Sipping minerals

 

When encountered in the alpine, Bombus melanopygus was sipping nectar from an Alpine Milk-vetch(?). Farther down the mountain it was seen on the ground, apparently sipping minerals from rocks. This was unusual.

The first observation of melanopygus was mundane: It was visiting vetch for nectar.

Later it was seen fighting over access to something on the ground.

The bumblebees then started puddling on the rocks. They were presumably sipping needed minerals in solution from the rocks. Butterflies do this, but it was an unexpected sighting for bees.

 

Posted in bugs | 7 Comments

Gibson errors

 

We drove to Gibson Lake.

Gibson Lake is one of the many satellite alpine lakes that hang over Kootenay Lake. On the way there, I was asked two questions: Might we see Indian Paintbrush? Might we see a Hoary Marmot? To each, I answered: It is unlikely. I had previously only seen each of these species at somewhat higher altitudes.

I was wrong. As we walked around Gibson Lake, the first thing we saw was a Hoary Marmot, and soon after that, some Indian Paintbrush. So much for my insights into the distribution of nature around me.

Indian Paintbrush was growing alongside the trail around Gibson Lake.

The Hoary Marmot was a real surpise. It sat beside the trail around the lake.

 

Posted in mammals, wildflowers | 5 Comments

Finn’s chicks

 

I went out to visit local nature with Finn, my 15-year-old grandson. We took many pictures. Here are two that Finn took of chicks being fed.

We started the day by watching a flicker father feed his chicks. Daddy has closed his eyes as he regurgitates ant’s eggs from his crop for one of his chicks.

We then visited an osprey nest, where Finn managed a superb shot (one that I have long sought): an osprey parent delivering a fish to its excited chicks in the nest.

Finn’s pictures are used with permission

 

Posted in birds | 9 Comments

Osprey chicks

 

This is the time of year to see fresh osprey chicks peeking out of nests around the Lake.

Often the chicks are seen interacting with a parent.

At another nest, three chicks look out at a parent in an adjacent tree. The chicks are distinguished by white-fringed wing feathers, and orange eyes, rather than the adult’s yellow.

 

Posted in birds | 2 Comments

Osprey and fish

 

There was a time when local sport fishermen demonized the osprey: How dare that bird prey on (what was fantasized as) their fish? Clearly, we need to kill the osprey. Locally burned pilings still stand as a mute testimony to torched osprey nests atop them. Sigh…, yahoos are timeless.

Leaving aside the fact that ospreys have fed on local fish for millennia prior to the arrival of the upstart fishermen, there is the secondary question of whether those fishermen correctly assessed the situation. Were the osprey actually depleting the favourite fish of the sport fishermen?

Here is the situation: humans prefer to catch and eat salmonid species: salmon, trout, chars, freshwater whitefish, graylings. Ospreys prefer to catch and eat fish that are particularly slow moving and thus easy to catch: suckers. Suckers are fish that are spurned by humans (too bony). So, the yahoos burned osprey nests on a nonsensical claim of prior rights, but based it on a flawed assessment of the (imagined) harm they inflicted.

An osprey lifts a sucker from the Lake. Osprey take other species, but suckers are a favourite.

Yet, ospreys have their own peculiarities when it comes to protecting their fish. This osprey is returning to its nest with a headless fish. OK, it ate the (tasty) head earlier, probably before even bringing the fish to the nest. But then, in response to a perceived threat, it took its fish and flew off (it now returns). The reason the fish was removed is that it cannot be protected if left in the nest. Alas, an eagle is likely to steal it. It does not matter that the perceived threat was actually a passing human, the headless fish was protected by being removed.

Posted in birds, fish | 2 Comments

Wave-cloud iridescence

 

Waves form behind a boat travelling on the water. It is the relative motion that counts, not whether it is the boat that is moving or the water that is moving. In a similar manner, the air displaced by flowing over mountains can oscillate up and down in a series of waves. 

However, the thing about the upward displacement of air is that often the humidity increase in the lifted air is sufficient to produce cloud. The resulting wave clouds are characteristically rather smooth and lenticular in appearance. This afternoon, I watched as wave clouds hung over the mountains around the Lake. 

A feature of wave clouds is their rather uniform drop size. When seen in front of the Sun, these cloud drops give rise to one of the delights of wave clouds: iridescence. 

Wave clouds form over the mountains surrounding Kootenay Lake.

One of the wave clouds that appears in front of the Sun shows the iridescent colours that result from the diffraction of light through uniform cloud drops.

 

Posted in weather | 3 Comments

Giant Helleborine

 

The Giant Helleborine is a wild orchid that grows in western North America.

It is found in a small portion of southern British Columbia, yet it is not particularly common. Indeed, it takes some effort to locate even a single population. But, it is assuredly (but rather sparsely) found around Kootenay Lake. And when located, one’s calendar will say: it is mid July.

However, when found, the Giant Helleborine does grow in a profusion of many dozens of plants and hundreds of flowers.

The Giant Helleborine grows in wet areas.

It grows on stalks containing multiple flowers. 

Mycorrhizal fungi supply nutrients that the Giant Helleborine cannot obtain otherwise.

 

Posted in wildflowers | 4 Comments

Foster parent

 

A brood parasite is something that one reads about, but does not actually expect to see.

The story begins with the Brown-headed Cowbird, a warm-season species that lays its eggs in the nests of other birds and so outsources its chick-raising obligations. As such, the cowbird is a brood parasite, which just means that it cons others into becoming foster parents for its chicks.

An initially unidentified fledged chick was begging as it sat deep among the branches of a tree.

But when a (tiny) Yellow Warbler responded by feeding it, the identity of the (large) chick was revealed as a Brown-headed Cowbird.  

With a constant demand, the cowbird kept its foster parent busy searching for food to satisfy it.

 

Posted in birds | 2 Comments

Ground squirrel pups

 

Having shown some less-than-cute baby animals, it struck me as appropriate to show some societally more acceptable babies. The first things I ran across were some pups of Columbian Ground Squirrels.

Columbian Ground Squirrels are usually found in fields where an adult sentry stands over a burrow. Their pups have not previously been apparent to me. However, when Kokanee Creek Park was closed for five weeks starting in April, this normally skittish ground squirrel cautiously spread in response to human absence. That led to the opportunity to see its pups.

When the Park opened again in mid May, this Columbian Ground Squirrel was spotted at the south end of the spawning channel. And this is where the pups were seen starting in early July. 

At the beginning of July, three Columbian Ground Squirrel pups appeared at the same place the adult had been seen a month and a half earlier. 

I didn’t get them all in the same view, but did manage a shot of one pup feasting on leaves. 

 

Posted in mammals | 3 Comments

Baby arthropods

 

Babies are cute. We seem to be hard wired to protect those adorable infants with their rounded, over-sized heads, large eyes, and chubby cheeks, whether they be human or animal. We just adore them. 

Well, maybe not all of them. How about baby arthropods? 

What I believe are mosquito larvae were spotted in a puddle early in June. Our revulsion is probably a result of what we anticipate the adult females will do. 

These spiderlings were seen in the grass. No one finds them cute, and arachnophobes fear them. Just maybe, all babies are not perceived as being cute.

But, did I get the identification correct? Are those mosquito larvae? What is the species of those spiderlings?

 

Posted in bugs | 2 Comments