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Category Archives: Life Photo Meme

It All Started with the Boobies

Well, it may be a stretch to call it misunderstood, but…

Tammy and I recently gave his own Flickr account. He’s been wanting one for a while and now that he is taking pictures regularly with me, there was a new reason to consider it. At the same time we are encouraging his use of as an opportunity to learn, as we do in most things. One thing is that I have taken to making a detective/research game out of each of his requests to add someone as a contact. (almost all are from my own contacts so I am familiar with their work). For member Aleutian Fox I gave 9 short answer questions about the Aleutian Islands which ranged from fairly easy (What European Nation first settled and claimed the islands) to reasonably hard (how were the islands formed). Encouraging him to continue to use books and cite sources, he also had to use only books for the answers and provide me a list of the books. Once he answered all the questions he could add Aleutian Fox as his contact.

I took off to my evening class after giving him the list and the plan that he and Tammy would visit the library tomorrow. By the time I got home from class he had only two questions left, and he was working on those! Within another 15 minutes he had them all done. All of the answers had come from books in our own private library, three of my books (The Sea Floor, Whales, Whaling and the Ocean Ecosystem, and An Introduction to the World’s Oceans) and two of his own (How People Live and Our Country’s Presidents). So much for going to the town library.

GANSO PATOLA, originally uploaded by sparkyfaisca.

The next Challenge was Sparky Faisca. I wanted to grab 5 pictures from his stream that represent 5 different orders within the class Aves and provide the complete classification for each (Sparky provides common name and species). Pretty easy, except discovered a problem. Sparky has some wonderful images of a Northern Gannet. He listed the scientific name as Sula bassana, and one of ’s books, Smithsonian Institution: Animal, had it as Morus bassana. pointed this genus confusion out to me, so I showed him how to use the ITIS website to verify the current classification. Problem solved!

ITIS Screenshot of search for "Northern Ganet"

Ooops! ITIS reports both as being confirmed valid species names. There seems to be a bit of confusion or misunderstanding there…

Ok. The Gannets and Boobies together make up the Sulidae. I remember that much from my trip to Belize… Why? Because for organized conservation in Belize it all began with the boobies. Sula is the genus of the boobies such as the Red-footed boobie Sula sula while Morus is the genus of the Gannets such as the Australasian gannet Morus serrator, and Papasula is the genus for Abbot’s boobie Papasula abbotti which appears to be much older branch than the Sula and may be intermediate to the gannet and boobie genus’. So why is the Northern Gannet in both Morus and Sula at ITIS? For that matter why is the Abbot’s Boobie in both Papasula and Sula?

Northern Gannet in Flight ©Jim Heupel

Northern Gannet in Flight ©Jim Heupel

suggested that the Northern Gannet, being a true gannet, must be in genus Morus with the other true gannets. I had to concur. Just before bed sent me the following classification for the Northern Gannet:

Classification for Norther Gannet

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Ciconiiformes
Family
Sulidae
Genus
Morus
Species
Morus bassanus(Linnaeus, 1758)

And just to be complete… here is the classification for the Red-footed boobie I captured in Belize…

Classification for Red-footed Boobie

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Ciconiiformes
Family
Sulidae
Genus
Sula
Species
Sula sula(Linnaeus, 1766)

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(Update: Dad just sent us a of a Northern Gannet in flight from his trip to Iceland. Three shots of Sulidae!! Thanks Dad!!)


Lymnaea Snail Eggs


Snail Chain by you.

Snail Chain ©Creative Commons BY-NC-ND, Eric Heupel 2008

One small section of a BUNCH of Lymnia sp. snail eggs pulled from our fresh water aquarium. They like to lay their egg clutches on the underside of larger broad leaved aquatic plants.
These snails are reproductive powerhouses! Not only are they simultaneous hermaphrodites which practice sperm sequestration and/or self fertilization, but they reach reproductive maturity and begin egg laying only a month after hatching or “eclosion.” Combine that with the 20-40 eggs per clutch they lay, and one can see how they can quickly grow the population.


Snail Eggs by eclectic echoes.

Lymnaea sp. snail eggs ©Creative Commons BY-NC-ND, Eric Heupel 2008

This shot was lit by the microscopes flourescent base light from below and a pair of remote flashes from above, giving pretty good definition to the individual eggs and inside the invisible gelatinous mass. The following shot was with the base CFL illuminator only.

Bottom lit Lymnaea snail eggs

Bottom lit Lymnaea snail eggs ©Creative Commons BY-NC-ND, Eric Heupel 2008

Did I mention they were prolific breeders? Every six months to a year we break down one of our two freshwater aquariums and rebuid it. The last time we made sure there are no eggs on the plants. After a full month of no snails we introduced one small adult snail. Two months later there were nover 50 snails in the tank. This time no adult snails. We have a single egg mass with 13 eggs in it. We’ll see how far we let those go.

