, but I noticed today that a lot of them are showing up again!  The larvae are tiny, only about 1.2 cm long!  That's the tip of my thumbnail in the photo!

Antlion larvae are pretty amazing little insects!  They hatch from an egg laid by and adult.  Then they begin making a pit in which they will ambush insects!  The pit construction is pretty amazing!   The larva will begin by walking backwards to form a circle, which is the outermost edge of the pit.  Working from the outside in, they begin removing the soil to form the pit.  They use their abdomen to shovel up the soil, as they continue to walk backwards!  Using their legs, they place a small pile of the shoveled soil on top of their head.  With a jerking motion of their head, they flip this soil out of the pit!  This process continues until they have made a conical pit about 2" deep and 3" wide!  The walls of the pit are steeply angled.  The angle is precise.  The larva maintain a critical "angle of repose" in their construction!  This angle is the steepest angle the soil can maintain without collapsing!  

Once the pit has been constructed the larva will bury itself at the bottom of the pit, with only it's mandibles showing.  The larva can sense the approach of an insect, through vibrations in the soil!  If an insect slips into the pit, the larva will grab it with its mandibles.  If the insect tries to climb out of the pit, the larva will throw soil at it to bring it back down.  When a larva catches an insect, it injects it with venom and enzymes through its mandibles.  Within a few minutes, the larva will then start sucking out the juices of the dead insect.  The empty carcass of the dead insect will be flipped out of the pit by the larva, when its used up!  Wow!  What an ingenious insect! 

Antlion larva have a very low metabolic rate and can go without eating for several months!  In winter they will dig down deeper in the soil and become dormant.  At some point in their life cycle, which can take several years, the larva will form a round ball-like chrysalis and pupate.  A month later an adult antlion will emerge from the chrysalis.  The adults are bigger than the larva, measuring 4 cm in length.  As soon as they emerge, adults go in search of a mate.  After mating, the females will lay their eggs in the soil.  The adults are rather feeble flyers, and "flutter" about at night!   The adults usually live for approximately 25 days, feeding on pollen and nectar.  Some adult species also eat small arthropods!

A friend of mine, Jerry Tecklin, has been studying and photographing antlions for years!  He kindly supplied the photos (below) of an antlion larva and adult.  The larva is covered in white sugar, because that's the "soil" Jerry keeps them in!

  Antlion larva & Antlion Adult - Myrmeleontidae
Photos by Jerry Tecklin ©2017

Mylitta Crescent - Phyciodes mylitta    Cabbage White - Pieris rapae    West Coast Lady - Vanessa anabella

Garden Update!

Lots of butterflies are still flitting around the garden feeding off the blooming flowers! They will lay eggs before the temperature gets a lot colder, and they won't be able to move.  These eggs will over-winter and hatch in the spring.

Long-horned Bees - Melissodes sp.

Native Bees!

This morning when I went down to our garden, there were lots of Long-horned Bees (above) that were still "sleeping" on the flowers!  Apparently it was too cold for them to move!  I was able to get super close to them because they were immobile!  There were also some new insects (below) that weren't moving as well!  I don't know what they are, but will try to identify them this week.  What a fun morning!

                      Unknown Bee (?)                      Urban Anthophora and a small unknown bee

Male                                        Juvenile                           Female
Lesser Goldfinches - Carduelis psaltria

Lesser Goldfinches!

I finally got a photo of the male Lesser Goldfinch, with his distinct black forehead and crown!!  He's been showing up in the early evenings in our garden.  I also got a photo of a fledgling with fluffy downy feathers!!  Lesser Goldfinches can have 1 to 3 broods in a season.  This must have been a fledgling from their last brood.  There are actually about 6 Lesser Goldfinch fledglings in our garden!  One of them flutters his wings to get his parents to feed him!  The rest of them forage on their own!  As the days get shorter and temperatures drop, these lovely colorful birds will migrate down to lower elevations in California for the winter.  Right now it is pure pleasure to watch them probe the Sunflower heads for seeds!

Spotted Towhees - Pipilo maculatus 
adult male & fledgling

Spotted Towhees!

