Today’s Jesus and Mo strip, called “nature,” came with the caption, “Jesus lets her confuse him.” And indeed she does. Now Jesus and Mo have no reason to be homophobic!
Today we have a batch of photos from UC Davis ecologist Susan Harrison. Susan’s comment are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Don’t miss the baby possum (last photo)!
Backyard Visitations
Recently I was fortunate to have a large mob of brightly colored birds visit my back yard. A flock of over 100 Cedar Waxwings (Bombycilla cedrorum) had been zipping around the neighborhood in their tight flying formation, constantly conversing in their high-pitched whistles. These wonderful birds are like parrots of the temperate zone in that they are colorful, social fruit-eaters, flocks of which will quickly denude a berry-covered bush before swooping off to another one. They descended upon my backyard pond the for a boisterous communal drink, as I sat at my computer/cat-cuddling/birdwatching station.
The photo sequence below illustrates the Cedar Waxwing’s always-changing body shapes, lively social behaviors, and unusual coloration: “a silky, shiny collection of brown, gray, and lemon-yellow, accented with a subdued crest, rakish black mask, and brilliant-red wax droplets on the wing feathers” (per AllAboutBirds.org). [JAC: I always thought that if an Adidas sneaker could fly, it would look like a cedar waxwing.]
Amidst the more routine winter visitors like Yellow-Rumped Warblers (Setophaga coronata) and White-Crowned Sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys), other recent notables have included Purple Finch (Haemorhous purpureus) and, in our Oregon yard, a presumably amorous pair of Red-shouldered Hawks (Buteo lineatus).
Purple Finch:
Red-shouldered Hawks:
A friend in Davis has been so fortunate as to have Barn Owls (Tyto alba) take up residence in her yard. Actually, it’s not a matter of fortune, but of putting up several well-placed owl nest boxes.
Barn Owl:
Owl nest boxes:
This same friend has just released, in her yard, nine baby Virginia Opossums (Didelphus virginiana) that became effectively orphaned when their mother was trapped and relocated. May her possums not become dinner for her owls; there are plenty of rats around for the owls to eat!
Baby Opossum (with me for scale):
Modern medicine is facing many challenges. As the science of medicine advances, it gets harder and harder. We have, in a way, picked all the low hanging fruit. People are living longer, and their medical conditions are getting more challenging to understand and to treat. In order to continue making medical progress we need more advanced technology. This technology – like stem […]
The post Will AI Save Medicine first appeared on Science-Based Medicine.Blackholes are a fascinating class of object to study. We have learned significant amounts over the years but one of the outstanding mysteries remains; how there were supermassive black holes with millions or even billions of times the mass of the Sun present in the first billion years after the Big Bang. Our current models of stellar mass black hole evolution and mergers cannot explain their existence. A new paper suggests that ultralight dark matter particles, like axions may have done the trick and provides a mass range for expected particles.
As humans continue to make tentative progress out into the cosmos, the impact of space exploration on our fragile bodies is only beginning to be understood. We know that space travel decreases muscle and bone mass but a team of researchers have discovered which bones suffer the most! Using a group of mice that became astro-rodents for 37 days, they discovered that bone degeneration effective the femur most but not the vertebrae. They concluded that it’s our weight-bearing bones that suffer the most.
Travellers to Mars Need to Avoid the Dust
Many health problems are faced by astronauts who spend significant amounts of time in space. But perhaps one of the most insidious is the danger to their mental health. In particular, a prolonged sense of loneliness that could crop up as part of a long-term deep space mission could have dire consequences. A recent paper from Matthieu Guitton, the editor-in-chief of the journal Computers in Human Behavior: Artificial Humans and a researcher at the CERVO Brain Research Center in Quebec, proposes one potential solution to that risk - social robots.
One of the common misconceptions about black holes is that they devour not only matter, but also the history of that matter. So when a black hole forms, you can only guess how it came to be. That isn't entirely true. Informational history is only lost when matter crosses the event horizon, and perhaps not even then. The material surrounding a black hole still has a rich history. In a recent study, astronomers have used that history to uncover the origins of a black hole system.
Though wildly different in so many ways, Earth and Saturn's moon Titan have something important in common. Among all the objects in the Solar System, they're the only two with liquids on their surfaces. There are parallels in how the liquids move in cycles on both worlds and a new mission proposal outlines how we can understand Titan better by studying these parallel processes.