anon6789

joined 2 years ago
[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 5 points 4 hours ago

Nah, then they'd remember the East India Company.

It just takes enough time to go by that society forgets about this kind of thing and it can rise up from the ashes again.

The Pinkertons or military being deployed on strikers wasn't all that long ago historically, but long enough that most of us don't feel it could happen now.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 6 points 5 hours ago

I don't know if I need this, as I felt everything was done pretty well as it was in 0 and Kiwami 2, but since all the characters and actors are so good with these roles, I definitely want to see it.

I'd be a bit annoyed if this isn't eventually a free patch to the PlayStation, and I don't know if I'd pay for it, but having this a Nintendo exclusive permanently seems an odd decision.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 2 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

Those are some very neat details! I'm glad to run into someone here that has some better info than I do!

I'm nowhere near any Burrowing Owls where I'm at, but I've seen a few different things I've shared here about some unique eye features of some of them in Florida and Aruba's subspecies, the Shoco.

That would be so heartbreaking to lose so many in 2 days after all that work! 😦

Thank you so much for sharing!

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

I feel some rules of grammar have changed since I was in school, which I find both cool and annoying at the same time. We've had English a long enough time one would think all this would be well ironed out by now, but it's also exciting a bit that the language isn't stagnant. At the same time, it also probably makes me look s but ignorant since I am likely unaware of a decent number of changes. 😅

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 3 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago)

It's keeping watch over the neighborhood!

I got my shirts for the clinic today.

I picked the GHO/opossum and the eagle/vulture ones.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 4 points 12 hours ago

I would have gone with "That" if it were me.

Protected Bird Site is the title though.

Maybe Burrowing Owl Nesting Area could be called a subtitle.

But the rest is no longer a title!

Even that fine print on the bottom looks to go back to title case again.

That's too much title!

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago (2 children)

Nice! I want to see some wild ones when I go to Florida later this year.

I did find some info on some of the work the San Diego Zoo is doing with our little subterranean friends here.

Didn't see a specific rate listed for California, but ORI says 20-30% survive the first year, though this paper from the Center For Biodiversity says the population of Burrowing Owls in CA has been especially hard guy, largest by development over recent years, so it may indeed be lower.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 60 points 14 hours ago (6 children)

Oh no, he looks just like that Molesting Owl on the sign!

That is some interesting capitalization they chose... 🤔

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 1 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago)

Work does suck the life out of me, but I'd hope I can still pass a Turing test! 😜

There's always going to be people that value facts and knowledge and they will always find each other for their own sanity.

With a focus on animal stuff, there is a lot of AI that I come across to try to win cuteness karma. I do see some convincing looking things that make me do a double take, because animals can do some weird things after all, but some stuff is never going to be physically possible. Some color combos just don't exist. It may take a more trained eye to spot things, but there's still going to be people calling stuff out and there will be forums where things will get pulled down if they're not real.

In that regard, I worry about some real things being lost, at least to view to some of the general public, where real things that can't be verified get downvoted/taken down/etc. But those with real interest will still work to conclusively verify or disprove things of questionable value.

People just want truth to get out. Whether you're interested in education or conspiracy, from whichever direction most of us approach things, we just want to know the truth to the best of our abilities. That does bring inherent troubles and creates avenues to poison the well, but as hard as the bad actors will work, the good actors will be working to clean it just as hard.

ETA:

Trust is almost becoming a thing of the past because of unprecedented digital threats.

I also encourage people to question me. I'm happy to be able to confirm things, because I want you to also learn what I have learned, because I found it cool enough to study and share with you already. Questioning what I present to you also leads me to learn about more things, exploring subject matter I wouldn't have thought to pursue on my own, or to finally learn about something I've been meaning to get to. Someone questioning my knowledge is both an opportunity for me to teach and to learn. And if I was wrong, hopefully afterwards I will know what is correct, and that has strengthened me as a whole if I accept I was wrong and have learned from the experience and not acted immaturely about it.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 0 points 17 hours ago

It's a good thing laws can't arbitrarily be changed then, right?

Oh, wait. This kind of thing is exactly about letting people do that so they can punish whomever they wish.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 8 points 17 hours ago (2 children)

We just collectively need to improve vetting sources. It's something we can do individually, or collectively through moderation.

