0
   

Number 85 - To see a tree asmiling.

 
 
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Mon 9 Aug, 2010 04:23 am
je je. All clicked and waiting for the return of the heat.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Mon 9 Aug, 2010 07:24 am
@sumac,
We are having triple digit weather here in NE TX each day for the next week - and, maybe afterward.

It's all coming your way sumac - and ehBeth - maybe......... Hoping for the best.

sumac
 
  2  
Reply Mon 9 Aug, 2010 08:17 am
I heard, Danon. I'm out there dragging the hose around to water things.
0 Replies
 
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Mon 9 Aug, 2010 06:55 pm
g'day ya all...

Up at 5, took a nap at noon, got most of the 'to do' list completed, and the weathers' cooperated with nice low 80 temps. hurray!

Stay cool everyone with the newest heat wave arriving...should be here again next week also.

From an e mail friend:


The Italian Secret to a Long Marriage

At St. Peter's Catholic Church in Toronto , they have weekly
husband's marriage seminars.
At the session last week, the priest asked Giuseppe, who said
he was approaching his 50th wedding anniversary, to take a few
minutes and share some insight into how he had managed to stay
married to the same woman all these years.
Giuseppe replied to the assembled husbands, 'Wella, I'va tried
to treat her nicea, spenda da money on her, but besta of all
is, I tooka her to Italy for the 25th anniversary!'
The priest responded, 'Giuseppe, you
are an amazing inspiration to all the husbands here! Please
tell us what you are planning for your wife for your 50th
anniversary?'

Giuseppe proudly replied, " I gonna go pick her up."

laughing

Good evening all ~


danon5
 
  2  
Reply Mon 9 Aug, 2010 09:05 pm
@Stradee,
Shocked Laughing Laughing Laughing Laughing Laughing
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 02:41 am
@danon5,
All clicked and an interesting article about looks only a mother cound love.

August 9, 2010

A Masterpiece of Nature? Yuck!

By NATALIE ANGIER

A friend recently sent around an e-mail with the subject line “lost cat bulletin.” Open the message and — gack! — there was a head-on shot of a star-nosed mole, its “Dawn of the Dead” digging claws in full view and its hallmark nasal boutonniere of 22 highly sensitive feelers looking like fresh bits of sirloin being extruded through a meat grinder.

“I don’t think anyone would come near that cat, much less steal it,” tittered one respondent. Another participant, unfamiliar with the mole, wondered whether this was a “Photoshop project gone bad,” while a third simply wrote, “Ugh.”

We see images of jaguars, impalas and falcons and we praise their regal beauty and name our muscle cars for them. We watch a conga line of permanently tuxedoed penguins, and our hearts melt faster than the ice sheet beneath those adorable waddling feet. Even creatures phylogenetically far removed from ourselves can have an otherworldly appeal: jellyfish, octopus, praying mantis, horseshoe crab.

Yet there are some animals that few would choose as wallpaper for a Web browser — that, to the contrary, will often provoke in a human viewer a reflexive retraction of the nostrils accompanied by a guttural or adenoidal vocalization: ugh, yuck, ew.

Let’s not pussyfoot. They are, by our standards, ugly animals — maybe cute ugly, more often just ugly ugly. And though the science of ugliness lags behind investigations into the evolution of beauty and the metrics of a supermodel’s face, a few researchers are taking a crack at understanding why we find certain animals unsightly even when they don’t threaten us with venom or compete for our food.

Among the all-star uglies are the star-nosed mole, whose mug in close-up, said Nancy Kanwisher, a neuroscientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “is disturbing because it looks like the animal has no face,” or as if its face has been blown away. The blobfish, by contrast, is practically all face — a pale, gelatinous deep-sea creature whose large-lipped, sad-sack expression seems to be melting toward the floor.

“It looks like if you handled it,” said Geoffrey Miller, an evolutionary psychologist at the University of New Mexico, “at the very least you’d get some kind of rash.”

We have the male proboscis monkey and the male elephant seal, with their pendulous, vaguely salacious Jimmy Durantes, and the woolly bat and the vampire bat, their squashed snub noses accentuating their razor-toothed gapes. The warthog’s trapezoidal skull is straight out of Picasso’s “Guernica,” while the warthog’s kin, the babirusa, gives new meaning to the word skulduggery: On occasion, one of its two pairs of curving tusks will grow up and around and pierce right into its skull.

