Category: Make a Difference: Community & Calls to Action

  • Giant Squirrel Back in Business: the Recovery of the Delmarva Fox Squirrel

    Giant Squirrel Back in Business: the Recovery of the Delmarva Fox Squirrel

    Delmarva Fox Squirrel

    The worst thing that will probably happen—in fact is already well underway—is not energy depletion, economic collapse, conventional war, or the expansion of totalitarian governments. As terrible as these catastrophes would be for us, they can be repaired in a few generations.

    The one process now going on that will take millions of years to correct is loss of genetic and species diversity by the destruction of natural habitats.

    This is the folly our descendants are least likely to forgive us.

    — E.O. Wilson

    A local squirrel I’ve never heard of, the Delmarva fox squirrel, is being removed from the Endangered Species list!

    The Delmarva fox squirrel was one of the animals included on the first Endangered Species list of protected animals— it actually came under federal protection six years before the Endangered Species Act became law. That was in 1967, and it’s taken 50 years for the squirrel to make enough of a recovery to be de-listed. In fact, it’s not even included in my Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Mammals; presumably no one expected I would ever see one (granted, my edition was published in 1980).

    In 1967, the Delmarva fox squirrel had lost all but 10% of its range due to overhunting and loss of habitat; that’s been increased to 28%. Today, an estimated 20,000 squirrels can be found ranging over 10 counties.

    It’s worth noting that 80% of that range is on private land, and a good bit of the remainder consists of wildlife refuge areas. It takes a village— or, rather, a bunch of people who are willing to share their own habitat with local wildlife.

    The Delmarva fox squirrel can grow up to 30 inches and are typically silvery-gray but coloring can vary to nearly black. The squirrel we’re used to seeing around here, the gray squirrel, is more chatty and smaller, with a narrower tail and more brownish coloring. Delmarva fox squirrels also spend more time on the ground, not jumping from tree limb to tree limb like the insane attention seeking squirrels in my backyard.

     

    Local folks can go look for a Delmarva fox squirrel at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge in Sussex County, at Blackwater in Dorchester County, Maryland) and at Chincoteague. Eagle eyes might spot one in wooded areas within that range, but they don’t tend to wander into more populated areas like its gray cousin.

    More than 30 species have been delisted since the Endangered Species Act began, including the bald eagle, American alligator and peregrine falcon. Every animal plays a valuable role in their ecosystem and food chain, and we can’t fully realize the consequences of their removal until it’s too late.

    The best ways we can help:

    • learning about endangered species
    • donating to conservation efforts
    • volunteering at state parks and wildlife refuges
    • cultivating gardens and wild spaces that support local flora and fauna,
    • inspiring our friends and neighbors to do the same.

    Few problems are less recognized, but more important than,
    the accelerating disappearance of the earth’s biological resources.

    In pushing other species to extinction,
    humanity is busy sawing off the limb on which it is perched.

    — Paul R. Ehrlich

     

    Photo credit Depositphotos

     

  • Eastern Cougar: No Longer Endangered. That’s Not a Good Thing.

    Eastern Cougar: No Longer Endangered. That’s Not a Good Thing.

    cougar

    The one process now going on that will take millions of years to correct is the loss of genetic and species diversity by the destruction of natural habitats.

    This is the folly our descendants are least likely to forgive us.

    E. O. Wilson

    When I was a kid, there was a riddle that went along these lines:

    A hunter is approached by a cougar, a mountain lion, and a puma. He has only one bullet left. What should he shoot first to ensure his safety?

    The answer then was that it didn’t matter; a cougar, mountain lion and puma are all the same animal (technically the puma is a subspecies of the cougar/mountain lion), so he was only being approached by one beast.

    The answer now is that it doesn’t really matter, because the US Fish and Wildlife service has called for removing federal protection for the Eastern cougar. It will no longer be on the endangered list.

    It’s extinct.

    There used to be tons, but overzealous hunters and habitat loss— which in turn affected numbers of white tailed deer, cougar prey— whittled away at cougar populations. The bulk of this happened in the 1800s when settlers were, well, settling in across the country and looking to protect their livestock. But since we haven’t done a whole lot to reinstate that habitat the cougar never really had a chance.