I mainly just share pics here, but I do try to give a decent chunk of educational content as well. I take what I share seriously, because I want it treated seriously at times. I'm honest I'm not an expert, just a hobbyist. I always include sources or share if it's something from my personal limited experience. I try to verify things from at least 2 sources before sharing things if it's a new source. I always try to be clear if I'm hypothesizing about something and I'm not certain of it.

It's probably taking my content more seriously than necessary, but I take pride in what I post and I want to be seen as a trusted person in the community.

I think the last few years have made it clear to anyone capable of understanding that we can no longer just take people at their word without some process of establishing trust. Like anything else, we can wait for someone else to fix it, or we can up our own games, on both providing and receiving information.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 2 points 17 hours ago

I love the pinecones and how sweet little baby looks here. The one we have like that at the clinic acts like a trapped feral cat every time I see it! 😄

 

From Fei Cheng

Burrowing Owl in flight at sunset

March 2025, Central WA

 

From Harold Wilion

Photography is like New England weather. If you don't like the scene, wait a minute.

I was trying to photograph these newly fledged Great Horned owls for about an hour or so with no photos to show for it. Two were visible but they had their eyes closed and I didn't like all the white sky behind them.

The third, this owl, was totally buried behind a curtain of spruce. So, I set up on the mom nearby waiting for her to wake so I could get some shots. Then, I heard one of the birders exclaim, "oh, look, the baby's sticking its head out".

I swung my camera around and sure enough, the owlet emerged a little from its hiding place allowing me to get this shot. He didn't stay there for long, but at least I felt like I got a decent shot instead of just a wasted day. I didn't even see all the berries around it till I looked at my photos later.

The moral of the story, have some patience and stick around. You never know what the next minute will bring.

Not totally sure this is the same owl, but this is from Dan Minicucci, who captioned this pic as " Homage to Harold's red pine cone shot."

Who's got the better shot? 🤔

 

From Danny Lee

A female Great Horned Owl glances into the sunset, awaiting the disappearance of light to begin her night- time hunt for food.

 

From A Place Called Hope

Now that's a tree topper!!!

It's easy to miss a Saw Whet. They're so tiny!

 

From Andrew Kawa

As this little owlet got more and more curious about the outside world it would move closer to the opening of the nest cavity. On the evening this photo was taken the owlet had moved closer to the opening than before while mom was still in the nest. When mom was ready to hunt, she came shooting out of the nest knocking the owlet out of the way and back down into the nest cavity. It was the last we saw of the owlet that night. The owlet has since fledged and is doing great.

 

From kymkemp.com

The industry lawsuit attempts to reinstate a critical habitat rollback issued in the final weeks of the first Trump administration that removed nearly 3.5 million acres from the 9.6 million acres that were protected for spotted owls in 2012.

“The forests these precious owls depend on also provide all of us with benefits like clean water, recreation, jobs and climate resiliency,” said Chelsea Stewart-Fusek, an endangered species attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Given Trump’s relentless assaults on our most cherished wildlife and public lands, it’s no surprise that corporate timber interests are resurrecting their attacks on northern spotted owls and the places they live in the name of short-term profit.”

The northern spotted owl first gained critical habitat protection in 1992, and those were adjusted in 2012 under the Obama administration. That rule was challenged in court by the timber industry, resulting in a settlement and a January 2021 designation excluding 3.5 million acres from critical habitat protection, nearly all on public lands managed by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management.

Just 10 months later, the Biden administration rescinded the final designation and instead finalized a proposed rule that excluded 204,294 acres instead of 3.5 million acres. That Biden administration rule is being challenged by the timber industry’s current lawsuit, which is seeking to reinstate the expanded Trump administration revision.

“This latest attempt by the timber industry to remove protections for northern spotted owls is a cynical move that perpetuates not only the biodiversity and extinction crises, but also the pendulum swing regarding management of the owl’s habitat,” said Susan Jane Brown, attorney with Silvix Resources that represents some of the intervenors. “Rather than accept that the best available science requires the protection of millions of acres of spotted owl habitat to prevent the extinction and foster the recovery of the owl, industry’s lawsuit seeks to unnecessarily stoke controversy.”

“This is a tired story: the timber industry attempting to game the legal system in order to expand logging on our public lands,” said Tom Wheeler, executive director of the Environmental Protection Information Center. “Unfortunately for them, they have to come through us first. We have stood up for the northern spotted owls and science for decades and we aren’t backing down.”

“The lawyers for Big Timber are cherry-picking a courthouse across the country to attack old-growth spotted owl habitat in our neck of the woods,” said George Sexton, conservation director for Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center. “So we’re intervening to stand up for science and our forests.”

