Showing posts with label Ross Boucek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ross Boucek. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2013

Extreme ecology: taking a look at the 2010 freeze

January 04, 2013 0

Happy new year folks! 

 I am writing today to discuss extreme ecology!

As much as I wish that “extreme ecology” is studying ecology while surfing or snowboarding, it is not. Rather, extreme ecology or the” ecology of extremes” is the study of how ecosystems change following very rare natural disturbances.   These disturbances are more like natural disasters, that include volcanic eruptions, biblical floods, hurricanes, super storms, and boiling heat waves.  Extreme disturbance events are so harmful because they often kill everything that happened to be in the path of the disturbance. On top of destroying ecosystems, these events incur billions of dollars of damages to humans.  The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens provides a good example of an extreme disturbance event. 



Mount St. Helens before and after the 1980 eruption

You can see in this picture that after the eruption of Mount St. Helens, swaths of forests  that are harvested for timber were destroyed. The loss of these forests caused substantial economic losses for local timber industries and completely changed the structure of the ecosystem.   Because of the severity of impacts that usually accompany extreme disturbances, their foot print or legacy often persists for a very long time, in some cases hundreds of years. 

The study of extreme events, in particular extreme climatic events such as hurricanes, winter storms, droughts etc., and their impact on natural systems have now popped up on scientists’ radar. These events are receiving extra attention because recent data shows that extreme climatic events are increasing in frequency. These events are increasing in frequency likely because of increased atmospheric green house gases and increasing air temperatures.  For more information about why this is happening please visit this link.



This brings me to recent events in South Florida. In January of 2010, south Florida and the Everglades was impacted by an extreme cold front that among other things, devastated many estuarine fish populations, killed mangroves, and caused catastrophic losses to the citrus industry. In fact, the 2010 cold front is the one of the two most severe to pass through the region in roughly 90 years (The other occurring in 1940).  Economically, this event was devastating, reducing many important tropical fisheries by as much as 80%, and consequently leading to roughly 50% reductions in inshore fishing trips in the Gulf of Mexico.


Hundreds of dead snook clustered by the boat ramp in Flamingo Everglades National Park

Since Florida’s recreational fishing industry generates over 8 billion dollars a year in angler expenditures, this freeze cost quite a bit of money for many Florida residents that rely on money spent by anglers for income.  The Citrus industry also lost approximately 10% of their crop from the freeze. Florida citrus provides over 40% of the worlds’ orange juice supply and takes home a little under 1 billion dollars per year.  Consequently, this freeze that lasted only 12 days, likely cost hundreds of millions of dollars through the losses of valuable natural resources.


Orange tree freeze hardened in preparation for the 2010 cold front

Unfortunately, temperature records do not go far enough back in time to capture multiple cycles of long-term weather patterns that create extreme cold fronts. Because these records are rather short- lived (approximately 120 year records), there is not enough evidence to know if they are increasing in frequency. However, what is known for sure is they are not going away.  And, in an ever warming world, the impact of extreme cold fronts will only worsen. A new challenge for researchers, resource managers, and politicians will be to develop a deeper understanding of the magnitude of impacts of these events, that will help us better prepare for the potential losses of valuable natural resources.  Ultimately, if these cold fronts become more frequent, decision makers  must start thinking of alternative careers and sources of income for those whose livelihoods are dependent on South Florida’s valuable natural resources.


Ross

Monday, September 24, 2012

Awesome research animals!

September 24, 2012 0
Good morning everyone,

This blog is a tribute to all the animals that get caught up in science. Without their help, we would know alot less about the environment and the natural resources we all love!



Lobster toupee



None of the other lobsters can tell its scientific equipment: These tags are the same as the ones I use. They send a sound pulse that can be detected by underwater equipment and are used to track movement patterns (photo courtesy of FWRI http://myfwc.com/research/saltwater/telemetry/)




Gopro shark (insert dup-step music here)




 
These are cameras attached to the sharks back that used to video and understand shark feeding habits. Courtesy of the Shark bay ecosystem research project and the Heithaus lab (http://www2.fiu.edu/~heithaus/SBERP/projects/tigerres.html).

Punk rocker walleye… His girlfriend’s parents are not impressed



 
Lip tags are used in mark recapture studies. A fish gets a lip ring with a unique number and released back into the wild… When the fish is recaptured scientists are able to measure growth rates and collect movement data on that fish (http://www.flickr.com/photos/dorsal-fin/7952702836/).





Sometimes fish get tattoos… 





 
These are elastomer tags. These tags are dye that scientists inject under fishes skin. Since this tagging method is not invasive and the tag is not bulky, using elastomer tags often is often preferred in small fish studies…. (They also glow in the dark; http://www.nmt.us/products/vie/vie.shtml)



Psychic seal!




 
A satellite tag glued to an elephant seal is used to track their movements. These tags can also record water depth and temperature. Data produced from these tags  are now being used to improve maps of the arctic seafloor!  http://www.underwatertimes.com/news.php?article_id=53081461092

 
Its kind of like Jaws with the oil drums…….. but a lot more mellow  



Manatees in the Bahamas fitted with floating satellite tags.
http://www.savethemanatee.org/tracking_manatees.htm
 

Are you more or less terrified if a shark swims at you with an antenna on its fin?


 
Shark fitted with a satellite tag used to understand shark movement patterns.
http://www.southernfriedscience.com/?p=9449

 
 
Alligator taking a hike

  


 
An American alligator with a GPS tracker. 
http://www.al.com/sports/index.ssf/2011/05/tag_shes_it_health_of_gators_d.html




Tagging surgeries in a more relaxed setting





 
A red grouper getting fitted with an acoustic tag underwater in the dry Tortugas. Florida fish and wildlife Research Institute do these surgeries underwater because of the water depth that grouper reside.  Grouper can occupy deep water where atmospheric pressure is more intense, compressing air inside the fishes body. If grouper are brought to the surface too quickly, air in their body cavities will expand before they can eject it; causing the fish major stress. (photo courtesy of FWRI http://myfwc.com/research/saltwater/telemetry/)






 
"Geeze I already gave you my lunch, can you PLEASE untie me from the picnic table"


An American Alligator prepped for gastric lavage and tagging. This process is explained in Adam's post (photo courtesy of FCE LTER; http://www.lternet.edu/research/keyfindings/food-webs)
 












 Easter Mice




 
I swear this is a real thing. Utah  Biologists dip rodents in florescent powder. Let them go, and follow them  by looking for the powder trails. Besides looking cooler than other mice, the powder is perfectly harmless! (http://www.newswise.com/articles/powdered-rodents-show-big-old-mice-spread-hantavirus)






The rat that everybody wants to have scurrying around their house



key largo woodrat
http://www.wec.ufl.edu/faculty/mccleery/




 

 Find that tag!

 
A conch with an acoustic tag (photo courtesy of FWRI http://myfwc.com/research/saltwater/telemetry/)


 
The crayfish mullet



 
 Business in the front, party in the back! Slough crayfish with radio transmitters glued to their back. The wire is the antennae and the block is the battery pack (photo from Cline et al. 2012 INTECOL oral presentation and; http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2080204/Plague-bearing-crayfish-electronically-tagged-escaping-London-aquarium-taking-river.html)

 Party Crab



 
Christmas island crab with a radio transmitter attached to its back. These transmitters send radiowaves that can be picked up by hand held antenna like Mike Bush uses in bass. The tag also functions as a strobe light in case you want to bring the crab to a party (http://www.arkive.org/christmas-island-red-crab/gecarcoidea-natalis/image-G78977.html)