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Archive for the ‘Landscape’ Category

When I was a graduate student (in the 1970s), American Kestrels were one of the most common avian predators I saw in upstate New York on almost a daily basis, as they perched along roadsides hoping to spot an errant grasshopper or mouse in the grass.

The smallest and most common falcon can be prey for other, larger raptors, especially sitting exposed on a bare branch or wire.

The smallest and most common falcon can be prey for other, larger raptors, especially sitting exposed on a bare branch or wire as this one did along a road in Puerto Rico.

American kestrels, or Sparrow hawks, are easily identified by their small size, black facial stripes, spotted breast feathers, and swept back wing shape in flight.

American kestrels, or Sparrow hawks, are easily identified by their small size, black facial stripes, spotted breast feathers, and swept back wing shape in flight.  Photo credit:  Steve Hillebrand.

Kestrels can be found throughout the Americas, from the most northern Alaskan tundra to the tip of South America (except the Amazon basin), including Caribbean islands, in a wide variety of habitats.  Although still considered one of the most common raptors, their populations have declined 48% since the 1960s, as the magnitude of the red areas showing population declines in the Breeding Bird census data show.

American Kestrel population status in the U.S. from Breeding Bird census data 1966-2010.  Red = marked decline, orange = fluctuating population numbers; green = population growth

American Kestrel population status in the U.S. from Breeding Bird census data 1966-2010 (the Peregrine Fund). Red = marked decline, orange = fluctuating population numbers; green = population growth.

While I rarely see kestrels in MN these days, I was pleased to see them frequently while we were in Puerto Rico, and even on its small island neighbor, Culebra, where they seem to be fairly common.

A male kestrel took up a hunting perch above a sandy beach in western Puerto Rico.

A male kestrel took up a hunting perch above a sandy beach in western Puerto Rico.  Males have slate blue feathers on their wings and a darker slate blue head than the females.

Kestrels prospered in the late 18th and 19th centuries in the Americas, when forests were being cleared for agriculture.  The open grassy spaces made perfect hunting grounds for their insect, small bird and mammal diet, and forest borders provided the requisite number of tree holes for nesting.  So why the decline in more recent times, and especially in the last couple of decades?

A female kestrel perched on a power pole in a residential area in western Puerto Rico, unafraid of dogs, cats, and people below her.

A female kestrel perched and preened herself on a power pole in a residential area in western Puerto Rico, unbothered by dogs, cats, or people below her.

Are they vulnerable as prey of other raptors?  Cooper’s Hawk populations are increasing as Kestrel populations are shrinking — coincidence or causation?  A recent paper found no evidence for Cooper’s Hawk numbers or incidence of West Nile virus as a cause of Kestrel population decline, but suggested that nesting sites were a limiting factor.

Another explanation might be changes in farming practices in the U.S.:  clearing the fields of hedge rows and forest edges where the birds might find nest holes, pesticides that eradicate potential insect prey,  conversion of more pasture land to cropland, etc.

Progress for humans often take its toll on the wildlife, unfortunately.

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“Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite ’em,
And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum.”
(Victorian mathematician Augustus DeMorgan)

And so it seems true of islands as well … larger islands have little islands about them, ad infinitum.

Coastal and landform topography of Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands.  From NCCOS http://ccma.nos.noaa.gov/ecosystems/coralreef/summit_sea/summit_sea2.aspx.  Culebra and Vieques are the small islands just to the east of Puerto Rico.

Coastal and landform topography of Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands. From NCCOS. Culebra and Vieques are idyllic small islands between Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands (St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix).

We got a great view of the chain of islets that span the distance between Puerto Rico and its small island neighbors to the east as we flew at 1400 feet over the ocean expanse to our destination on Culebra.

Cape Air took us from Puerto Rico to Culebra and back.  I remembered to get my camera out of the luggage on the trip back!

An 8-seater Cape Air plane took us on a half-hour flight from Puerto Rico to Culebra for a mere $45. I remembered to get my camera out of the luggage on the trip back to PR!

A view of Culebra looking northeast toward St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands

A view of Culebra looking east toward St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.  The coastal shores and keys surrounding Culebra are protected as part of the U.S. National Wildlife Refuge system, which results in some of the most diverse and healthy coral reefs in the Caribbean and prime habitat for nesting seabirds.

