altivo: From a con badge (studious)
[personal profile] altivo
No, I'm not making this up... er, well, maybe I am. But it's fun. Read it and see.

New installment here

Cumulative word cound: 19930

Went to the Audubon meeting to hear a conservation district guy talk about restoration, which was actually interesting mostly because he admitted that no one really knows what they are doing.

It got even more interesting when we got to the Q&A period and someone asked him about oak savannas, which is one of his specialties. I actually understood what he was saying and the theories he advanced. In short, bur oak savannas are not expanding or reproducing here at all. It turns out that the reason is white footed mice, who eat all the acorns. No, not squirrels, but mice. He has all the evidence. Yet the oak, the squirrel, the mouse have all co-existed for millennia. One natural predator of mice that was widespread here a century ago is missing today: the gray wolf! Another even bigger mouse-eater is even less likely to be successfully reintroduced: the Massassauga rattlesnake. All very interesting.

And it snowed more today. None of it lasted though.

Date: 2011-11-11 09:35 am (UTC)
hrrunka: Frowning face from a character sheet by Keihound (frown)
From: [personal profile] hrrunka
Yeah, it's fascinating (and, sometimes, deeply worrying) how just a small change in nature's balance can tip things one way or the other, and how hard it can be to learn the whole story.

Date: 2011-11-11 12:26 pm (UTC)
frith: Yellow pony with yellow mane, stunned look. (FIM Applejack stunned)
From: [personal profile] frith
Top-down population control for mice? By rattlesnakes and dogs? And foxes, shrews and feral cats figure how in this equation? I'm not buying this at all. It reeks of the gardening, "balance of nature" model of population dynamics. While he was at it, did he go on to say that white footed mice were eating all the mast and eliminating all trees with large seeds, such as maples, pines and beech? What of all the other species of small rodents like voles and jumping mice? Why aren't we over-run with mice like in Australia where at some point they were as thick as cockroaches in a slum?

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