I also finally got a photo of an adult male (above left) Spotted Towhee!  The adults blast out of our garden as soon as they see me approaching!  I've repeatedly watched 6 or 7 of them leave all at once!  The fledgling, however, doesn't seem as wary of me, and is a lot easier to photograph!  I caught the photo (above right) of him all puffed up, on a recent cold morning! 

Both the adults and the fledglings have red eyes.  The color apparently comes from red oil droplets in the cones of the retina.  These red droplets increase contrast and sharpen distance vision, especially when hazy!   Maybe that's why the can see me coming from a long ways away! 

The coloration of birds' eyes varies greatly!  Some eyes change color as the birds age.  Some change color during the breeding season!  In some species, the males and females have totally different eye color!  Both the male and female adult Towhees have red eyes.  The fledglings' eyes are initially brown in color, and change to red as they mature.  

The birds in the photos below are both Green-tailed Towhees, but the one on the right has red eyes and the one on the left has brown eyes.  The one on the right was taken in the Spring, the one on the left was taken this week.  Do you think their eyes change color during breeding? 

    
Anna's Hummingbird (male) - Calypte anna

Hummers!

This little male Anna's Hummingbird is still defending his territory in our garden!  This week he took a break to preen his feathers!  First he puffed them way out, and then he poked and prodded around in them with his beak!!  When he was finished preening, all his feathers flattened back into position and some of his metallic feathers caught the light!  Wow!  What a difference in his appearance! 

        Rufous Hummingbird (male) - Selasphorus rufus          Anna's Hummingbird (juvenile) - Calypte anna

This male Rufous Hummingbird (above left) and the juvenile Anna's Hummingbird (above right) are some of the hummingbirds that are getting driven off by the male Anna's Humming bird! They feed off of other flowers in our garden, and sit and wait for a chance at the Bee Balm!

Right now this Rufous Hummingbird is just stopping by for a week or two, on his 3,900 mile migration from Alaska to Mexico! The Anna's Hummingbird will also migrate but not as far as the Rufous Hummingbird. It may just migrate to a lower elevation in California, or the southwest, or maybe the northern end of Mexico! That's such a long way for these tiny birds to fly! It's amazing!

Gray Fox - Urocyon cinereoargenteus 

Gray Fox Update!

I lucked out again photographing the Gray Fox near our garden!  This time he saw me and barked!  It looks like he's howling, but he is only barking his hoarse cough-like bark!  I only peeked from the bushes for a few seconds, but he still saw me!  I'll be more cautious next time.  I don't want to disturb them!!

Gray Fox - Urocyon cinereoargenteus 

There's another Gray Fox in our neighborhood!  I've seen him several times, but he's always been far away!  When I first saw him, about a month ago, he looked pretty scrawny and sickly.  Yesterday, my neighbor and I saw him quite close as we walked back from the river!!!  He looked a lot better!  His fur doesn't have the same coloration as the ones near our garden, but he's getting some of the red coloration on his belly and his throat now!  He doesn't look as skinny as he was a month ago and that's encouraging!  I sure hope he continues to improve in health and appearance in the months to come.  I think he is just beautiful!

Who's tail is this (above)?

Bears and Crayfish have been eluding me! 
Hopefully, I will investigate them this coming week!

The bear poop from last week was mainly filled with the skins of grapes and apples that grow all over my neighborhood!

What's happening down at the river?

What about those bats?

Where are the deer?

Whose ears are these (below)?
Check back next week for the answers 
to these questions and more!

Your comments & questions are greatly appreciated!  
Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com! 
  Thanks!

Monday, September 4, 2017

More Mammals!


Long-eared Chipmunk (?) - Neotamias quadrimaculatus (?)

This week we went for a hike up in the Lakes Basin and luckily saw several different kinds of mammals!  The chipmunk (above) was busy eating some kind of nut or seed.  Chipmunks hibernates during the winter.  Right now they are eating lots of food, and storing up some fat for the winter.  Their diet consists of conifer seeds, fungi, flowers, berries, various nutlets, and insects.  They will also store small caches of food underground, to consume before and immediately after hibernation.  

