The EBL Project has a new publication discussing how animal movement drives variation in seed dispersal distance across entire communities.
Click here to read the publication.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
The EBL Project hosted a National Geographic reporting writer and the finished product has been published!
In November 2018 the Ecology of Bird Loss Project hosted a reporting writer for National Geographic, Alexandra Ossola, on Guam. During the host period she attended the MTCC conference, went on a Brown Treesnake night search, attended a DOD sponsored field trip to active restoration sites, interviewed multiple stake holders on Guam, and interviewed EBL's PI Haldre Rogers (who is quoted in the article). Below is the link to the finished product in National Geographic.
Guam's ecological fate is in the hands of the U.S. military
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
New Publication in Micronesica!
Check out this new publication in Micronesica! During the
2017 field season, we caught 3 brown treesnakes (BTS) that had consumed our
fledgling Såli. When we analyzed the physical traits of these snakes, we found
that they were all large individuals in very good body condition, suggesting
that young Såli
(and birds in general) may be a particularly rich meal for snakes that are used
to eating smaller meals of geckos and skinks. In 2018, we caught 12 more BTS
and saw the exact same pattern. In addition, we found that snakes that had
recently eaten fledglings hunkered down in hollow trees for 4-6 days at a time,
presumably to digest their food. These results echo those from a recent study
by Siers et al. (2018), and provide important additional information about
snake behavior and activity cycles – snakes that are full after a large meal
are less detectable and harder to catch. This research (Wagner et al. 2018) was
a collaborative effort between our entire 2017 field crew and is now available here:
(http://micronesica.org/sites/default/files/wagneretal2018.pdf)!
References:
Siers, S. R., A. A. Yackel Adams, & R. N. Reed (2018).
Behavioral differences following ingestion of large meals and consequences for
management of a harmful invasive snake: A field experiment. Ecology and Evolution 8: 10075-10093.
Wagner, C., C. Tappe, M. Kastner, O. Jaramillo, N. Van Ee,
J. Savidge, & H.S. Pollock (2018). First recorded predation of fledgling
Micronesian starlings (Aplonis opaca)
by brown treesnakes (Boiga irregularis)
on Guam. Micronesica 6: 1-7.
Saturday, November 3, 2018
Bird Skull Mystery
While taking measurements at roost sites recently, there was a morbid find under a Calophyllum in an urban area on Andersen Airforce Base. It is generally a popular roost site for starlings, sparrows, and doves, but the birds above in the canopy just make the scene below them at the base of the tree seem more chilling. What looked like a graveyard for nearly 50 birds could have been a cache made by some predator lurking around base of the tree. Let us know what you think could have caused this mass grave.
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Post-typhoon Mangkhut: Rota Update
Rota was hit directly by Typhoon Mangkhut on Monday, Sept. 10th. EBL Field Biologist Erin Fitz was on Rota this week and said that there were "many huge trees broken and uprooted. The canopy of much of the forest is now very open and there are lots of dead leaves everywhere." Compared to Guam, the magnitude of damage on Rota was more severe Luckily field sites are still intact and we will be able to look at post-storm forest impacts. Below are photos of Rota's Alaguan Bay pre- and post-typhoon.
Saturday, September 15, 2018
Post-typhoon Mangkhut: Update from the Islands
Post from ISU graduate student, Ann Marie Gawel: Typhoon Mangkhut blew through the Mariana Islands the night of Monday, Sept 10. While the island of Rota felt the brunt of it, Guam also experienced typhoon-force winds. I went out post-storm with EBL intern Erin Fitz (pictured in album under her mosquito net) to check on two of our Guam field sites. I was interested in seeing if the storm had knocked down many fruits, thereby impacting future fruit-picking efforts for my pig-feeding trials @SERDPESTCP #SERDP . The good news was that many trees were still fruiting, and we observed multiple species with fruits on the trees, both ripe and unripe throughout the forest. (big sigh of relief) Although there were some fruits, fallen branches, and many fallen leaves scattered about the forest floor, the forest looked intact, and we only saw a few fallen trees in and around our sites.
We also checked on eight different chicken-wire fences used in our canopy gap experiments and did a quick damage assessment of our long-term forest grids @NSF_Bio #NSFfunded. Two of the fences were damaged from fallen papaya trees, which we quickly mended to prevent any infiltration from wild ungulates (deer and pigs), and so we could continue to monitor seedlings in those plots. We saw a number of interesting critters in the forest including a Philippine deer, a singing sali (only heard), lizards, some large cane toads, a land crab with an interesting "shell", and many many mosquitoes.
Stay tuned for news from Rota, where the storm seemed to have a much bigger impact.
Wednesday, August 15, 2018
The Sali Field Crew
We have a group of five individuals working with Sali, the Micronesian Starling, on Guam! Follow the EBL Facebook page to learn more (https://www.facebook.com/ebl.project/)!
Henry Pollock, Postdoctoral Researcher
Martin Kastner, Field Crew Leader
Ovidio Jaramillo, Field Technician
Megan Pendred, Field Technician
Nikki Suckow, Field Technician
Saturday, June 9, 2018
Welcome Two New Interns to the EBL Crew!
The EBL crew is excited to introduce our two new interns!
1) Natalie Myers:
She just graduated from Occidental College with a BA in Biology with a concentration on Environmental Science. She is originally from near Seattle, Washington and in her free time she likes to draw, hike and read. She loves animals, and in the past has studied a variety of things, but hopes to study evolutionary biology and herpetology in the future! She is excited to get to explore Guam and the Mariana Islands, and to learn more about plant communities.
1) Natalie Myers:
She just graduated from Occidental College with a BA in Biology with a concentration on Environmental Science. She is originally from near Seattle, Washington and in her free time she likes to draw, hike and read. She loves animals, and in the past has studied a variety of things, but hopes to study evolutionary biology and herpetology in the future! She is excited to get to explore Guam and the Mariana Islands, and to learn more about plant communities.
2) Erin Fitz:
She recently graduated from the University of British Columbia with a degree in Natural Resource Conservation. She is interested in landscape ecology and understanding the role humans play within the ecosystem. She is looking forward to gaining a greater understanding of tropical ecology on the islands. Erin continuously seeks new ways to explore the world around her- namely through travel, hiking, rock climbing, drawing, and painting.
She recently graduated from the University of British Columbia with a degree in Natural Resource Conservation. She is interested in landscape ecology and understanding the role humans play within the ecosystem. She is looking forward to gaining a greater understanding of tropical ecology on the islands. Erin continuously seeks new ways to explore the world around her- namely through travel, hiking, rock climbing, drawing, and painting.
Tuesday, June 5, 2018
Team Flame Trees: Tricia Magallano
Delayed post: 28 May 2018
The first week of the Tropical Forest
Island Ecology Course has passed. Pictured above are the course
participants from the Northern Marianas College, Saipan arriving to
OceanView Hotel in Tumon, Guam.
Team Vines: Atanacio Naputi
My name is Atanacio Naputi and my amazing and hardworking team Bruno, Marie, and Eugene are doing a project on vine abundance and diversity.
These are pictures of us out in the field collecting data.
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