Showing posts with label Opossums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Opossums. Show all posts

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Francois Portmann's Snowy Owl and Crows in NYC, Lincoln Speaks with the NY Daily News, a Pale Male Update and Frisky the Opossum


Photo by Francois Portmann

Photo by Francois Portmann
 A Snowy Owl (Nyctea scandiaca) is harassed by a trio of local Crows on a stretch of coastal dunes within city limits. Ultimately, she didn’t seem too concerned about the 15 min episode and settled for the day. F. P.

I do wonder if the parties concerned are up on the other species language and after doing their required scolding duty then came to some kind of understanding.

And Francois isn't just using the pronoun "she" as a  raptor courtesy to Queen Elizabeth I,  male Snowy Owls are more uniformly white than the females.


Do click on Francois' link to see the rest of the Crow vs Snowy Owl sequence and much more gorgeous bird photography besides.
http://www.fotoportmann.com/birds/2012/02/29/snowy-owl-crows/

And from longtime hawkwatcher Kat Herzog, who has spent many an hour observing from the Hawk Bench at the Model Boat Pond in Central Park, a Pale Male Update--
 

I heard about the sightings of more hawks than Pale and the new female but I'm not sure about that.  I've seen him with the new Hawk.  She is following him everywhere but though they are flying in circles together - the do not have their legs down and they have not been seen mating.

(Dropped talons during courting flights are a precursor to copulation in Red-tailed Hawks. D.B.)

The New Girl and Pale have gone to the nest - separately and together....bringing budding twigs.  We shall see.  I'm sure Pale will start fulfilling his destiny and start mating soon....unless he is "playing the field" and looking for the best female around.  The new female has a red tail but a lot of yellow in her iris....but she is quite adamantly courting him.  She following him and he staying at arms (wings?) length.  And, so, a new melodrama begins.....

Indeed it does Kat.

 I believe that when Pale Male does make his choice, she will be his sixth mate.

NEXT UP-- LINCOLN KARIM TELL HIS SIDE OF THE STORY TO THE NY DAILY NEWS

 
 Photographer Lincoln Karim’s feathers ruffled by arrest after death of Pale Male's hawk girlfriend

The photographer who has obsessively chronicled celebrity hawk Pale Male is squawking over his arrest by state wildlife officials.

Lincoln Karim says he was just trying to get state Department of Environmental Conservation officers to take the body of Lima, Pale Male's mate, when he was collared in Central Park Monday night.
Karim said he was held for more than six hours in the Central Park Precinct stationhouse after being arrested by a DEC police officer.

Karim had collected Lima’s body in Central Park on Sunday.
 MORE...
 
And another related story from International Business Times--

Frisky, the new Opossum in town.
 
 On the 28th Pyewackit the house cat went running to the patio door and ducked under the curtain for a look.  When I turned on the back light expecting one or both of the Bird Bath Cats, what should I find but a new Opossum in the neighborhood.  This one far more active than Fluffy who had previously been frequenting the feeding floor.  Fluffy is a large, tough looking Opossum who takes his time and isn't above snarling so I  get a look at his many sharp teeth if he catches a glimpse of me.  Needless to say I don't intrude on his personal space in any way. 
 
 When I attempted to ease the glass door open so I could  use the flash to get a sharper photo of Frisky, Opossums are notoriously hard of hearing, she looked up and trotted briskly around the corner of the house.  No teeth baring in this case,  which was nice.
 
As you have no doubt gathered from previous blogs, the negative behavior of Wisconsin animals upon seeing me approach compared with those in  NYC was beginning  to give me a complex.

Donegal Browne


Monday, January 24, 2011

John Blakeman on the Odd Buteo, Two Opossums in One Night and Opossum Tracks in the Snow


Yesterday's Odd Buteo

Ohio Red-tail Hawk expert, John Blakeman adds his expertise to the conversation-

Donna,

The hawk in question is a partially leucistic Red-tailed Hawk, apparently still in its first year, as revealed by the very slightly elongated tail (Red-tail tail feathers lose a half-inch in the first molt). It’s not a Rough-legged Hawk, as the shape and wing patterning is all wrong for that species. All the other suspect buteos would be much darker. This is a Red-tail.

Leucisticism seems to develop incrementally in subsequent molts. The light coloring of the primaries of both wings is a typical pattern. In following molts, more and more feathers will come down white, often with streaks or patches of normal color, but distorted in shape. For example, when the whiteness appears in the red tail, the greater portions of the retrices (tail feathers) will be white, but often with a distorted, angled dark terminal band; or with white splashing at an angle across the partially-red feather.

