Rio Randomness

Went out to Laguna Atascosa this afternoon, ran into Steve Sinclair and had a long chat with him. I hope he did well with the terns I 'terned' him on to! I didn't shoot a whole lot, went to Kidney pond but the gators were escaping the heat in their dug outs, went to shoot the oriole nest but the adults never came, so I drove the bayside loop looking for Aplomados but didn't find them. So here are a few shots I shot today.



Mockingbird and Crested Cara-Cara having a heated
disagreement regarding roosting proximity to nesting grounds.


Harris Hawk on Spanish Dagger Plant


Mexican Ground Squirrel

posted by Seth Patterson @ 10:15 PM, ,

Your tern!

Okay, recently I've really started photographing birds and in doing so I feel I've garnered so much more insight into their natural history than ever before. For example, anyone who has been along the Laguna Madre or out on South Padre Island has seen those expansive stretches of "mud flats." They may not look like much--empty, barren, desolate, and to many of you they look like a great place to do donuts in your 4x4s but in reality they are teeming with life.

During the spring and the summer months our shore birds thrive on these mud flats for nesting habitat. All types of terns, willets, black-necked stilts, plovers, Oyster Catchers, etc.. etc.. etc.. Usually the eggs are small and the nests especially difficult to see. Once hatched, the chicks are well adapted in color and camouflage to lay flat against the mud and avoid detection. However these great techniques of avoidance also come at a high cost when humans are involved. One person running their truck out onto these mud flats and doing donuts and figure eights can destroy nesting populations.

Yesterday I went out early in the morning to the mud flats just south of Sea Turtle Inc. on South Padre Island. Here there are easily two dozen or more nesting Least Terns, several Black-necked Stilts, Wilson's Plovers, and Willets. As soon as you approach the area all the birds start making a ruckus and the terns will start dive bombing you. This is a sure sign there is nesting around--otherwise the birds would just fly away. As I walked along the mud flats, surveying what was around I started to see the tern nests. It takes a trained eye to pick them out, but once you do you see them everywhere. Easily three fourths of the nests I found were laid in the depression of where someone had walked across the mud flats. I saw at least a dozen foot prints with two tiny little dappled eggs in them. Of course this means when walking across these mud flats if you're not paying attention you will be stepping on nests and eggs.

Worse yet, through the entire mud flat are deep tire tracks from a vehicle doing donuts. Of course when I start walking along these tire tracks, what do you think I saw? I found that the chicks especially liked the deep trenches of the tire tracks to hide in while danger was near. So should another vehicle visit the mud flats, we all know you tend to follow others tire tracks when you're driving in unsavory territory, they are almost guaranteed to kill every chick hiding in those old tracks. If they get off the tracks? They are destroying more nests and potential chicks hiding out in the open. There is no way you can spot these nests from a vehicle, especially at the speeds these people travel.

Last, but certainly not least, many of the walkers who do enjoy a tromp across the mudflats often let their dogs run free around them. These animals have a fantastic sense of smell and are unhindered in finding both chicks and eggs.

So in short, during the nesting months these wonderful mud flats are extremely fragile environments that should be protected and avoided. Is 15 minutes of driving in a circle really worth killing so many helpless little animals? I should hope not. Really the best remedy would be erecting impassable barriers around the flats, keeping vehicles out and posting signs as to the reason for this. But that's unlikely to ever happened as a lot of it is private property and for sale. So I hope that if we can educate people that should they get the urge to drive or walk across these flats, if they see birds acting funny and yelling at them, perhaps now isn't a good time to do it.

Least tern sitting on nest while mate brings breakfast!

posted by Seth Patterson @ 6:52 AM, ,

Laguna Alligatascosa



posted by Seth Patterson @ 10:21 PM, ,

Spring into the Valley

Here are some photographs I took earlier this year at spring time when flowers were showing up around the valley.

A Native Bromeliad

posted by Seth Patterson @ 2:23 AM, ,

Water World!

Some of my first pictures taken with my underwater housing.




Portuguese Man-o-War & two Man-o-War Fish which feed on it.

posted by Seth Patterson @ 4:09 AM, ,

Kemp's Ridleys heading to Sea



posted by Seth Patterson @ 8:28 PM, ,

Charros Day Parade - 2008!

posted by Seth Patterson @ 3:11 AM, ,

Rio Macro


posted by Seth Patterson @ 10:43 PM, ,

Cumulonimbus



posted by Seth Patterson @ 1:04 PM, ,

High Dynamic Range (HDR)





posted by Seth Patterson @ 3:29 PM, ,

Gone Batty

posted by Seth Patterson @ 11:31 PM, ,

Fun with Fauna

Headed a little north today... some random shots of wildness.

Crested CaraCara

Marine Toad

Baby Bat!

posted by Seth Patterson @ 3:56 AM, ,

Hill Country (of the Valley)





posted by Seth Patterson @ 12:03 AM, ,

Night Blooming Cereus

posted by Seth Patterson @ 12:57 AM, ,

Oyster Reef in Roma?

I went out and photographed a Fossilized Oyster Reef near Roma this afternoon, neat area but it is more of a morning shoot.

posted by Seth Patterson @ 6:57 PM, ,

Star Cactus, Starr County

My dad took me out this morning to photograph the endangered Star Cactus on a remote ranch in Starr County today. First time I'd ever seen one, pretty little cactus. Fruit is in the center.

posted by Seth Patterson @ 1:50 AM, ,

The Necessity of Unnecessary

My mom and I ran out to Unnecessary Island, in the lower Laguna Madre, Tuesday morning to see how the nesting birds were doing there. Lots of birds! Certainly a Necessary Island if I've ever seen one. The terns and gulls were either still sitting on eggs or feeding chicks, the pelicans were just about to fledge and the spoon bills were flapping around the tree tops. My mom's boat couldn't quite get close enough for the shots I was hoping for, but here are a few I did manage to take.

The Island

Royal Terns & Laughing Gulls

Laughing Gulls

posted by Seth Patterson @ 1:42 AM, ,

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