Don’t forget the gargoyles of our own creation, purebred cats and dogs that are stump-limbed, hairless and wrinkled, with buggy eyes and concave snouts, and ears as big as a jack rabbit’s or curled at the tips like rotini. We love them, we do, our dear little mutants, not in spite of their ugliness, but because of it.

As scientists see it, a comparative consideration of what we find freakish or unsettling in other species offers a fresh perspective on how we extract large amounts of visual information from a millisecond’s glance, and then spin, atomize and anthropomorphize that assessment into a revealing saga of ourselves.

“No one would find the star-nosed mole ugly if its star were iridescent blue,” said Denis Dutton, professor of the philosophy of art at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. “But the resemblance of the pinkish nose to human flesh subverts our expectations and becomes a perverse violation of whatever values we have about what constitutes normal or healthy human skin.”

Conservation researchers argue that only by being aware of our aesthetic prejudices can we set them aside when deciding which species cry out to be studied and saved. Reporting recently in the journal Conservation Biology, Morgan J. Trimble, a research fellow at the University of Pretoria in South Africa, and her colleagues examined the scientific literature for roughly 2,000 animal species in southern Africa, and uncovered evidence that scientists, like the rest of us, may be biased toward the beefcakes and beauty queens.

Assessing the publication database for the years 1994 through 2008, the researchers found 1,855 papers about chimpanzees, 1,241 on leopards and 562 about lions — but only 14 for that mammalian equivalent of the blobfish, the African manatee.

“The manatee was the least studied large mammal,” Ms. Trimble said. Speculating on a possible reason for the disparity, she said, “Most scientists are in it for the love of what they do, and a lot of them are interested in big, furry cute things.”

Or little cute things. Humans and other mammals seem to have an innate baby schema, an attraction to infant cues like large, wide-set eyes, a button nose and a mouth set low in the face, and the universality of these cues explains why mother dogs have been known to nurse kittens, lionesses to take care of antelope kids.

On a first pass, then, “ugliness would be the deviation from these qualities,” said David Perrett, an evolutionary psychologist at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Tiny, close-set eyes, prominent snout, no forehead to speak of: it sure sounds like a pig.

A helpless baby grows into a healthy, fertile youth, which in humans is visually characterized by clarity of shape, sleekness of form and visibility of musculature, said Wendy Steiner of the University of Pennsylvania, who is author of “Venus in Exile” and “The Real, Real Thing,” to be published this fall. “An animal with saggy skin, whiskers and no neck will look like some old guy who’s lost it,” she joked.

The more readily we can analogize between a particular animal body part and our own, the more likely we are to cry ugly. “We may not find an elephant’s trunk ugly because it’s so remote,” Dr. Dutton said. “But the proboscis on a proboscis monkey is close enough to our own that we apply human standards to it.” You can keep your rhinoplasty, though: the male monkey’s bulbous proboscis lends his mating vocalizations resonant oomph.

People are also keenly, even obsessively vigilant for signs of ill health in others. “That means anything that looks seriously asymmetrical when it should be symmetrical, that looks rough and irregular when it should be smooth, that looks like there might be parasites on the skin or worms under the skin, jaundice or pallor,” Dr. Miller said. “Anything mottled is considered unattractive. Patchy hair is considered unattractive.” We distinguish between the signs of an acquired illness and those of an innate abnormality. Splotches, bumps and greasy verdigris skin mean “possibly infectious illness,” while asymmetry and exaggerated, stunted or incomplete features hint of a congenital problem.

If we can’t help staring, well, life is nasty and brutish, but maybe a good gander at the troubles of others will keep it from being too short. “Deformities provide a lot of information about what can go wrong, and by contrast what good function is,” Dr. Miller said. “This is not just about physical deformities. People who seem crazy are also highly attention-grabbing.”

And as long as we’ve been gawking and rubbernecking, we’ve felt guilty about the urge. In his book “The Art Instinct: Beauty, Pleasure, and Human Evolution,” Dr. Dutton recounts a passage from Plato in which a man passing by a pile of corpses at the feet of an executioner wants desperately to look, tries to resist and then finally relents, scolding his “evil” eyes to “Take your fill of the beautiful sight!”

The appeal of ugly animals is that neither they nor their mothers will care if you stare, and if you own a pet that others find shocking or ugly, you probably won’t mind if others stare, too.

Joan Miller, vice president of the Cat Fanciers’ Association Inc., said she found the hairless Sphynx cat, with its “huge ears” and only “a minor amount of wrinkling,” to be “absolutely marvelous looking” and “strong as an ox,” although she conceded it sometimes needed to wear a sweater.

