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Back to 1969 - a year in the rainforest (thread 69)

 
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 02:39 am
You know, I like the general concept, Amigo, particularly about cross-posting it to Trivia. And it will get people to do some research and learn something.
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 08:16 am
you're on Amigo

<please put the number 70 somewhere in your title so we don't lose track>

~~~~~~~~~~

aktbird57 - You and your 293 friends have supported 2,331,483.7 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 107,434.8 square feet.

American Prairie habitat supported: 50,703.0 square feet.

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,173,345.9 square feet.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

2331483.7 square feet is equal to 53.52 acres
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danon5
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 08:18 am
I'm Monitoring the post.

Meanwhile, have clickednclickednclickednclickedn'n'n'etc.
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 08:25 am
We'll back you up, Amigo. Don't hesitate to ask if you aren't sure of something.
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 10:09 am
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 10:10 am
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Iguana-Tax.html?pagewanted=print

"April 14, 2006
Fla. Island Residents Besieged by Iguanas
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 5:46 a.m. ET

BOCA GRANDE, Fla. (AP) -- Death and taxes may be life's only certainties, but for folks in this upscale island town, add iguanas. And another tax.

During the last three decades, the resort community on Florida's Gulf Coast has been overrun by the black, spiny-tailed, nonnative lizards that demolish gardens, nest in attics and weaken beach dunes with burrows.

Last month, Lee County commissioners agreed to create a special tax for Boca Grande to cover costs of studying the infestation on the barrier island of Gasparilla, where scientists estimate there are up to 12,000 iguanas on the loose, more than 10 for every year-round resident.

The frustration here has led to frenzy. Bonnie McGee keeps a pellet gun by her door ready to take on the slithering enemy.

''They eat your flowers and their feces is everywhere,'' she said, adding that she's killed dozens. ''Some people toss them in the canal and the hermit crabs feed on them.''

Aaron Diaz, owner of Boca Grande's Barnichol hardware store, said he has sold 75 traps in the past three weeks alone.

''For some people, they've really taken over, climbing into attics, into vents and even into their toilets,'' he said.

County Commissioner Bob Janes doesn't know how much eradication will cost, so he's not sure how much the tax will be. He said the issue has finally come to a head.

''In 1988, there was talk of a program but people at that time thought they were kind of cute,'' Janes said. ''They're no longer cute little guys. They're very pesky.''

Kevin Enge, an exotic species expert with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, said he believes the iguana was introduced to Boca Grande in the 1970s by a boat captain who brought a few from Mexico for his kids but released them when they grew too large. Their population exploded because each female iguana can lay up to 75 eggs a year.

...The county hired Florida Gulf Coast University biologist Jerry Jackson to study the problem. He is worried the lizards aren't just a nuisance, but are destroying native habitat, spreading other invasive species through their droppings and endangering the town in the event of a hurricane.

''The majority of their burrows are in the dunes along the beaches,'' Jackson said. ''We're threatening the human population on Gasparilla Island to the extent that the dunes are in danger of just disappearing with a storm surge.''

The iguanas feed on the eggs of gopher tortoises, a species of ''special concern'' that the state says will likely to be bumped up to threatened in a few months as their population declines.

The lizards also carry salmonella.

''The disease organism alone could be a problem for native species, even for humans,'' Jackson said. ''It's a zoo out there. It's an ecosystem gone crazy.''

Even the local weekly paper, the Boca Beacon, gets flooded with letters about iguanas."
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 10:12 am
Note that one of the uses is for hunting preserves.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060413/sc_nm/environment_gamecapture_dc&printer=1;_ylt=Am78ZMpena8RmmpSYOWvTgkiANEA;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-

"Capturing big animals is big business in S. Africa
By Ed Stoddard
Wed Apr 12, 9:06 PM ET



The helicopter hovers a few meters above the thorn trees like a mechanical bird of prey.

In the bush below is its quarry -- a young adult bull rhinoceros weighing almost a tonne which is succumbing to the effects of a dart fired from the air.

When the beast is deemed sufficiently groggy, the game capture team drapes a cloth over its eyes and goes to work as its legs wobble and it sinks to the ground.

The operation is carried out with clinical precision: the animal is roped while a hole is drilled in its horns to accommodate a microchip.

"It's a bar code. It's unique, so if it ever gets poached we can trace it," says Jeff Cooke, the head of the game capture unit for KZN Wildlife, the conservation body for KwaZulu-Natal province.

Game capture is serious business in South Africa, where it has been honed to a fine science to supply niche markets.

Almost unique in the world, South Africa's privately owned wildlife and game breeding has been a growth industry, although there are signs it has peaked with prices declining partly because of the large supply of animals.

Animals are bred for a range of purposes: for conservation, for hunting, and for sale to other game reserves. They are captured on both state-owned and private land.

Sales from game auctions in the country last year amounted to 93.5 million rand ($15.30 million) compared with about 101.3 million rand in 2004, according to one estimate.

KZN Wildlife says revenue raised from its own game auctions was about 9.1 million rand last year compared with almost 22 million rand in 2001, but turnover has been up and down.

It remains high enough to support a burgeoning industry dedicated to the live capture and transport of wildlife.

FLY-BY-NIGHTERS

"It is a growing industry though nobody knows exactly how many operators there are," said Petronel Nieuwoudt, who runs a game capture school.

"There are some good operators out there but unfortunately there are also some fly-by-nighters and that is bad because animals can easily die from stress," she told Reuters.

KZN Wildlife alone moves between 3,500 and 4,500 head of game each year. They range from dainty duikers, a small species of antelope, all the way up to elephants.

The rhino being captured on this day is the first to be offered on the market by the Makhasa Game Reserve, a 1,700-hectare (4,200-acre) conservation area owned by the local black community.

The money will be used to raise funds for the nearby villages and the running of the park.

"This is going to mean a lot for our community," said Simon Gumede, the community's traditional leader, as he gripped the animal's horn while the capture unit went about its work.

The work is exacting, from the timing to the dosages used.

Dragged from the bush into a clearing, the rhino is given a carefully measured adrenaline shot to revive it partly.

This enables the blindfolded animal to stagger to its feet. With a rope around its snout, it is guided by team members into a metal crate, which is winched on to a flatbed truck.

There is no margin for error.

"If the animal gets an incorrect dose it can come around faster than expected and break loose. Then you're in trouble," said KZN Wildlife's communications manager Jeff Gaisford.

SPLIT-SECOND TIMING

The darting operation involves split-second timing and steely nerves on the part of the pilot and the marksman.

"I try to get within 50 meters of the animal for the darter," said pilot Vere van Heerden.

A darted animal takes four minutes to fall, so van Heerden tries to make sure the shot is fired near a clearing where it will be easy for vehicles to get close.

"As soon as it is darted we start a stopwatch," he said.

Lots can go wrong.

"You handle every species differently and you need to know what you are doing...you can't use the same drugs for cats that you use for herbivores," said Nieuwoudt.

"You can use the wrong drug or dose and kill an animal. Or if it's position is wrong it can bloat. Or it can run too far or get stressed when it is being moved," she said.

Elephants must be doused constantly with water to keep them from overheating and are winched while unconscious into their carrying crates.

Lions are darted at night and individual animals must be separated from the rest of the pride -- no easy task.

The work is also very expensive.

On this morning, the helicopter takes about three hours to find a suitable animal to dart, and its operator charges by the hour. One KZN source said the whole operation probably cost about 20,000 rand including the drugs.

The community will probably get about 70,000 rand for the rhino and there were plans to catch another for sale.

Game capture vehicles with cranes and crates are expensive and helicopters are needed for rhino and elephants, pointing to a capital-intensive industry.

However, the high costs and risks highlight the lucrative nature of the business.

($1=6.111 Rand) "
0 Replies
 
danon5
 
  1  
Reply Fri 14 Apr, 2006 08:21 pm
[quote
Q; Largest lizard on earth????[/quote]

ans = ((at least my answer =))

Still MONITOR - ing the site - - - Staying the course for MONITOR - ing purposes.................................
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Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 12:15 am
Click, click, click (x3). Very Happy

Q. Lagest lizard on earth. A. Komodo Dragon (that was an easy one)

http://www.dennisprager.com/assets/PragerSnapShots/dragon.jpg
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 05:37 am
wowee. Godzilla.
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Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 02:44 pm
Q. Whats the smallest Island on the planet.

(I don't even know if I can amswer that, I don't know the answer)Thats not the island


http://www.nmm.ac.uk/upload/img/104004A-island.jpg
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 03:28 pm
aktbird57 - You and your 293 friends have supported 2,333,192.8 square feet!

Marine Wetlands habitat supported: 107,598.6 square feet.

American Prairie habitat supported: 50,749.8 square feet.

Rainforest habitat supported: 2,174,844.4 square feet.

