Back yard critters

This morning was the first of the last three where the clucking of turkeys didn't wake me up. Instead I looked out in the predawn glow to see Bambi's mom fattening up on acorns. Interesting thing is that we had our first killing frost this past night, but that frost didn't quite make it to the water as can be seen by the clear demarcation in the photo as the doe is standing just in front of the slope down to the water...

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Not in the backyard but on the corner of Ocean Avenue and Hawkins Boulevard a major traffic intersection when I turn the corner a lady had a giant 10 foot branch trying to chase him off the road he would not leave I went and did a job came back 30 minutes later and he was still in the middle of the road just walking around
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Not in the backyard but on the corner of Ocean Avenue and Hawkins Boulevard a major traffic intersection when I turn the corner a lady had a giant 10 foot branch trying to chase him off the road he would not leave I went and did a job came back 30 minutes later and he was still in the middle of the road just walking aroundView attachment 26024View attachment 26025
Hope someone hit it so it gets removed from the gene pool...

There are 4 big Toms in the backyard right now. I'm sorely tempted to pop one...
 
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Dang, that Tom Quartet is really testing my self restraint. They've been showing up in the backyard in the late afternoon and feeding, roosting in the oaks every night, and feeding again in the early morning since Wednesday. I bet one is pushing 20 lbs and would easily feed the whole family for Thanksgiving...

Sorry for the picture quality, but I shut off the flash to keep from spooking them. All four of them are in this photo, with 3 easily discernable...

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Dang, that Tom Quartet is really testing my self restraint. They've been showing up in the backyard in the late afternoon and feeding, roosting in the oaks every night, and feeding again in the early morning since Wednesday. I bet one is pushing 20 lbs and would easily feed the whole family for Thanksgiving...

Sorry for the picture quality, but I shut off the flash to keep from spooking them. All four of them are in this photo, with 3 easily discernable...

View attachment 26115
?????? roccussssss that will take care of that?,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,><)))):>
><))):>
 
Dang, that Tom Quartet is really testing my self restraint. They've been showing up in the backyard in the late afternoon and feeding, roosting in the oaks every night, and feeding again in the early morning since Wednesday. I bet one is pushing 20 lbs and would easily feed the whole family for Thanksgiving...

Sorry for the picture quality, but I shut off the flash to keep from spooking them. All four of them are in this photo, with 3 easily discernable...

View attachment 26115
You live in their home deal with it
 
You live in their home deal with it
Oh, not complaining, love to see them. I'm just contemplating inviting one to be the guest of honor on Thanksgiving. I was disappointed not to see them last evening, but I was out grilling and figured that wouldn't happen, but I did see a 6 point buck after dark.

The critters are loving the glut of acorn...
 
OK, this is a first. Been watching squirrels, gray & red, going nuts on all the acorns the past week. I grilled some spare ribs tonight and a fire started, which didn't surprise me much. When I opened the cover on my gas Weber, I noticed the fire was tucked into a back corner of the grill, no where near the meat, and there was a woody smell to the fire. I looked down and saw a pile of 20 or so acorns on fire!!!

So we had acorn-smoked ribs tonight, very tasty!!! Surprised we didn't have a side of roast squirrel too!!
 
OK, this is a first. Been watching squirrels, gray & red, going nuts on all the acorns the past week. I grilled some spare ribs tonight and a fire started, which didn't surprise me much. When I opened the cover on my gas Weber, I noticed the fire was tucked into a back corner of the grill, no where near the meat, and there was a woody smell to the fire. I looked down and saw a pile of 20 or so acorns on fire!!!

So we had acorn-smoked ribs tonight, very tasty!!! Surprised we didn't have a side of roast squirrel too!!
LMAO too funny Maybe a cold Winter coming they storing acorns in weird places?
 
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Scanning electron microgram of a Tardigrade.

With all the different moss patches we have around the house, one of my winter projects is to find some Tardigrades in my backyard. I've always loved these little tiny invertebrates, < 1 mm, and bought a telescope to hook up to the computer for my hunt. For you Trekkies out there, the creature that navigates the super biohyperdrive system in Star Trek Discovery is a Tardigrade.