“With northern spotted owl population numbers in precipitous decline, the timber industry seeks to remove protections from a full third — 3.5 million acres — of the species’ critical habitat,” said David Woodsmall, attorney at the Western Environmental Law Center. “This is a choice by the industry to drive the northern spotted owl to extinction for private profit, antithetical to the American values of conservation embodied in our laws. Western Environmental Law Center has fought for northern spotted owl recovery for decades, and we will use the power of the law to thwart any action that threatens the survival of this iconic species.”

“The logging industry wants to frame this lawsuit as just about the northern spotted owl, but what’s really at stake are our oldest, most resilient forests, forests that also provide cold, clean rivers for salmon, drinking water for communities and cherished places for countless people,” said John Persell, staff attorney for Oregon Wild. “Trump administration officials have made it clear they view these lands as little more than a source of profit. It’s up to all of us to stand up — for owls, salmon, clean water and carbon-storing forests — and say no.”

“Drastically reducing spotted owl habitat protections is not only antithetical to the best science we have for allowing the imperiled species to recover, but puts at risk all the other benefits that protecting these public lands provide to Oregonians, the very people that these lands are supposed to be managed for,” says Nick Cady with Cascadia Wildlands. “Aggressive logging increases wildfire risk, threatens drinking water sources, recreation opportunities, and much more all for the benefit of corporate timber barons.”

“With less than 3,000 spotted owls left and a population that is declining precipitously, this challenge is a slap in the face to conservation and the survival of this species. Any reduction in acreage of critical habitat could be this species’ death knell,” said Joe Liebezeit, statewide conservation director for Bird Alliance of Oregon.

“Everything needs a home to survive,” said Dave Werntz, science and conservation director at Conservation Northwest. “The northern spotted owl is no exception.”

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service protected the northern spotted owl, a bird found only in the forests of the Pacific Northwest, as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act in 1990. In 2020, because of continued loss of the old forests they need to live and competition with the invasive barred owl, the Service found northern spotted owls should now be classified as endangered but has yet to provide stronger protections for the species.

 

From Patty Pickett

One cranky parent.

Two cutie babies!

One proud parent.

 

From Tamarack Wildlife Center

Spirited Eastern Screech Owl in Care

They say good things come in small packages, but in this case, this small package is full of spunkiness! This beautiful female red-phase Eastern Screech Owl was admitted from Erie back in March. Her road to recovery began when she was found entangled in fishing line. The entanglement caused feather damage and soft tissue injuries.

Treatment has included wound care, antibiotics, proper nutrition, and other supportive care. While the TWC team knows we are working to help her make her way home again, she's harder to convince! Being held for treatment is the worst part of her pretty easy day. The office staff who work above the exam room always know when this bird is receiving care as her annoyed screech can be heard a floor away! Once returned to her enclosure, she quickly relaxes again.

We expect her to make a full recovery and be ready for release soon, but we aren't sure if the world is ready for such a feisty little owl to return to the skies!

Did you know? Eastern Screech Owls only weigh between 4.5 and 8.5 ounces. That's less than most cell phones!

 

From Philippe De-Bruyne

Grand duc d'Amérique juvénile dans un magnifique décor sous la pluie.

Juvenile GHO in a beautiful setting in the rain.

Canada

 

From Gretchen Lally

Burrowing Owl mother and her two kids. One tries to get mom's attention by pulling her feather while the other suddenly sees me 😂

 

Teton Raptor Center Conservation Director Bryan Bedrosian holds the wing of a female barred owl he helped trap and tag in May 2025 near Jackson. (Courtesy Bryan Bedrosian)

From wyofile.com

Jackson researchers had been attempting to trap the male barred owl for more than a week, but the wary raptor was proving elusive. First, the owl swooped in for the bait mouse but glanced off the trap. The next time, he performed evasive flight maneuvers and escaped.

Then on Thursday, they set up a different trap in the Teton County forest habitat, this time with dho-gazza nets — fine mist nets designed to envelop raptors that unknowingly fly into them.

“And then, literally out of nowhere, the female came in and got caught,” said Bryan Bedrosian, conservation director at the Teton Raptor Center.

His team affixed the female with a GPS tracker. And like that, the bird became the first-known barred owl tagged in Wyoming. To Bedrosian’s knowledge, it’s also the first barred owl tagged in the Rocky Mountains.

