#nests

2026-02-16

The Giant #Anteater looks like a Surrealist artist's fever dream, but they are actually real and feature an ultra long tongue for suctioning #insects from #nests in #Brazil🇧🇷 Help them to survive when u #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife 😍 in supermarkets wp.me/pcFhgU-1Cd?utm_source=ma

The Giant #Anteater looks like a Surrealist artist's fever dream, but they are actually real and feature an ultra long tongue for suctioning #insects from #nests in #Brazil🇧🇷 Help them to survive when u #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife 😍 in supermarkets https://wp.me/pcFhgU-1Cd?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=Palm+Oil+Detectives&utm_campaign=publerThe Giant #Anteater looks like a Surrealist artist's fever dream, but they are actually real and feature an ultra long tongue for suctioning #insects from #nests in #Brazil🇧🇷 Help them to survive when u #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife 😍 in supermarkets https://wp.me/pcFhgU-1Cd?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=Palm+Oil+Detectives&utm_campaign=publerThe Giant #Anteater looks like a Surrealist artist's fever dream, but they are actually real and feature an ultra long tongue for suctioning #insects from #nests in #Brazil🇧🇷 Help them to survive when u #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife 😍 in supermarkets https://wp.me/pcFhgU-1Cd?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=Palm+Oil+Detectives&utm_campaign=publerThe Giant #Anteater looks like a Surrealist artist's fever dream, but they are actually real and feature an ultra long tongue for suctioning #insects from #nests in #Brazil🇧🇷 Help them to survive when u #Boycottpalmoil #Boycott4Wildlife 😍 in supermarkets https://wp.me/pcFhgU-1Cd?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=Palm+Oil+Detectives&utm_campaign=publer
Public Domain Image Archivepdimagearchive
2026-01-27

Illustration by Frederick Whitney, from Blackboard Sketching (1909).

Source: California Digital Library / Internet Archive

pdimagearchive.org/images/e253

Blackboard sketch by Whitney
2025-12-18

The wind took down a cottonwood at the Masonville house. Cottonwoods grow fast and make weak wood, but they are still heavy! This one decided to take out a small gate that lets the horses go down to the creek.

There was a large cavity nest inside the trunk that fell. We're trying to figure out whose nest it was.

#wind #weather #trees #nests

A treetrunk lying smashed on the ground between two fenceposts. There is a small metal gate under the trunk and bits of bark and branches scattered around. Several cottonwoods are still standing in the background.Most of the center of the tree is missing in this section. There are two white eggshells in the cavity, as well as a lot of wood fragments.
Ma Quest :ablobjam:MaQuest@mastodon.green
2025-11-16

"This is a brilliant example of how communities can make a real difference – not just for wildlife, but for the future of our planet."
bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ckgkj7

#SheffieldSwiftNetwork #Sheffield #Birds #Nature #Swifts #WildLife #Community #BirdsOfMastodon #BioDiversity #Nests #SolarPunkSunday

2025-11-16

More predator hornets found in Auckland, total of queens now 9

“One nest was more developed and contained a queen, two worker hornets and two adults which were about…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #auckland #ball #been #both #containing #cricket #found #have #hornet #Hornets #in #more #nests #NewZealand #Now #NZ #of #predator #Queens #size #total
newsbeep.com/253421/

2025-11-01

Mudlarks building nest of mud

A few weeks ago, I watched a pair of Mudlarks building their nest. Mudlarks get their name from their construction of nests made of mud and reeds. Despite their name, Mudlarks are not larks. Another name for them is Magpie-larks — but they’re not Magpies either! Yet another name for them is Peewees, which is an imitation of the noise they make: pee-wee, pee-wee.

Building a good nest takes a lot of patience and skill. The birds use their beaks to pile globules of mud on top of each other to form a bowl, increasing the circumference of the bowl with each layer. Every now and then, the birds sit in the growing nest and wiggle their bodies around to smooth out the inside and make sure the nest is the right size and shape. Watch this video to see the nest-building:

https://youtu.be/xixmDTYbEcc

The birds collect mud and reeds from a nearby river or lake. Here’s a pair of them (male and female) collecting reeds at Manly Dam in NSW, Australia:

https://youtu.be/nroz2UlD6oc

Here’s the female sitting in the nest, making sure it’s the right size and shape:

Here’s a still shot of the male gathering mud and reeds:

Common name: Magpie-lark, also called a Peewee or a Mudlark
Scientific name: Grallina cyanoleuca
Approximate length: 30 cm
Date spotted: 18 September 2025 (spring)
Location: Manly Dam National Park, New South Wales, Australia

#australia #birds #birdwatching #MagpieLark #mudlark #nests #peewee #SydneyBirds

2025-10-21

COZY OWL HAVENS 💛 "There's no place like home"

🌳🍂🍃🍂🦉🏡🛏🏡🦉🍂🍃🍂🌲


💕😘🦉🤗💕

2025-10-06

Alas, butcherbirds nest abandoned when tree fern sprouted

In my previous post, I wrote about a pair of Grey Butcherbirds that had built their nest in a tree fern below our house. The problem with tree ferns is that they sprout new fronds from the centre of the trunk, exactly where the birds had built their nest. 