A HS student worked with a college Prof in finding a new species recently and they're having a naming poll. The site also allows for "suggestions" and of course, I put my 2¢ in with Dacatylobiotus inventa as a tip of the hat to Star Trek in that "Inventa" is Latin for Discovery.

BANGOR – The Maine Science Festival is proud to announce that invertebrate zoologist Dr. Emma Perry and John Bapst high school student Noelle Killarney – the team that discovered a new species of tardigrade – have asked us to help them in naming the new species. Perry noted, “With everything that has happened in the last six months, we thought it would be nice for people to be part of this new discovery.”

Tardigrades, also known as “water bears” or “moss piglets” are water-dwelling, eight-legged, segmented micro-animals. Dr. Perry, who has done the work to confirm that the species is new to us, has put together four name options for the newly discovered tardigrade found in Bangor City Forest. They are:


  • Dacatylobiotus killarneyorum (because Noelle found the first animals in this species)
  • Dactylobiotus bangoriensis (because the animals in this species were found in Bangor)
  • Dactylobiotus covidus (Emma had the time to collect and describe this species due to the shut down from COVID-19)
  • Dactylobiotus pandemus (Emma had the time to collect and describe this species due to the pandemic. Pandemic = pandemus in Latin.)
There is also a space for survey takers to suggest a different name.

An interview with Perry and Killarney talking about their discovery can be heard as a bonus episode of the new Maine Science Podcast. Each episode is a conversation with a Mainer who is working in science, engineering, technology, and innovation, and deep-dive into who they are and what they do. Guests include entrepreneurs, researchers, and professors, and now this bonus episode spotlighting a discovery in Maine.

The Tardigrade naming survey ends at 5 p.m. (Eastern) on Oct. 30 and is found at the Maine Science Festival website (Name that tardigrade). We’ll announce the name in November.

As the first and only science festival in Maine, the Maine Science Festival is a celebration of the national and world leading science by the Mainers who do it. The MSF encourages attendees to question the world around them and seeks to inspire not only the next generation of scientists and engineers, but also facilitate grass roots scientific thinking at the citizen level. Through partners and sponsors, the MSF works to showcase the remarkable work happening in Maine daily. During this pandemic, the MSF has launched the Maine Science Podcast to continue to highlight the remarkable work happening in Maine.

The Maine Science Podcast is an episodic show where each episode is a conversation with a Mainer who is working in science, engineering, technology, and innovation, and a deep-dive into who they are and what they do. The format allows us to explore more about the science and the person doing it. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, or listen on our website at Maine Science Podcast.
 
View attachment 26306
Scanning electron microgram of a Tardigrade.

With all the different moss patches we have around the house, one of my winter projects is to find some Tardigrades in my backyard. I've always loved these little tiny invertebrates, < 1 mm, and bought a telescope to hook up to the computer for my hunt. For you Trekkies out there, the creature that navigates the super biohyperdrive system in Star Trek Discovery is a Tardigrade.

A HS student worked with a college Prof in finding a new species recently and they're having a naming poll. The site also allows for "suggestions" and of course, I put my 2¢ in with Dacatylobiotus inventa as a tip of the hat to Star Trek in that "Inventa" is Latin for Discovery.

BANGOR – The Maine Science Festival is proud to announce that invertebrate zoologist Dr. Emma Perry and John Bapst high school student Noelle Killarney – the team that discovered a new species of tardigrade – have asked us to help them in naming the new species. Perry noted, “With everything that has happened in the last six months, we thought it would be nice for people to be part of this new discovery.”

Tardigrades, also known as “water bears” or “moss piglets” are water-dwelling, eight-legged, segmented micro-animals. Dr. Perry, who has done the work to confirm that the species is new to us, has put together four name options for the newly discovered tardigrade found in Bangor City Forest. They are:


  • Dacatylobiotus killarneyorum (because Noelle found the first animals in this species)
  • Dactylobiotus bangoriensis (because the animals in this species were found in Bangor)
  • Dactylobiotus covidus (Emma had the time to collect and describe this species due to the shut down from COVID-19)
  • Dactylobiotus pandemus (Emma had the time to collect and describe this species due to the pandemic. Pandemic = pandemus in Latin.)
There is also a space for survey takers to suggest a different name.

