Tommy's "Wild Life" adventures. Lifestyle and island living insights on the most remote inhabited community in the UK. Fair Isle, Shetland Islands, Scotland. - Population 45 Resident Islanders, 1200 Sheep, 20,000 Puffins and a few rare birds.
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Sunday, April 29, 2012
Friday, April 27, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Birds, Art & Cute Lambs - random photos of Fair Isle
The Bluethroat |
This Painting commemorates the first Bluethroat I ever saw... Spring 2007 in the Ferny Cup, Fair Isle. After hearing that a Bluethroat was seen Henry & I went looking for it... such a small bird in a big open area for two new birdwatchers. I was looking at a pipit when Henry said there it is! He was right of course. Now the painting has the excitement and the unbelievable flash of colour I felt when the little bird turned it's chest into the light and indeed it was a Bluethroat. I can't wait to see one again this year!
Kestrel on the garden wall. |
Jimmy's Big Lambs |
Love the Beard! - Bearded Bunting? or Whiskered Sparrow? |
"Shearwater" Malcom Green & Tim Dallins Thanks guys! You really know how to put on a show! |
Common Crane not so common here on Fair Isle. Please forgive this record shot from a half a mile away... it's badly taken in light rain with a fully zoomed pocket camera in a friends scope. |
Black-Eyed Suzanne our caddy lamb from 2007 had triplets! Now we are getting a caddy from our caddy! How cool is that! Her name will be Suzie Q |
Henry & Suzie Q only 4 hours old. |
1st Barn Swallows of the year |
Large Butterfish |
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Great Grey Shrike in the ringing room
Great Grey Shrike - Lanius excubitor |
no one wants to see you Tommy... photo & comment by my son Henry |
Asst. Warden Jason Moss & Great Grey Shrike in the ringing room at the Fair Isle Bird Observatory.
The white on the tail feathers give clues to the birds sub species? |
Thanks Jason it's nice to see one in the hand. |
What a beauty!
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Hawfinch - Auld Haafinch up close and personal
Fair Isle Bird Observatory Staff came in for a front row seat! |
Sunday, April 08, 2012
Easter Foiled Again! First Baby Lamb & Sea Snail Fish
Thank You Easter Bunny! |
Foiled Again! |
Skerry Holm's first lamb & mother |
Spring vacation & low tides means plenty of tidepooling...
This fish is called a Sea Snail a first or lifer for us! |
Montaga's Sea Snail Liparis montagui
We think? it's also called a Tadpole Fish?
it looks more like a tadpole than a snail to us?
Butterfish Pholis gunnellus |
Sunday, April 01, 2012
Great Auk Clones to be Hatched on Fair Isle! Extinct no More?
The Great Auk is large and
flightless seabird, it was also known as a penguin and garefowl and was hunted to extinction for its oil, feathers and eggs. The seabird was a familiar sight to sailors and
islanders in the North Atlantic until the mid
1800s. In Scotland ,
the last one was thought to have been caught and killed on the remote island
archipelago of St Kilda. According to the National Trust for Scotland (the
owners of St Kilda), it occasionally visited the island group. Scots writer Martin. Martin wrote of seeing the bird there in his book A Late Voyage to St Kilda
1698 referring to the bird as a Witch.
St. Kilda boast
the last recorded sighting of a Great Auk in the British
Isles .
It was made in 1840,
when islanders on Stac an Armin suspected it was a witch and the cause of a
tremendous storm. The last breeding
pair are believed to have been spotted (and promptly killed) in 1844 by sailors on a rocky outcrop on
the island of Eldey
off Iceland . And the last
recorded sighting was in Newfoundland , Canada , in
1852.
Pioneering ornithologist Dr. Eagle Clark (1912) refers to a statement in Baikie and Hedle's Historia Naturis Orcadensis (1848) that one was seen off Fair Isle in June 1798. The Great Auk was still known to breed at Papa Westray, about 40 miles away at the time. I can not find this book but would like to see if it has any other Fair Isle bird info?
More great Great Auk info & History: http://www.messybeast.com/extinct/great-auk.htm
a bit of the Science publish in the Oxford Journals: http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/content/19/9/1434.full
Fig. 1.—Organization
and sequence characteristics of great auk mtDNA. a, Schematic representation of a 4,258-bp
mtDNA region in great auk. The length of each gene is indicated, and lengths of
the intergenic spacers are given below the gene junctions. For designation of
tRNAs the corresponding three-letter amino acid code is used. A representation
of the control region with conserved boxes F, D, C, and conserved sequence
block I (CSB I) is given below. The heteroplasmic tandem repeat (HTR) region
and a possible TAS are indicated. b, Multiple sequence alignment of the 3′
end of the control region showing the position and sequence motifs of HTRs in CR
III of six alcid species. Dashes represent gaps. HTR sequence motifs are shown
in brackets, and n designates the variable number of
repeats found within single individuals, a condition known as heteroplasmy. The
3′ end of the CR is indicated
Since
2002 Scientists at the Royal
Ontario Museum
have been slowly but successfully piecing together the genetic blueprint of the
Great Auk from the scattered remains of a bird whose extinction at the hand of
man in the first half of the 19th century has made it the tragic figure of
Canadian nature.
In a
project aimed at tracing the Great Auk's evolutionary history and establishing
its relationship to several living species of birds, the researchers are also
taking the first steps toward a tantalizing possibility: the complete mapping
of an extinct animal's genome and its resurrection through cloning
Razorbill parents of a cloned Great Auk chick. |
As a human I have always been ashamed of this type of mass extinction.
I wish that I could say the Great Auk flies again! even though it never could...
If you have not figured it out yet...
April Fools!
The above links I found by google and are real as far as I know?
Dr. April J. First says cloning gone wild will have to wait a few years...
If you have not figured it out yet...
April Fools!
The above links I found by google and are real as far as I know?
Dr. April J. First says cloning gone wild will have to wait a few years...