~~~~~~~~~

2333192.8 square feet is equal to 53.56 acres
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 04:03 pm
I imagine you woiuld also need to know the year - as islands come and go.
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danon5
 
  1  
Reply Sat 15 Apr, 2006 06:47 pm
There are islands in the Bahamas for sale - some of the cheaper ones are about ten feet across - but still are thousands of dollars. grin

clicked away........
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 04:17 am
There is a sucker born every second. And greedy people every other second.
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Stradee
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 09:17 am
HAPPY


http://www.xmission.com/~tssphoto/easter/easter_title.gif


WILDCLICKERS
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sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 12:09 pm
Glad to see you Stradee. I thought you might have been flooded out.
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Amigo
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 12:15 pm
http://www.btinternet.com/~k.trethewey/images/Bishop1.jpg

Q. Smallest Island on Earth?

A. British Rock.

The smallest island in the world - according to the Guiness Book of Records - is Bishop Rock. It lies at the most south-westerly part of the United Kingdom. It is one of 1040 islands around Britain and only has a lighthouse on it. In 1861, the British government set out the parameters for classifying an island. It was decided that if it was inhabited, the size was immaterial. However, if it was uninhabited, it had to be "the summer's pasturage of at least one sheep" - which is about two acres.
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 12:20 pm
Very enlightening, Amigo. Two acres, huh?
0 Replies
 
sumac
 
  1  
Reply Sun 16 Apr, 2006 01:47 pm
All clicked.
0 Replies
 
 

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