Classical beauty is easy, but a taste for the difficult, the unconventional, the ugly, has often been seen as a mark of sophistication, a passport into the rarefied world of the artistic vanguard. “Beauty can be present by its violation,” Dr. Steiner said, and the pinwheel appendages of the star-nosed mole are the rosy fingers of dawn.




More in Science (2 of 38 articles)
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Read More »

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0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 02:46 am
Is the bat going the way of the honey bee? Editorial from today's NYT.

August 9, 2010
A Destructive Epidemic
Since its discovery in a New York State cave in 2006, the fungus called Geomyces destructans has killed about a million cave-dwelling bats of several different species, including the most common Northeastern species, the little brown bat.

A new study, published in Science last week, concludes that little brown bats are likely to be extinct within two decades, possibly sooner. According to bat conservation experts, this is “the most precipitous decline of North American wildlife in recorded history” — worse than the destruction of the American bison and the passenger pigeon.

Bats afflicted with white-nose syndrome show white fungal splotches. Irritated by the fungus, which destroys the underlying tissue, bats rouse from hibernation early, depleting their energy reserves. Most bats infected with the syndrome are grossly underweight. In some caves, all the bats have died. And the disease has spread with astonishing speed, reaching Oklahoma this spring. In response, state and federal agencies have begun keeping humans out of caves and abandoned mines where bats roost in hopes of slowing the fungus.

It is difficult to imagine that an entire species, whose numbers are historically very large, could actually disappear. It is even more difficult, but equally unpleasant, to imagine how their disappearance might change an entire ecosystem.

The sky at dusk used to be filled with those predators, each one eating its body weight in insects nightly. Without them, the balance of nature will be changed, with potentially significant impact on agriculture and forestry, which have always depended — almost without knowing it — on the role of insectivorous bats.

Earlier this year, President Obama approved $1.9 million for research on white-nose syndrome, but that figure needs to be increased sharply at the earliest opportunity. We need to do everything we can to understand and counteract this terrible scourge.
0 Replies
 
High Seas
 
  3  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 03:13 pm
@danon5,
How are trees in NE TX holding up in the heat? I'll bet you can't locate each individual tree by GPS, but here in Manhattan we can:
Quote:
the Central Park Conservancy has counted every single tree over six inches in diameter, and horticulturists can download each one’s vital statistics by simply walking up to it with a GPS gadget. Every one of those 23,551 trees is, of course, worth a look. The 23 here are only the most notable.

This is #23 - an elm with a trunk circumference of almost 17 ft that may be one of the oldest trees in the park:
http://images.nymag.com/news/articles/10/08/trees/images/23.jpg
http://nymag.com/news/features/67404/
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 03:19 pm
That is nice, HS. Thanks.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 09:15 pm
@sumac,
Hi sumac thanks for the interesting articles........... Mom's are doting when the little ones are young - but, later???

HS, yes, I have a GPS finder etc. And, unfortunately last Wednesday I had four trees around the house cleared by a professional crew because they were dead or dying. Things here aren't what it used to be. The whole world is going to pot. Just look at Russia.

And the rest of the world.............

Not a good sight.

Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Tue 10 Aug, 2010 09:43 pm
@danon5,
Lovely, HS thanks.

I need GPS just to find my way through the forest...thank God for so many beautiful and healthy trees, although Dan, we lost five trees to drought last year.
With all the wonderful rain the past winter, pines are singin'!

HS, do you stroll through Central Park often? Must be quite beautiful during the Spring and summer months.

Reading about the terrible happenings around the globe weatherwise...sad stuff.

sue, interesting reads, thanks.

Thanking God all the wildclickers are safe and sound.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Wed 11 Aug, 2010 02:05 pm
All clicked and nothing new to report. Except that I bought a root feeder from Amazon.com. It has a longish metal tube that you push into the ground and hopefully into the root system. On top there is a valve and a place for you to screw in the hose, I am so tired of dragging the hose around and watering on the surface, with all the runoff and uncertainty as to when enough water has gone down. This will make my life easier here when there is so little rain.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Wed 11 Aug, 2010 02:06 pm
There is also a place to insert fertilizer pellets - thus the name feeder.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Wed 11 Aug, 2010 05:43 pm
@sumac,
Great sumac, I always say to myself - myself, how can I make my life more easy.