It appears that leucisticism, which is not so uncommon in Red-tails, is expressed somewhat in the manner of gray hairs in humans, with age. I estimate it’s prevalence between one in 1000 to one in 5000, with the greater frequency more likely.

In this case, this an apparently young bird, with just the first hints of whiteness.

I trapped and studied an old, very wary formel (female) haggard Red-tail in 1970, and watched (before it was released) two molts. The bird got whiter each time. Before being trapped, she was the mother of a normally-colored tiercel (male) eyass that she and her normal mate successfully fledged.

Albinism or leucisticism is known in the other North American buteos, but it is very rare in those species. Just why the Red-tail has, and expresses these genes so frequently is a ponderable raptor biology question. I have no answers for it. The best explanation is that it would provide some hunting or survival advantage in snow. But if that were so, the trait would be seen much more frequently in northern birds. But that’s not necessarily so.

–John Blakeman

Thank you John, very interesting. The idea of albinism in Wisconsin being an adaptive advantage with all it's snow, makes sense, and it is the capital of Albinism in many species. There are quite a number of white deer here for instance. Though I understand some still have dark eyes so technically they're only partially albinistic. But you're right, if that is the case in RTHs why isn't albinism more prevalent in the north for that species?

Another mystery. :-) And another question to be filed in the mind waiting for the day something happens that might help answer it

REMEMBER THE TWO OPOSSUMS IN ONE DAY I MENTIONED?

7:12pm I looked out and WOW there's a possum right there on the step. The back story: I'd cleaned out the refrigerator and transferred the old food, but not too old food, all into a serving bowl that I was going to pour out on the goodie stump for the crows. I then left it on a counter while I went to another room.

In the meantime Quicksilver the African Grey Parrot had flown over and was helping himself. Greys have somewhat delicate digestion at times so I didn't figure even slightly old food was a good idea, being in the middle of something else, I took the bowl away from him much to his chagrin, (Don't worry he gets plenty to eat, but stealing food he is not supposed to have always makes it yummier), I opened the patio door, and put the bowl on the step to take to the stump later on when I had my snow boots on.


I forgot it. Thus attracting the opossum who as I watch starts wobbling the bowl around with his paw very vigorously. Bam, bam. The bowl is actually clunking on the concrete. OH NO! That bowl goes to a set of my mother's china that my youngest daughter is supposed to get. Beyond clunking on the concrete the bowl is very dangerously close to the edge of the step. That's a smash waiting to happen.

And even sending tidbits flying.


7:13pm Back to the bowl.

Is that bowl going to go over the edge? It looks like more than half is already sitting on air.

Here is a good view of the possum's back foot. Note the big difference with the front feet in the second possum photo above and the back foot in this photo.

By the way, the black blotch at the bottom of the photos is the cat Pyewackit's ear.


7:14pm Now you can tell it is the top of a cat's head. Pye waits for the opossum to reappear. He doesn't, so Pye wanders down to the basement hoping for an unenlightened mouse that has weaseled its way into the house.

Periodically she spends most of the hours of a couple days down there. Then suddenly she's back upstairs returning to her usual behavior. I believe she realizes there is a mouse in the basement, goes into mouser mode, eventually catches it, obviously eats it all as I never find any mouse bits, and then having done her duty or simply followed her irresistible instinct for obtaining a rodent meal-your choice, and then goes back to napping cat of sloth snoozing on the furniture until another mouse appears.

But back to those possums...

Several hours pass.

7:16pm Silver curious as to what everyone is looking at, flies down to take a look- flushing Pyewackit the Cat under the dining room table. The possum takes no notice as sight isn't their forte as a species. Note that Silver, having spotted the weird animal out there, has fluffed up his feathers into aggression mode. It makes him look bigger and he hopes scarier.

11:01pm She is following her nose to the bowl.

Possum circles round and while jockeying for a better angle, I accidentally bump the glass. Possum must have heard or felt the vibration as she freezes in place waiting to sense if anything else will happen, allowing me to get a slightly better photo of her in the dark.

She backs out.

Then she comes round the other side. 11 o'clock possum finishes up the food meant for the Goodie Stump. And Yea! The bowl is unscathed.

What about Possum prints? The front foot print is shaped like a long varigated toed paw but the back foot has a elongated print with a jog at the back with shorter toes which might appear strange until you know what it is. In case you're slightly confused by which way the animal is going, the back foot prints are going one way and the front prints the other.

The long trough in the snow is the print of the opossum's naked tail dragging behind her in the snow.

Donegal Browne