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Alders and crows, Oyster Bay. |
(A forgotten photo, just re-discovered tonight.)
Veinticuatro cuervos, en un par de alisos rojos en Oyster Bay. Una foto olvidada, descubierto esta noche.
Nature notes and photos from BC, Canada, mostly in the Lower Fraser Valley, Bella Coola, and Vancouver Island.
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The end of the estuary, from the Myrt Thompson trail. The fence protects recently re-planted native vegetation. |
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Sign near this veiwpoint, with old map of the estuary. |
Text of sign: Estuaries form where rivers meet the sea.
Rivers slow as they flow through coastal floodlands and out into the Pacific Ocean. Silts and nutrients settle to form fertile delta soils, mud and sand banks and various marsh habitats. The diverse specially adapted marsh plant communities and wide flat intertidal areas are exposed twice a day by the tides and are teeming with tiny worms, snails, and crustaceans.
These are the most biologically diverse wetlands along the Pacific coast. They provide ideal feeding and resting areas for millions of waterfowl, shorebirds, wintering birds of prey, salmon stocks and many other life forms. They are essential to the survival of hundreds of fish and wildlife species, and the people relying on them.
Dice: Los estuarios forman donde los ríos llegan al mar.
Los ríos corren lentamente através de tierras inundables y salen al Oceano Pacífico. Allí en la delta, cienos y materias nutritivas se depositan y forman tierras fértiles, bancos de lodo y de arena, y pantanos de varios tipos. Las comunidades de plantas pantanales adaptadas especialmente a estas condiciones, y las áreas planas litorales se exponen al aire dos veces diarias por las mareas, y abundan en gusanos, caracoles, y crustáceos.
Estos son los terrenos humedales con más variedad biológica en la costa del Pacífico. Proveen areas ideales donde millones de pájaros acuáticas y playeras, aves de rapiña que pasan aquí el invierno, salmones y muchos otros animales descansan y se alimentan. Son esenciales para la sobrevivencia de cientos de especies de pescado y otros animales salvajes, y de la personas que de ellos dependen.
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Hairy hermit, Pagurus hirsutiusculus, still very small. They lose their orange colour as they grow. |
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Plumose anemone, Metridium senile, surrounded by seaweeds (Pacific rose, Turkish towel, eelgrass, a fragment of sea lettuce) and broken shells. |
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Sitka periwinkle, Littorina sitkana. About 5 mm long. |
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Yes, that's a log. With a nest of rock eggs. As found. |
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The roots of an old branch. And more rocks. A few blades of grass add to the life aboard. |
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On the next log over, because I could reach these: Jelly Spot fungi, Dacrymyces stellatus. |
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Low tide. A branch of the creek, with shaped ice. |
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The tide rises to the top of the ditch. |
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In mid-summer, this is dry at low tide. |
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Ice caught high on the reeds, while the surrounding ice dropped as the tide went out. |
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View over the southeast end of the marsh, looking northeast. The hills beyond are on the mainland. |
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Description of the restoration program. |
The sign reads: Environmentally Sensitive Fish Habitat. Discovery Harbour Shopping Centre Ltd, developed and managed by the Campbell River Indian Band and Northwest Properties in conjunction with Federal Fisheries and Oceans and the Canadian Wildlife Service conducted a low marsh restoration and planting program in the Campbell River Estuary within Lot 136 and Spit Road in 1997 and 1999. As part of the estuary restoration plan, relocation of Old Spit Road occurred and natural estuary was re-established. Designed by TERA Planning Ltd, the planting was completed by members of the Campbell River Indian Band.
Continuing with the text of the sign: To assist the natural recolonization of the estuary area, salvaged vegetative material was stockpiled for use. Approximately 800 sq m of plant material, including Lyngbye's and other sedges, spikerush, hairgrass and other low marsh species were removed and stored in a donor site. The existing slough was not touched.
Back to the sign: The eastern half of the program was conducted in the spring of 1997 and the culverts at Old Spit Road were opened at that time. This included the removal of shrub vegetation and soil, followed by the establishment of a network of channels planted with approximately 400 sq m of the stockpiled vegetation (or 20,000 15 cm x 15 cm cylinders of marsh material.)
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Photos from the sign |
The western half and the area under the Old Spit Road were replanted in early 1999. Construction was similar to that done for the eastern half. This phase saw the decommissioning of Old Spit Road itself. This project has created approximately 2 ha of low marsh. The new marsh is now an important contributor of fish nutrients and provides rearing habitat for your salmon.
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Under the roof of the above sign. Juvenile salmon live here!! |
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Google map of the area, with my labels. |
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A kingfisher! Not only did he park not too far away, but he stayed there while I took enough photos to get one more or less in focus. |
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A young robin, all speckly. |
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A little green-winged teal. Poor photo, but I'm glad I got it; I haven't seen one of these for several years. |
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A sparrow on the frozen path beside the river. |
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One of a flock of golden-crowned sparrows. |
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Mallards sleeping in the sun. The white stuff on the island behind them is ice. |
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An eagle, as I usually see them; a white spot at the top of an evergreen. |
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Frozen solid, warmed by afternoon sun. |
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Don't mess with Corsa! She's lightning fast and her claws are sharp. |
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The rocks are dry. The weeds are damp. |
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Ice on a puddle. With mini-snow blobs. |
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See? Sunshine on the trees and the valley beyond! No road goes there, though. |
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My logging road. A few metres farther up, and the view was gone. The light patch on the hillside is a clearcut logged area. |
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Around the next bend. No sunshine visible from here. A bit of snow, behind the trees on the left. |
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On the shore of Tyee Spit |
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Fragment of sponge, on stones washed by waves. With kelp. |
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A larger piece,damaged, and with what looks like burn marks, but still retaining a bit of pink colour. |
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Sponge, as found, inside the aquarium. |
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18 pine siskins on this half of the tree. |
Pine Siskins are fairly common, but their numbers can be difficult to estimate due to the large and hard-to-predict movements they make each year. Partners in Flight estimates that populations have declined by 80% since 1970. ... The Pine Siskin rates a 10 out of 20 on the Continental Concern Score and is considered a Common Bird in Steep Decline. Domestic cats, red squirrels, hawks, jays, and crows can prey on adult birds or on their eggs or young. ... Pine Siskins' fondness for mineral deposits can lure them onto dangerously busy roadways salted to melt ice and snow. Loss of habitat from forest-clearing may be balanced by new commercially planted coniferous forests, and by the Pine Siskin’s willingness to nest in shrubs and ornamental trees. (from Cornell Lab of Ornithology)
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Bits of yellow cheer |
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Viewing platform and blind, Campbell River estuary, high tide, three wigeons. |
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Mallards. These long grasses are never dry except in mid-summer. |
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Mallards and wigeon. |
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Walking on water. |
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Itchy, itchy! |
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View from the blind. Even the industrial complex on the far side of the estuary looks good! |
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From my windowsill while it blew and stormed outside. |