A tiny islet in the channel separating Puerto Rico and Culebra (seen in the distance).

A tiny islet in the channel separating Puerto Rico and Culebra (seen in the distance). When is a rocky outcrop in the ocean too small to be called an island?

The extreme northeastern tip of Puerto Rico, showing coral heads and sandy shoreline that surround the island.

The extreme northeastern tip of Puerto Rico, showing coral heads and sandy shoreline that surround the island.

Although birds are highly mobile and able to navigate the mileage between mainland and islands fairly easily, there is nevertheless an ever diminishing number of species on islands as the distance from the mainland increases and/or the size of the island decreases.

Birds could settle on Caribbean islands by migrating eastward from Central Mexico (1026 bird species) or southward from Florida (510 species).  To illustrate the “island effect” of distance and size:  Cuba has 368 bird species in its 43,000 square mile expanse, while nearby but much smaller Puerto Rico (3400 square miles) supports 349 bird species, and Culebra (12 square miles) has just 110 species, many of which are only passing through on migration to other sites (only 43 species actually nest on Culebra).

Over time island birds often develop unique characteristics that separate them from their mainland ancestors, becoming unique to that particular place (endemism), like the Puerto Rican Lizard Cuckoo and the diminuitive Puerto Rican Tody (from an earlier post).

Looks very much like the Cuban Lizard Cuckoo, I photographed

Looks very much like the Cuban Lizard Cuckoo, I photographed last April.

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Mangroves line the shorelines of Puerto Rico and its many island keys, where ever the wave action is limited.  The most noticeable are the red mangroves that grow from the shore into the salt water, supported by a tangle of prop roots.

Red Mangroves

The roots not only support the plants but catch debris, leaves, and sediment floating by which supports a community of organisms that feed on it.  This  is further enriched by droppings of the birds that roost in the mangrove branches at night.

While the mangrove forest above the water supports a terrestrial community of life,  the maze of roots below the water line offer protection for small fish and invertebrates that make up the underwater community.

While the mangrove forest above the water supports a terrestrial community of life, the maze of roots below the water line offer protection for small fish and invertebrates that make up the underwater community.

Red Mangroves are so dense you could never walk through them, but they make intriguing waterways for kayaking.

Red Mangroves grow together in such density that you could never walk through them, but they make intriguing island waterways for kayaking.

kayaking in mangrovesIt was a quiet on this particular day in the mangroves, no birds or fish to be seen.  But there was a pretty terrific sunset.

sunset in the mangrove swamp

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it rained off and on during our hike to the waterfalls in El Yunque forest today, which is what is supposed to happen in a rainforest.  But nothing illustrates the congested overgrowth of life on top of life in the tropics better than this.

Liana vines creep up the trunks of the trees, embedding lateral roots right into the tree bark so tightly, they look like a part of it.  Circular-shelled snails graze on the algae growing on the lianas.  A few lichen find a roost on the tree bark as well.  Life growing on life everywhere.

Liana vines creep up the trunks of the trees, embedding lateral roots right into the tree bark so tightly, they look like a part of it. Circular-shelled snails graze on the algae growing on the lianas. A few lichens find a roost on the tree bark as well. Higher up the trunk, large “air plants” roost on tree branches, catching moisture in the rain, and nutrients floating in the humid air.  Sometimes there is such an overgrowth of the vines, bromeliads, ferns, etc. that their weight breaks the branch.

The light can hardly make it to the forest floor because there is such a density and diversity of plant material above it.  And naturally, rainforests have a lot of running water everywhere.

There are a few bare rocks, but not much bare earth that isn't colonized by plants.

There are a few bare rocks, but not much bare earth that isn’t colonized by plants.

Cascades of water flowing into larger waterfalls, eventually merge into the highest waterfall in the park.

Cascades of water flowing into larger waterfalls, eventually merge into the highest waterfall in the park at La Mina falls.

La Mina falls in el Yunque forest, P.R.

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We drove the back roads of Puerto Rico from our house in Aguadilla on the northwest coast to the Arecibo observatory the other day, and decided we love everything about this place: the climate, the food, the people, and definitely the scenery.  This area of PR is composed of karst limestone, which is ancient sea floor being slowly dissolved by the acidic water flowing through it.