Good clicking all you great Wildclickers.......!

0 Replies
 
High Seas
 
  3  
Reply Wed 11 Aug, 2010 09:02 pm
@danon5,
danon5 wrote:

The whole world is going to pot. Just look at Russia.

And the rest of the world.............

Don't despair just yet - remember the infrared picture of the sun you liked? Well our star is acting up again, what we're seeing here on earth is aftereffects of its previous decade-long slumber. Rossby waves are moving westwards, interfering with the jet stream's eastward motion:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20727730.101-frozen-jet-stream-links-pakistan-floods-russian-fires.html
Quote:
...as the static jet stream snaked north over Russia, it pulled in a constant stream of hot air from Africa. The resulting heatwave is responsible for extensive drought and nearly 800 wildfires at the latest count. .......There is some tentative evidence that the sun may be involved. Earlier this year astrophysicist Mike Lockwood of the University of Reading, UK, showed that winter blocking events were more likely to happen over Europe when solar activity is low – triggering freezing winters
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Wed 11 Aug, 2010 09:42 pm
@High Seas,
Interesting explaination! Thanks

sue, sounds like you're moving right along with the gardening. woop!

Did nothing today except shop...no work at all! Now to give kittens tlc...they miss Bootsie so much...me as well. Bella won't stay inside the house at night and i'm very concerned. Both Bell and Amanda are acting out...poor babies. sigh

I didn't bring Boots home and bury her in the garden, instead i had her remains creamated and will bring them home next week. Wondering if not burying Boots in the garden has something to do with the way Bell and Amanda are feeling. Difficult to tell.

Well, have a good evening all.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  3  
Reply Thu 12 Aug, 2010 03:18 am
August 11, 2010
Farmers Lean to Truce on Animals’ Close Quarters
By ERIK ECKHOLM
WEST MANSFIELD, Ohio — Concessions by farmers in this state to sharply restrict the close confinement of hens, hogs and veal calves are the latest sign that so-called factory farming — a staple of modern agriculture that is seen by critics as inhumane and a threat to the environment and health — is on the verge of significant change.

A recent agreement between farmers and animal rights activists here is a rare compromise in the bitter and growing debate over large-scale, intensive methods of producing eggs and meat, and may well push farmers in other states to give ground, experts say. The rising consumer preference for more “natural” and local products and concerns about pollution and antibiotic use in giant livestock operations are also driving change.

The surprise truce in Ohio follows stronger limits imposed by California voters in 2008; there, extreme caging methods will be banned altogether by 2015. In another sign of the growing clout of the animal welfare movement, a law passed in California this year will also ban imports from other states of eggs produced in crowded cages. Similar limits were approved last year in Michigan and less sweeping restrictions have been adopted in Florida, Arizona and other states.

Hoping to avoid a divisive November referendum that some farmers feared they would lose, Gov. Ted Strickland of Ohio urged farm leaders to negotiate with opponents, led by the Humane Society of the United States. After secret negotiations, the sides agreed to bar new construction of egg farms that pack birds in cages, and to phase out the tight caging of pregnant sows within 15 years and of veal calves by 2017.

Farmers in Ohio have accepted the agreement with chagrin, saying they sense that they must bend with the political and cultural winds. Tim Weaver, whose grandparents started selling eggs in the early 20th century, is proud of his state-of-the art facilities, where four million birds produce more than three million eggs a day. In just one typical barn here at his Heartland Quality Egg Farm, 268,000 small white hens live in cages about the size of an open newspaper, six or seven to a cage.

Mr. Weaver said that after his initial shock at the agreement, he has accepted it as necessary. He will not be immediately affected since it allows existing egg farms to continue but bars new ones with similar cages. He defends his methods, saying, “My own belief is that I’m doing the right thing.”

Egg production is at the center of the debate because more than 90 percent of the country’s eggs are now produced in the stacked rows of cages that critics call inhumane.

Ohio is the country’s second-largest egg producer, after Iowa. In the modern version of an egg barn, hordes of hens live with computer-controlled air circulation, lighting and feeding, their droppings whisked away by conveyor belt for recycling as fertilizer. As the hens jostle one other, their eggs roll onto a belt to be washed, graded and packed without ever being touched by human hands.

Mr. Weaver insists that his chickens are content and less prone to disease than those in barnyard flocks, saying, “If our chickens aren’t healthy and happy, they won’t be as productive.”