As long as I’m not subjected to further displays of their extreme hermaphroditic proscuousity!

PZ Myers has a great post realted to these snails that shows the early development of the Lymnaea zygote, especially focussed on the 3rd division from four cells to eight, which begins the pattern of molluscan spiral cleavage. The details of that division have profound effects on the organism, including whether they are sinestral or dextral.

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Mollusca
Class
Gastropoda
Order
Pulmonata
Family
Lymnaeidae
Genus
Lymnaeas

Tags: , , ,

Carving the Air

Juvenile

Juvenile
Originally uploaded by eclectic echoes.


This juvenile reminded e of air more that any other picture I have taken recently. I really enjoy photographing birds in flight though it more often than not result in less than optimum photos. A skill I really need to work on more.

Among my favorites to photograph are swallows and terns. These are the acrobats, the sleek highly maneuverable species which remind me of the Thunderbirds flying precision high G passes. This juvenile tern for example is still being fed by the adults, but here it is carving a path through the air, twisting and turning with great control. Later in the same session I watched one of the adults approach and hand off a herring to the juvenile smoothly without landing. It hovered for a minute as it put the fish in the juveniles mouth then took of again like a rocket.

Watching a tern fish, alternately scouting, hovering and diving head first into the water is a great way to pass an hour or even two.

Classification

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Charadriiformes
Family
Sternidae
Genus
Sterna
Species

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Cabbage White - Pieris rapae

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Cabbage White
Originally uploaded by eclectic echoes.

A Small Cabbage White (Pieris rapae) from our garden. These little beauties are often overlooked because of their plain coloration, but they are among my favorites. I see the adults most often enjoying Queen Anne’s Lace, but the caterpillars feed mostly on plants of the Brassicaceae (cabbage or mustard family). Next year we plan to plant some horseradish in the garden, which will hopefully attract more of these little beauties and let me capture the entire life cycle for Larval Images.

There is a chance to capture some of that life cycle now as the small white will continue to be found here until the hard freeze comes. They hibernate in pupae form and will be the first butters we see in the late winter or early spring.

Of course, this is also one of my favorites, because it’s the N.American cousin of the Large Cabbage White (Pieris brassicae) of Eurasia. P. brassicae is the species that I blogged about at The Other 95%. Some recent research showed it is in the middle of a three way evolutionary arms race with its host plant and a parasitic wasp, because the male’s ejaculate attracts parasites both direct and indirectly.

Classification

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Class
Order
Family
Pieridae
Genus
Pieris
Species
Pieris rapae

Johann’s Great White Egret

A week or so ago, and I headed out to the hardware store to pick up some PVC pipe so we could make a light tent for shooting Tammy’s booties. We both took our cameras to see if there were some opportunities along the way. The hardware store was a bust, but the journey there and back was golden!

First we spotted some great white egrets on an area of marsh. It was high tide and the marsh was flooded. The egrets were hunting through the clumps of marsh grasses for mummichog and other tasty treats. We pulled to the side of the road and got quite a few shots. Eventually a blue heron arrived on the scene, though it stayed pretty far out on the marsh edge. A male kingfisher also visited, perching on the abandoned osprey roost. Up the road at another marsh was a snowy egret prancing along the flooded mosquito ditch. So in one afternoon outing he added the White Egret, Snowy Egret, Blue Heron and kingfisher to his newly started Life List.

’s film card was filled by the time we left the marsh, so he was my spotter when we saw the osprey with it’s striped bass. He was so excited to be buzzed so closely by the osprey that he was literally jumping up and down for all he was worth.

Soon we’ll have to get him his own account.

At the same spot I managed to catch the egret in mid mummichog flip…

Gulp!

Gulp!
Originally uploaded by eclectic echoes.

Classification

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Aves
Order
Ciconiiformes
Family
Ardeidae
Genus
Ardea
Species

Recycling

Recycling

Recycling
Originally uploaded by eclectic echoes.


Life Photo Meme’s theme this week is “Green” and I didn’t want to put inverts here as well as The Other 95% and Larval Images. Here at Eclectic Echoes I am going to try and stay away from inverts as much as possible for the Life Meme since there is such a beautiful diversity of life out there (besides the obviously beautiful invertebrates).

This was actually from a few years ago, a nice nursery in Niantic has this old pickup at the intersection they are at. It is always a pleasure to see the explosion of color and texture they craft in the arrangements.

What better use for an old vehicle than as a planter?