A good example of the "holey" limestone that makes up the karst substrate of most of western and west-central Puerto Rico.

A good example of the “holey” limestone that makes up the karst substrate of most of western and west-central Puerto Rico.

When the erosion occurs from underground water percolation, it can excavate huge underground spaces, leaving cavernous cave rooms.

Dragon's mouth entrance to Rio Camuy cave features a set of fearsome stalactite teeth from its roof.

Dragon’s mouth entrance to Rio Camuy cave features a set of fearsome stalactite teeth from its roof.  The underground cavern here opens up to the light from a sinkhole where the cave ceiling fell in.

When the porous limestone roof becomes too thin to support its weight, it collapses, forming a sinkhole, and carrying everything on the surface into the cave system with it.  Sinkholes are conspicuous circular depressions, looking like bowls, covered with forest vegetation.  One such depression south of the town of Arecibo, P.R. caught the eye of some Cornell scientists back in the 1960s who decIded that the particular sinkhole was the perfect spot to build the world’s largest radio telescope.

The spherical collector of the radio telescope is 1000 feet in diameter.  A special focusing

The spherical collector of the radio telescope is 1000 feet in diameter. A special focusing receiver (weighing 900 tons) is suspended above the collector by 18 cables, 6 from each of three 300 foot towers.  The entire structure was too large to photograph, even with my wide angle lens.

Although it was originally designed for research on the earth’s atmosphere, minor alterations in the collector and receiver structures have enabled the largest radio receiver in the world to explore the electromagnetic radiation of the planets of this solar system as well as distant ones in far-off galaxies.

all because there was an underground river carrying acidic water through an ancient sea bed…

Bougsinvillea grows luxuriantly everywhere, including the Arecibo visitor center

Bougsinvillea grows luxuriantly everywhere, including the Arecibo visitor center

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A visit to the interior karst (limestone) topography to see caves, waterfalls, and the Arecibo radio telescope, which I will write more about later.  But first, the most shocking thing I saw today was…

A guy jumping down a waterfall -- no room for mistakes here!

A guy jumping down a waterfall — no room for mistakes here!  He did manage to avoid hitting the sloping rock below the falls.

A ribbon of white water goes over the edge of the limestone in this lush tropical forest.

A ribbon of white water goes over the edge of the limestone in this lush tropical forest.

a truly wondrous place!

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Among the ruins of magnificent Castillo San Felipe del Morro, the fort that guarded the entrance to San Juan, Puerto Rico harbor, were a few avian residents.

3 tiers of 40 foot walls that rise from sea level made the fort impregnable for 350 years.

Three tiers of 40 foot walls that rise from sea level made the fort impregnable for 350 years During Spanish domination of the Caribbean.

Pairs of Caribbean Martins nest in the drain spouts that emerge from the 18 foot thick walls of the fort.  Each pair defended a different drain spout, flapping and chittering at each other.

Pairs of Caribbean Martins nest in the drain spouts that emerge from the 18 foot thick walls of the fort. Each pair defended a different drain spout, flapping and chittering at each other to establish their dominance.

Caribbean Martins are Purple Martin sized birds and fill their niche on most of the Caribbean Islands.

This seems to be a stouter version of the Northern Mockingbird, with a thick, almost shrike-like bill.  But it sings a wide variety of songs and hunts insects on the wing like a flycatcher.

This seems to be a stouter version of the Northern Mockingbird, with a thick, almost shrike-like bill. But it sings a wide variety of songs and hunts insects on the wing like a flycatcher.

White winged doves are native to the southwestern US, but found in the Caribbean as well.

White winged doves are native to the southwestern US, but are found in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean islands as well.  It’s a very distinctive looking bird with its red eye surrounded by blue skin and white wing stripe.

It was 100 degrees warmer in San Juan than in MN the day we left.  Humid air, bright colors, and warm temperatures make the tropics a very inviting place to spend the winter months!

Pastel-colored houses line the narrow cobble-stone streets in old San Juan, P.R.

Pastel-colored houses line the narrow cobble-stone streets in old San Juan, P.R.

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