An interview with Perry and Killarney talking about their discovery can be heard as a bonus episode of the new Maine Science Podcast. Each episode is a conversation with a Mainer who is working in science, engineering, technology, and innovation, and deep-dive into who they are and what they do. Guests include entrepreneurs, researchers, and professors, and now this bonus episode spotlighting a discovery in Maine.

The Tardigrade naming survey ends at 5 p.m. (Eastern) on Oct. 30 and is found at the Maine Science Festival website (Name that tardigrade). We’ll announce the name in November.

As the first and only science festival in Maine, the Maine Science Festival is a celebration of the national and world leading science by the Mainers who do it. The MSF encourages attendees to question the world around them and seeks to inspire not only the next generation of scientists and engineers, but also facilitate grass roots scientific thinking at the citizen level. Through partners and sponsors, the MSF works to showcase the remarkable work happening in Maine daily. During this pandemic, the MSF has launched the Maine Science Podcast to continue to highlight the remarkable work happening in Maine.

The Maine Science Podcast is an episodic show where each episode is a conversation with a Mainer who is working in science, engineering, technology, and innovation, and a deep-dive into who they are and what they do. The format allows us to explore more about the science and the person doing it. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, or listen on our website at Maine Science Podcast.
I submitted Killarneyorum ,
She deserves it????
 
I'm not sure if I read this, saw it on the news or dreamed about it. Didn't the Israelis send a rocket to the moon and release a bunch of tardigrades there?
Don't think so, but Tardigrades have been put outside of orbiting space vehicles for long periods of time and when returned to earth they were revived. They can withstand near Absolute Zero temps, boiling, and radiation that would kill a human in short order. If any organism on this planet began life on another world, the Tardigrades are on top of the potential list.
 
Don't think so, but Tardigrades have been put outside of orbiting space vehicles for long periods of time and when returned to earth they were revived. They can withstand near Absolute Zero temps, boiling, and radiation that would kill a human in short order. If any organism on this planet began life on another world, the Tardigrades are on top of the potential list.
Ha, I found the Israeli Tardigrade story @Dx life Rx fishing

Tardigrades, the toughest animals on Earth, have crash-landed on the moon​

The tardigrade conquest of the solar system has begun.

By Brian Resnick@B_resnick[email protected] Aug 6, 2019, 3:20pm EDT

A cartoon tardigrade in space.
“Mwhahahahaah. Our conquest of space has begun.” Getty Images/Stockphoto

In 1983, a team of Japanese scientists on a journey through Antarctica happened upon a pile of moss harboring a strange, strange creature.

Living in the moss were tardigrades, millimeter-long animals that resembled teddy bears crossed with caterpillars. The tardigrades (sometimes called “water bears”) and the moss they were found in were wrapped in paper, placed in plastic baggies, and locked away in a -4 degrees Fahrenheit freezer. There they remained — frozen and forgotten — for more than 30 years.

This sounds like the start of a horror movie. But rest assured: When scientists thawed the tardigrades in 2014, the microscopic animals did not seek vengeance upon humanity for their imprisonment. Instead, they moseyed around on a plate of agar gel like nothing had happened. And then they reproduced.

Scientists keep learning about tardigrades and their remarkable ability to survive just about anywhere. And they’ve learned that different species of tardigrades have different adaptations for a wide variety of environmental threats.

In hot conditions, they release heat-shock proteins, which prevent other proteins from warping. Some tardigrades can form bubbly cysts around their bodies. Like puffer jackets, the cysts allow them to survive in harsh climates. In dry conditions, they shrink down into a protective pill shape, called a tun. In this state, they can survive — without water, or being trapped in ice — for decades.

Tardigrades live in the ocean and in the soil of every continent, in every climate and in every latitude. Their extreme resilience has allowed them to conquer the entire planet. That’s because tardigrades are one of the toughest — if not the toughest — animals on planet Earth.

And now, as Wired reports, they’ve landed on the moon. And it’s possible they’ll survive even there.

