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Earth Almanac: January/March 2003
Audubon Jan./Mar. 2003
Photo by David M. Schleser/Photo Researchers
Attack of the June Bugs
June bugs—those huge, fearsome-looking scarab beetles that bang fiendishly against your screens on soft spring evenings—are much prized by children, who find them useful for frightening adults. June-bug phobia is a centuries-old tradition in the New World. As essayist Sarah O. Jewett noted in August 1872: "Your life is made so wretched by their whizzing past your ears and dropping upon your table, not to speak of the horrible fear of their entangling themselves in your hair. … We ought to sympathize more tenderly with our young-lady friends who spend long seasons of dejection on the hall stairs because two or three energetic June Beetles have happened to come into the parlor to spend a social evening." June bugs appear to seek entry to houses because they are attracted to light, and they bang because flying mobility has been sacrificed for protection by a second set of hard wings that are extended to the sides in flight. Like all proper monsters, most of the 200 or so species distributed throughout North America emerge from the earth at night. All are harmless. But the fat, white larvae of about 25 species feed on the roots of grass and, in large concentrations, can damage your lawn.
Uncommon Courtship
Common terns are now courting where gently sloping land, especially islands, meets the sea and big lakes in northern temperate zones around the globe. Watch for their distinctive flight displays in which a male, shadowed by a female, flies along with a small fish in his bill. When she overtakes him, he'll drop his head, turn away, and hold his wings high over his back. At the same time she'll thrust her head forward and hold her wings down, then start a sharp downward glide, tilting from side to side. On the ground a male may march in front of the female in a semicircle, lower his head, raise his head, bend forward, and kick back with his feet. Often he'll carry a small fish, presumably a signal of his intention to copulate. The female expresses interest—at least in the fish—by emitting a ki-ki call and hunching over. Sometimes another male will ape this behavior, thereby acquiring a free meal. Also called sea swallows, these graceful, agile birds cover astonishing distances in migration. One individual, banded in Finland, was captured 16,000 miles away in Australia.
Teddy Bears' Picnic
Black-bear cubs emerge from their dens in spring, but unlike their mothers, they have not been hibernating. Instead, they have been nursing as she slept. Now the size of small tabby cats, they are in fine flesh and frolicking in a new universe of sights, smells, sounds, and tastes. If you encounter a black-bear family in the wild, keep your distance but consider yourself blessed, not threatened. Because black bears evolved in forested habitats, they almost always react to danger by running away or climbing a tree. Our other two bear species—grizzlies and polar bears—evolved on open ground and therefore are more likely to stand and fight. Land clearing and unrestricted hunting in the late 1800s devastated black-bear populations over most of the United States. But under modern wildlife management and with the regrowth of their forest habitat, the species is making a dramatic comeback.
Beloved Serpents
If you live east of the Mississippi, spring is the time to look for timber rattlesnakes as they come out from hibernation dens in south-facing cliffs and boulder fields. Which brings up the question: Why would you want to? Maybe because these stocky pit vipers are beautiful, secretive, and rare to the point of being semi-mythical. In Maine, Rhode Island, Michigan, and Delaware, they've not been seen in recent years and may have been extirpated—all the more reason to look for them there. Timber rattlers vary from almost jet black to yellow, with brown or black blotches on their sides and back. In the southern part of their range, a chestnut stripe may run along their backs. So shy are these snakes that if you encounter one, it will almost certainly be by your choice. And so docile are they that getting one to strike you requires major effort. Love of timber rattlers is a new cultural phenomenon in America. As recently as 1989, for example, Minnesota was paying a bounty on them. In Wisconsin, where the bounty was discontinued in 1975, one exterminator reported killing 5,700 in a single season. Now the species is protected in nine states.
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