The photos of the nest in my earlier post were taken on the 18th of September. Just a few days later, the tree fern did indeed sprout a new frond, putting the nest at an uncomfortable angle. Still, the butcherbirds persevered. This photo, taken on the 25th of September shows one of the birds sitting determinedly on a very slanted nest, which presumably still contained the three eggs:

Just a day later, the birds had abandoned the nest. I don’t know if the eggs were still in the nest. The tree fern is way too high for me to go up and take a look:

By yesterday, the 5th of October, the new fern frond had pushed the nest to the top of the canopy:

Never mind little butcherbirds, there’s still plenty of time left this season to try again. Or next year perhaps.

Perhaps they’ll have learned something about real estate from this experience. Grey Butcherbirds live for around 20 years, so there’s plenty of time for learning!

Common name: Grey Butcherbird
Scientific name: Cracticus torquatus
Approximate length: 30 cm
Date spotted: 18 September to 5 October 2025 (spring)
Location: Allambie Heights, NSW, Australia

#australia #birds #birdwatching #GreyButcherbird #nests #SydneyBirds

The Kid Should See This 🌈🪐✨tksst@fediscience.org
2025-10-03

🏺🦅 Spanish researchers surveyed 12 abandoned bearded vulture #nests and discovered 226 human #artifacts, some nearly 700 years old, preserved alongside animal remains. The #vultures' cliff cave nests acted as natural #museums, protecting items like medieval #shoes, crossbow bolts, and woven baskets through centuries. #Carbon dating revealed artifacts spanning from the #MiddleAges to 150 years ago.

1️⃣ popsci.com/environment/bearded

2️⃣ Learn more on #TKSST: Vultures, the acid-puking, plague-busting heroes of the ecosystem • thekidshouldseethis.com/post/v

#archaeology #spain #conservation #birds #history #ecology #science

2025-09-29

Why a #mite of the #Parasitidae (#Mesostigmata), apparently genus #Parasitellus, seemingly attacks moth #Pyrausta #despicata (Crambidae). Parasitellus develops in #bumblebee #nests and uses them for dispersal (#phoresy) to other nests, thus they leave their hosts on blossoms and wait for new hosts to be carried to new nests. The moth was detected by the mite as a #nonsuitable #phoretic #host.

© #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

Visit my new YouTube Video:
youtu.be/gRAT7CIKWTk?si=hb2LC1

Photos
©S.F. Wirth

A mite of Parasitidae (Mesostigmata), seemingly genus Parasitellus, on a common dandelion flower head examines moth Pyrausta despicata (Crambidae) for whether it might be a suitable host for dispersal (phoresy/phoresis). It detects the moth as not suitable as it requires bumblebees to get into their nests, where the mite feeds and finishes its life-cycle. © Stefan F. Wirth, Berlin park Rehberge, footage end of April, editing September 2025Moth Pyrausta despicata (Crambidae) feeding nectar on a flower head of common dandelion on a dry meadow © Stefan F. Wirth, Berlin park Rehberge, footage end of April, editing September 2025
2025-09-27

#Socialinsect #nests are #ecosystems with a #diversity of #organisms.
In #leafcutterant #Atta #texana nests, mite #Histiostoma #bakeri reduces harmful #fungi in detritus chambers (S.F. Wirth & J.C. Moser 2008).
A. Panchal et al. (2025) found #termite #Odontotermes #obesus to reduce harmful fungi from its food #funguscultivar using fungicides of #bacteria.

©#StefanFWirth

Ref
(2008)
Proceed. 6th EURAAC

(2025)
doi.org/10.1126/science.adr2713

pic
O. obesus, Nikhil More, 2020,
creativecommons.org/licenses/b

Original file description:"Odontotermes obesus is a species of termite in the family Termitidae. It is native to tropical southwestern Asia. This termite cultivates a symbiotic fungus in a special chamber in the nest", by author Nikhilmore nimo, 2020, licensed under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en

Dusky-footed Woodrats (Neotoma fuscipes) build large, conical nests up to 8 feet tall in trees, on the ground, or on bluffs. Made of sticks, bark, and plant material, the nests can house multiple generations and include rooms for food storage, resting, nurseries, and protection.

#woodrats #nests #nature #wildlife #california

2025-07-15

#Plastic is a killer.
The scientists were following a hunch that they – and ecologists around the world – were missing a hidden death toll from plastic that #birds incorporated into their nests. #Scientists tend to inspect #nests only at fledging time, yet dead chicks can be swiftly discarded by parents, so those killed by plastic early in their lives might go uncounted.

theguardian.com/environment/20

2025-07-11
This is round 2 from this season's nest. Suspect these guys will be out on their own by next week's check.

#bluebirds #bluebird #easternBluebirds #easternBluebird #nests #nature #birds #ornithology
Four young eastern bluebird nestlings crowd together in a nest of straw.  Fur and feathers have begun full development on each, primarily gray with beige speckles.  Bright blue tail feathers are also evident.  The way the birds are configured allows a view of a single, open eye for each.
Andrew ShieldsAndrewShields@mas.to
2025-05-31
The Simple EntrepreneurentrepreneurAU
2025-05-01

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