Keeping chickens in cages is cruel and unnecessary, counter advocates like Wayne Pacelle, chief executive of the Humane Society of the United States, which has played a central role in the state-by-state battles. “Animals that are built to move should be allowed to move,” he said in an interview, and for chickens that means space for dust-bathing, perching and nesting.

The assertion that animals must be “happy” to be productive is not accurate, Mr. Pacelle added, pointing to abnormal behaviors like head waving or bar-biting and to a loss of bone density in confined animals.

In the mid-20th century, developments in animal nutrition and farm technologies as well as economic competition spurred the emergence of large-scale farms, often driving out small farmers who could not afford the large capital investments or survive the lower prices.

Now, the United Egg Producers, a national trade group, says that egg prices would rise by 25 percent if all eggs were produced by uncaged hens, putting stress on consumers and school lunch programs. Animal proponents say that better noncage methods could be developed and that price is not the ultimate issue anyway.

The American Veal Association, under pressure from consumers, agreed in 2007 to phase out the close confinement of calves by 2017. The requirement in the California law and the Ohio agreement to phase out the use of “gestation crates” on hog farms will have much wider effects.

The family of Irv Bell, 64, has been growing hogs in Zanesville, Ohio, since the 19th century. Where males and females were once put into a pen to mate, sows are now inseminated artificially and most are kept through their pregnancy in a 2-by-7-foot crate, in which they can lie down but not turn.

“I work with the hogs every day, and I don’t think there is anything wrong with gestation crates,” he said. “But I have to be aware of things on the horizon, the bigger things at work.”

Formally, the new Ohio agreement only makes recommendations to a state livestock standards board, and getting opponents to recognize the authority of that board was an important achievement, said Keith Stimpert, a senior vice president of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation. “We all know change is coming,” Mr. Stimpert said, adding that farmers would also respond to demands by consumers and restaurants for free-range products.

“But is this how we’re going to deal with these issues, on a state-by-state basis?” he asked. That timetables and rules differ among states is going to cause economic harm, he said.

The Humane Society of the United States, for its part, is already picking new targets. The advocates have the most leverage, Mr. Pacelle said, in the states that permit referendums. He said that the issues were likely to be pressed in Washington and Oregon. Winning concessions may be harder, he acknowledged, in states without referendums, including Iowa and the South.

Meanwhile, a new dispute over chicken cages is already brewing in California. The breakthrough 2008 law said that animals could be confined only in ways that allowed them “to lie down, stand up, fully extend their limbs and turn around freely.” Egg producers and even some animal advocates say this may permit housing hens in larger “enriched cages,” with perches and nesting spots.

Mr. Pacelle asserts that no form of caging can meet a chicken’s needs for “running, flying and wing flapping” and that denying these impulses can cause a rise in stress hormones.

“There’s going to be a legal wrangle over this,” Mr. Pacelle predicted.
Stradee
 
  2  
Reply Thu 12 Aug, 2010 07:38 am
@sumac,
Yeah, after eons of attempts...i still don't like "2017" as a target year.

Also, people should be aware that millions of gallons of water are needed at CAFO's. Millions each quarter...saying nothing for conservation...

Saw a documentary on PBS, a woman egg farmer removing dead chickens from "roosts" each day...her visibly upset and saying "this is not farming".

Quote:
Now, the United Egg Producers, a national trade group, says that egg prices would rise by 25 percent if all eggs were produced by uncaged hens, putting stress on consumers and school lunch programs. Animal proponents say that better noncage methods could be developed and that price is not the ultimate issue anyway.


hmmm, less cost for antibiotics, feed, housing...what the council is saying is that corps won't be making millions in write offs for 'loss'.


0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  2  
Reply Thu 12 Aug, 2010 08:22 am
Progress is often measured in small steps, Stradee. All clicked.
danon5
 
  2  
Reply Thu 12 Aug, 2010 10:48 am
@sumac,
Hey, good stuff you guys........ I never liked the "penned up" growing of any animal. We should pen those guys up for a day and see how they like it. The bottom line is money.
Everyone when I was young called "lower animals" dumb. I don't think they are dumb - we just don't speak their language.

HS, I never associated the sun's recent activity with our recent Earth Warming and Weather......Except for the warming trends in the Pacific that drives our jetstreams. Those Ninyos (sp) do affect us. You are right - the sun has everything to do with what's happening on our spaceship.

Anyway, today we Wildclickers saved another tree here on Earth.

That's a good thing.



 

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