The tagging comes two years after the pair became the first documented nesting barred owls in Wyoming, news that ruffled some scientific feathers. Though they are eastern birds, barred owls have expanded their range westward through the boreal forests of Canada and down into the Pacific Northwest, where they have outcompeted the imperiled northern spotted owls and created significant management conflicts.

A female barred owl was trapped and tagged with a transmitter in May 2025 as part of a project to understand the behavior and any conflicts with other Wyoming raptors. (Courtesy Bryan Bedrosian)

Wyoming raptor experts and others are wary about the impact the adaptable and aggressive barred owls could have on native species like great gray owls.

Those concerns prompted the Teton Raptor Center to initiate the tracking project. Bedrosian and his team aim to tag the female’s wily mate, along with any chicks that hatch from a nest the pair is currently tending. The goal is to gather data on the birds’ movement and behavior to see if and how it’s impacting other raptors.

“I’m not suggesting we do anything right now, but with any invasive species, it’s always easiest to do action at the beginning rather than being reactionary later,” Bedrosian said. Information gathering is step one. Potential competition

Barred owls are similar in size to great horned owls, but lack the distinctive “horns.” They are similar in profile to great gray owls, but are smaller and have black eyes in contrast to the great grays’ yellow ones.

In Washington, Oregon and California, their negative impacts on federally protected northern spotted owls have prompted wildlife authorities to classify them as invasive. Barred owls, which are territorial and eat a variety of prey, have edged out the more shy and specialized spotted owls.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has wrestled with the issue for years, even resorting to killing barred owls to help prevent further damage to the declining spotted owls. Those conflicts stirred up concern after the nesting pair was documented in Wyoming by nature photographer Tom Stanton.

A pair of barred owls preen and scratch each other in Teton County. Photographer Thomas Stanton discovered and documented their nest in spring 2023 — the first instance of breeding barred owls in Wyoming. (Thomas Stanton)

But Wyoming, unlike the PNW, has limited data.

The relationship between barred and spotted owls in the Pacific Northwest is “one of the most extensively studied cases of competitive exclusion in the history of wildlife ecology,” said Wyoming Fish and Game Nongame Bird Biologist Zach Wallace.

Meanwhile, Wallace said, “next to nothing is known about potential competition between barred owls and great gray owls.”

The Wyoming project, he said, is a good step toward filling in that information gap. That’s why his agency helped support the application for a grant that’s helping to fund it.

The National Park Service is also in the loop on the project and monitoring the situation, Bedrosian said. Data gathering

Barred owl sightings are not unheard of in Wyoming — the 2023 report is just the first documentation of a nesting pair. What scientists are trying to understand now is what the nesting birds do year round, and if others are present in the state and pose competition to other owls.

Teton Raptor Center is approaching the questions with a multi-pronged strategy. One prong involves analyzing years of historic acoustic data in the region.

The center also received grants from the Wyoming Governor’s Big Game License Coalition, the Jackson Hole Community Foundation and the Jackson Conservation District to help monitor the birds with GPS transmitters, satellite trackers and acoustic recorders.

Tom Stanton first glimpsed evidence that barred owls had successfully bred in Wyoming on June 28, 2023, when two fluffy chicks poked their heads from the tree cavity. Their mother watched from the cavity. (Thomas Stanton)

The team this spring placed recorders in roughly 200 spots in the Grand Teton National Park vicinity — those recorders yielded proof that at least one other individual, likely a bachelor male, has been in the region.

The final piece is the tracking. The hope is to tag each member of the nesting family, Bedrosian said. The owls produced three chicks in 2023, but their nest failed in 2024. They are nesting again currently, though it’s unknown how many eggs they have.

But if they get trackers on all of the owls, ecologists can better understand their territory, where they spend the winter months, where their offspring go and if there is competition with other species.

“One of the biggest concerns is the potential impact on other species that aren’t used to this generalist, very aggressive predator,” Bedrosian said.

“Where this bird has been located is a historic great gray owl territory that is now vacant,” he continued. “And so did the barred owls push out the great gray? We don’t know. But if you take evidence from the Pacific Northwest with the spotted owls, it doesn’t look good.”

There is also a prior article about the original discovery of nesting Barred Owls in the areas in 2023 here if you need more!

 

From Michelle Sidman Reinemann

I am Owlet.

Hear me stare.

(Cropped after using an 800mm lens. Still trying to work on creating bokeh with fixed F11)

view more: next ›