Tag: Endangered Species

  • 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

     

  • Loggerhead Turtle Love: Loggerhead Apparel Giveaway

    Loggerhead Turtle Love: Loggerhead Apparel Giveaway

     
    aquarium turtle

    The oceans are the planet’s last great living wilderness,
    man’s only remaining frontier on Earth,
    and perhaps his last chance to prove himself a rational species.

    -John L. Culliney

     

    Feeling a little out of place at a wedding reception at the Camden Aquarium, I made friends with a loggerhead turtle.

    This is why I am not anti-zoo or anti-aquarium. For most of us, this is the only chance we have to interact with some of the world’s majestic creatures, and we need those connections to strengthen our commitment to saving them.

    I would never have guessed that one of my more emotional connections with an animal would be with a plane of glass between us, but there you go. He swam right up to me, I looked in his eye, he stayed awhile so I could admire. At night’s end, I felt compelled to say goodbye and he returned immediately to the glass as though he’d been waiting. He did the same when I took my kids there years later. Coincidence? Does he just really like to look at people through the glass? Probably, but I was affected just the same.

    Loggerhead turtles are endangered. They are beautiful, elegant creatures, 3 feet in length, and like dolphins will become hooked on lines or caught in nets. They travel great distances all over so their odds of being snagged are high, and they need air to breathe. They struggle and drown.

    Loggerheads are important to ocean ecology in that they carry up to 100 plant and animal species on their backs from place to place, a habitat in themselves; their omnivorous eating patterns and migration mean they are key to recycling ocean floor nutrients and keeping them in balance.

     

     

    LoggerheadApparelLogo-558x390

     

     

    Sarah at USA Love List (a site dedicated to products made in the USA, check it out!) introduced me to Loggerhead Apparel, a clothing company dedicated to supporting their local textile industry and the loggerheads:

    The Loggerhead Sea Turtle is an endangered species, and the coast of South Carolina is extremely important to its survival.The textile industry of South Carolina, once thriving, is as endangered as the Loggerhead, and has a huge impact on the economy of our state.

    Loggerhead Apparel will provide top-quality, American-grown, American-made clothing at a fair price. Ten percent of the revenue gained from the sale of all Loggerhead Apparel shirts will be donated directly to local causes supporting the conservation and protection of the Loggerhead.

    In addition to supporting the Loggerhead, Loggerhead Apparel will also support the local textile industry, because no part of the production process will take place outside of the United States.

    They also helpfully list a number of organizations to support if you would like to learn more about protecting the loggerhead turtle.

    You know how I feel about using your dollar to support businesses whose values align with yours, so I’m happy to share this company’s mission with you.

    But today I ALSO get to take part in a giveaway. So enter for your chance to win a Loggerhead Apparel polo— and if you win, when people ask about the adorb embroidered turtle, tell them about the company and the need to save the endangered loggerhead turtle and conserve our oceans.

    Deal?

     

    BellwetherPolos

     
    There are lots of ways to enter, do whichever you like to increase your odds of winning.

    Good luck!

     

    a Rafflecopter giveaway