    We are already feeling the effects of the loss of the cougar. Where I live the white tailed deer population has exploded due to having no natural predators around. I narrowly avoid hitting a deer with my car on a weekly basis. Hunting season keeps their numbers from being catastrophic, but it doesn’t work the same way natural selection does. Hunters want the strong, older, trophy deer; not the old, the sick, the genetically inferior. I don’t know if that’s somehow connected to the uptick in Lyme disease through deer ticks in this region, but it seems like a logical train of thought.

    How will losing more animals listed as endangered or vulnerable— the loggerhead turtle, the blue whale, sea lions, the monarch butterfly, the jaguar, the great white shark— affect the ecosystems around them? We’re not just losing that magnificent animal, we’re taking a link out of the food chain. There is no real way for us to clearly see just how severe the ramifications may be.

    The only way to truly protect these animals is to protect their habitats, which means a reversal of what was set in motion by the settlers in the 1800s. It seems like an impossible task; all we can do is try. (Here’s what you can do to help endangered species.)

    Mother Nature is highly adaptable, but the pace we’ve asked of her is too fast. We need to actively support other species of big cats, in the hopes that they will fill the gap in the food chain left by the eastern cougar.

    But mostly we need to recognize that we’re not the only ones on this earth, and it’s our responsibility to stop acting like we are.

    Photo: DepositPhotos

  • Recycling Beauty Products in the Bathroom (Amazon Gift Card Giveaway)

    Recycling Beauty Products in the Bathroom (Amazon Gift Card Giveaway)

    Recycling in the Bathroom

    Do you have a recycling bin in your bathroom?

    Only 10% of Americans do, compared to a surprisingly respectable 45% who have one in their kitchen (honestly, I never would have guessed that high a number).

    Out of sight, out of mind: unsurprisingly, people are less likely to recycle bathroom items than they are kitchen items. According to new research commissioned by the Ad Council, 47% of those surveyed said they don’t think about recycling materials in the bathroom, and 52 percent admitted that they have a lack of knowledge around which items can be recycled.

    bathroom recycling tips

    So we’ve come a long way on recycling in general, but there’s always room for a bit of improvement, eh? In 2012, Americans generated about 251 million tons of trash and only about 35% of that was recycled. 27.4% of the trash headed for landfills was paper/paperboard, and 12.7% of it was plastics: both easily recycled.

    We can collectively put a big dent in those numbers by changing our bathroom habits. Set up a recycling station in your bathroom for:

    • toilet paper rolls
    • the cardboard packaging toothpaste, soap and other beauty products come in
    • shampoo, conditioner, mouthwash, styling product bottles
    • deodorant and dental floss packaging
    • aerosol cans (like spray sunscreen)
    • pill containers

    (No curbside recycling from your waste company? Find your nearest recycling centers here.)

    [Tweet “Your bathroom products want to become something new! Think beyond the kitchen; keep a bathroom recycling bin to close the loop #berecycled”]

    Now, most recycling centers will only accept #1 and #2 plastics. Check to see what can be collected in your area, but don’t give up on those harder to recycle items like mascara bottles, toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes. Consider collecting those and sending off to Terracycle; some programs have a cost, but most offer free shipping plus a donation to a non-profit organization or school for each piece of garbage that you collect. (Shipments need to be fairly sizeable though, so this is a great way for kids to get friends and neighbors involved as you pool your collected items for shipment!)

    What can these items be recycled into? Functional items, like hairbrushes…

    Or park benches in your community.

     
    When purchasing new beauty items, keep an eye out for products that can be easily recycled; ideally those that are made with recycled materials. Explore the bulk bin of your local co-op, or the handmade wares at your farmers market!

    Find out more about how and why to recycle, and what your recyclables can find new lives as at iwanttoberecycled.org.

     

    What do you recycle?

    Let me know below and make sure to enter the Amazon gift card giveaway!

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