I'm not sure if this is a Long-eared Chipmunk or a Lodgepole Chipmunk!  Two characteristics that distinguish the Long-eared Chipmunk from a Lodgepole Chipmunk, are the white patch behind the ear and the longer ears.  I'm going to submit my photo to www.iNaturalist.org. and hope that someone confirms my guess!  I'll let you know what response I get!

    Columbian Black-tailed Deer - Odocoileus hemionus columbianus  &  Chickaree - Tamiasciurus douglasii

We also came across these Columbian Black-tailed Deer (above left)!!  The pair of them were busy foraging on grasses, flowers, and shrubs in the forest.  As you can see, the male's antlers are covered in "velvet"!  The velvet is a highly vascular skin that supplies oxygen and nutrients to the growing antler, which is actually a bone!  Once the antler is full-sized, the velvet falls off and the bone dies!  The resulting hardened bone is the mature antler.  Only the male deer grow antlers. They use them during the breeding season as weapons in competition between males for females, and in sexual displays.  Males with the largest antlers are usually more likely to obtain mates!  After mating in November, the females give birth to one or two fawns the following spring!  Males drop their antlers in winter, between January and March. These discarded antlers are a great source of calcium for many other mammals, such as mice, squirrels, and chipmunks!

The Chickaree or Douglas Squirrel (above right) was dragging this huge fir cone up a tree trunk!  These squirrels do not hibernate in the winter!  They store 100's of cones on the ground, in large caches for winter!  They will dig down through the snow to eat the seeds in these stored cones!  They do not live underground!  Their nests are mainly found in hollow trees, or abandoned woodpecker cavities, 15'-20' above the ground.  They will also sometimes build a ball or cup-shaped nest out of leaves and twigs, up in the branches of a tree!  Maybe this Chickaree was afraid that we might take his cone, so he dragged up the tree trunk!  It was really interesting to watch!

Aplondontia or Mountain Beaver - Aplondontia rufa
Photographs by Chris Wemmer

Aplondontia!

 I have never seen an Aplondontia, even though they are listed in all of my field guides!  In fact none of my friends have ever seen one either!!   I was wondering why they weren't listed as endangered or rare, since none of us have seen one.  It turns out that they're rarely seen because they live underground and are mainly nocturnal!  

I had asked my friend and local resident, Carl Butz, if he had ever seen an Aplondontia and he had!!!!  He had noticed some burrows on his property in 2014, and a friend of his, Chris Wemmer, set up a motion activated camera outside the burrow and caught these photos of an Aplodontia!!  WOW!!!  Look at those big rodent teeth and sharp digging claws!  It looks like a gopher but is much bigger in size.  Gophers are usually 7"-11" long, and weigh 2.5-9 oz.  Aplodontias are about 20" long when fully grown, and weigh from 1-2 lbs!!  

Aplondontias are subterranean, herbivorous rodents.  They create a maze of underground tunnels in which they live and raise their young.  Their preferred habitat is forested damp slopes and ravines near streams and creeks.  Apparently Aplondontias live near water because they have very primitive kidneys, and must drink 1/3 of their weight daily!!  Their diet consists of the above and below-ground parts of ferns, dogwoods, willows, alders, young conifers, nettles, Fireweed, and Bleeding Hearts!  They do not hibernate in winter and remain active underground, subsisting on caches of grasses and forbs.  

It would be so cool to see one of these in person!  
If I spend more time in local ferny, damp areas I might get lucky!

You can see lots more of Chris Wemmer's photos and videos of animals at www.cameratrapcodger.blogspot.com  Check it out!  He has done amazing work!


Gray Fox - Urocyon cinereoargentus

Neighborhood update!

The Gray Foxes are still staying in the same area near our garden!  This week I lucked out and got the above photo!  They are so camouflaged and so beautiful!  I'm hoping that I'll get to observe them for several more months!  

Sunflower Seed Eaters!

Down in our garden the Towhees, Goldfinches, and Jays are still busy eating the ripened sunflower seeds!  I watch them every morning for an hour or more.  It is so much fun to watch their seed-gleaning acrobatics!

Lesser Goldfinches (females) - Carduelis psaltria

There's a small group of 5 female Lesser Goldfinches feeding in our garden.  
The male Lesser Goldfinch has a black cap on his head.  
I've only seen one male so far, but failed to get his picture.  Rats!
I'll keep trying this week!