Hold up. Why are tardigrades on the moon?​

In April, the lunar lander Beresheet — a privately funded Israeli project — crashed on the moon. The mission originally started as a contender for the Google Lunar X prize, a contest to land a privately made robot on the moon before a 2018 deadline. As The Verge’s Loren Grush explains, it wasn’t a very robust scientific mission: It had planned to run some simple tests on the moon’s magnetism. The mission was more a proof of concept that ambitious space exploration can take place outside of big government programs.

Sadly, the craft crash-landed due to a computer error.

But a part of the mission lives on. A group called the Arch Mission Foundation had installed a library of sorts on the craft, and they tell Wired, they believe it may have survived. Arch Mission has the goal of “maintaining a backup of planet Earth,” and wanted a store of information on the moon “to preserve the records of our civilization for up to billions of years.” In the future, after our extinction, if aliens were to land on the moon and find the archive, they could learn about us (and presumably feel sorry we’re no longer around).

The “library” was etched on to a nickel-metal disc, and it contained nearly all of English Wikipedia, copies of classic books, human blood samples, and tardigrades (because if anything alive on Earth is going to last billions of years, it’s them). Many of those tardigrades are coated in a protective resin, much like how amber preserves long-dead mosquitos that were once trapped in tree sap.

According to Wired, a co-creator of the library believes the disc survived the crash. “In the best-case scenario, Beresheet ejected the Arch Mission Foundation’s lunar library during impact and it lies in one piece somewhere near the crash site,” Wired reports.

Why Tardigrades are the toughest animals on Earth — and now possibly the moon​

It’s important to note: Tardigrades are basically indestructible only when they enter a special state called cryptobiosis. In this state, they tuck in their legs and expel all moisture from their bodies, preserving their bodies. They’re called tuns when they reach this state, and it was tuns that were sent aboard Beresheet.

As tuns, the tardigrades produce glycerol (antifreeze) and secrete trehalose, a simple sugar that mummifies them in a glass suit of armor. This process is called vitrification, and scientists have studied it for use in protecting other delicate cellular tissues like sperm and eggs. As a tun, the tardigrade reduces its metabolism by 99.99 percent as it waits for a more suitable environment.

Tuns are remarkably resilient; they can survive in ice for decades. But they also can survive the harsh conditions of space, at least for a little while.

In 2007, the European Space Agency launched a satellite carrying (among other things), a payload of tardigrades in tun form, and selectively exposed them to the vacuum of space and cosmic radiation. Ten days later, the tardigrades were returned to Earth and rehydrated. Remarkably, a handful of them survived both the radiation and the vacuum, making them the first animals on record to survive complete space exposure.

Research has also shown the tuns can survive pressures up to 87,022.6 pounds per square inch — six times what you’d find in the deepest part of the ocean. (Around 43,00 PSI, “most bacteria and multicellular organisms die,” Nature reported.) They’re that tough.

If a cataclysm wipes out most of life on the planet — including humans — it’s likely that tardigrades will survive.

Why the question of what can survive on the moon is so fascinating​

The moon formed more than 4 billion years ago. And for the entirety of its existence, it has been a completely sterile place. Humans first brought life to the moon — in the form of microbes hiding in feces and other human waste — 50 years ago, with the Apollo missions. And now, it has tardigrades too.

It will be fascinating if, one day, astronauts decide to go back and collect them. Because if they can survive on the surface of the moon — an incredibly harsh, irradiated environment — it helps us understand the resiliency of life.

It could also help us investigate the hypothesis that life didn’t start on Earth at all. Rather, perhaps it was seeded by microbes from another world. If life can survive on the moon, even in a dormant state, it could mean that life can survive long stretches of time in the deep reaches of space, traveling between worlds, propagating life along the way.

“Can simple life spread through the cosmos like radio waves [just naturally moving through the universe, on its own], or does it need to wait billions of years until there are technological species with spaceships to spread it?” planetary scientist Phil Metzger recently asked on Twitter.

That’s a huge question in astrobiology. Maybe these tardigrades, one day, can help us discover the answer.
 
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