Green-Tailed Towhee (adult & juvenile) -  Pipilo chlorurus

Every day I see these two Green-tailed Towhees!   
It looks like the juvenile is getting his rusty-red feathers!  
There are still tons of sunflowers seeds that haven't ripened yet.  
So hopefully I'll get to watch these two for quite a while still!

Spotted Towhee (juvenile) - Pipilo maculatus

Last week I found a bunch of feathers in the garden, that looked like they may have come from a Spotted Towhee.  Luckily, they weren't from this juvenile!  His eyes, and the eyes of the adult Spotted Towhees, are red!  I wonder what purpose the red iris serves?  I'll have to look that up!

Steller's Jay - Cyanocitta stelleri

There are about 7 Steller's Jays that are gleaning sunflower seeds in our garden!  
They are quite clever in their seed getting antics!  
They are a lot heavier than goldfinches, and can't perch on the smaller, thinner-stemmed sunflowers.  I watched the one in the photo insert repeatedly leap up about 4.5 feet to get the seeds of one particular sunflower head!   Wow!

River Otters - Lustra canadensis

River Otters at Last!!!

There's a section on the North Yuba River, about 1/2 mile downstream from our house, that seems to be a magnet for animals!  I have photographed Spotted Sandpipers, Water Striders, Rainbow Trout fry, and Aquatic Garter Snakes there!!!  I was there twice last week and each time we saw amazing wildlife pass by!!!  On Monday, I was there with my sister and two River Otters swam past us!  It was SO exciting!!!  I have never seen River Otters in the No.Yuba!!!!  They swam past us pretty fast!  Their heads would pop up for a few seconds, and then they would dive underwater.  A few seconds later their heads would pop up many yards downstream. It was so wonderful to finally see them, after watching for them for years!!!  Yahoo!

River Otters are pretty big!  The males can weigh 11-30 lbs!   They can be 3'- 4.25' long, with the tail an additional 12"-20"!  Their main food is fish when available, and will eat up to 2.2 - 3.3 lbs per day!  They rarely "chase" fish, but use "surprise" as their main hunting method. They will also eat frogs, newts, garter snakes, aquatic insects, and ducks!  They usually travel 1.5 to 3 miles daily, but have been known to travel 26 miles in one day!  They are fast swimmers, 6-8 mph, and can swim underwater for 4 minutes.  Both their ears and nostrils close underwater!  They are absolutely amazing animals!  How lucky we were to see them!

Common Merganser (female & ducklings) - Mergus merganser

A Merganser with her ducklings!

A few days later, I went down to the same spot with a friend of mine and we saw a Merganser with her ducklings!!!  A few weeks ago I posted a picture of a female Merganser with her 4 downy ducklings.  I'd bet that this is the same Merganser!  There were only 3 ducklings this time, but they have grown a bunch and are getting their adult feathers!  It was SO exciting to see them!  I sure hope the remaining three survive till migration in October! 

Common Merganser ducklings - Mergus merganser


It's been HOT and SMOKEY for this past week.  We don't have any fires in our neighborhood, but smoke is coming from the fires northwest and northeast of us.  The forecast for this coming Wednesday is a chance of thunder showers.  Hopefully we'll get some rain, but no new fires, which might clear out some of this smoke!  
I'm keeping my fingers crossed!



The Black Bears are back!  

Here's another photo of bear poop (above) for you to analyze.  What kind of fruit do think the bear ate?

One of them tore down our two bird feeders early last week!  I still haven't seen any in person!!  

What kind of crickets are making that 
constant racket in the night?

There haven't been signs of Crayfish anywhere!!!  
What happened to all of them?

I haven't had time to research about our local bats.  Hopefully I will this week!

Check back next week for the answers 
to these questions and more!

Your comments & questions are greatly appreciated!  
Please email me at northyubanaturalist@gmail.com! 
or
Click on "no comments" below, to post a comment!
  Thanks!

Unless otherwise noted, all photographs are taken and copyrighted by North Yuba Naturalist.  
I am more than willing to share!  Just ask!