“Snake Salvation” Won’t Save Any Snakes

  • Snake Salvation | National Geographic Channel Fall 2013
    In the hills of Appalachia, Pentecostal pastors Jamie Coots and Andrew Hamblin struggle to keep an over-100-year-old tradition alive: the practice of handling deadly snakes in church. Jamie and Andrew believe in a bible passage that suggests a poisonous snakebite will not harm them as long as they are anointed by God’s power. If they don’t practice the ritual of snake handling, they believe they are destined for hell. Hunting the surrounding mountains for deadly serpents and maintaining their church’s snake collection is a way of life for both men. The pastors must frequently battle the law, a disapproving society, and even at times their own families to keep their way of life alive.
  • Snake-Handling Preachers Open Up About ‘Takin’ Up Serpents’ : NPR 100413
    Snake handlers dwell at the edge of the spiritual frontier — a community of people who are willing to die for their faith three times a week in church. Members of the Pentecostal Holiness Church take up venomous serpents to prove their faith in God. The practice is still widespread in Appalachia, though mostly hidden. | Pastor Jamie Coots warns about the scent in the snake room behind his house in Middlesboro, Ky. | “It’s strong, so I’ll go ahead and tell you that,” he says as he unlocks the squeaky door. We’re greeted by the rattles of dark-complexioned pit vipers lying about in glass cages. The air in the snake room is warm, musky and malevolent. | “Got rattlesnakes: the timber rattler and the canebrake,” says Coots, inventorying his reptiles. “We have northern copperheads. And that’s the only two cottonmouths we have.” | Coots is a well-known snake handler here in southeastern Kentucky. He’s 41, stout and bald, with a Vandyke beard. He’s the third generation of Coots to take up serpents; his 21-year-old son, Little Cody, is the fourth. | “Takin’ up serpents, to me, it’s just showin’ that God has power over something that he created that does have the potential of injuring you or takin’ your life,” Jamie Coots says. | Worshiping with snakes dates back more than 100 years, but today, the major Pentecostal denominations denounce the practice. | There are an estimated 125 snake-handling churches scattered across Alabama, Georgia, the Carolinas and Appalachia, where the tradition is strongest. Snakes in church are against the law everywhere but West Virginia, though in most states it’s a misdemeanor offense the authorities don’t bother with. | The National Geographic Channel followed two snake-handling preachers off and on for a year for a called Snake Salvation that will air this fall on Tuesday nights. Pastor Jamie Coots is one of the series’ subjects. | The Tabernacle Church of God in LaFollette, Tenn., is a short drive through the Cumberland Gap from Coots’ church. The pastor here is Andrew Hamblin, a lanky, charismatic 22-year-old, who is the other preacher featured in the TV series. Hamblin wants to modernize the practice of handling snakes in church. He posts photos of himself with snakes on his Facebook page, and he aspires to pastor the first serpent-handling megachurch.
  • Snake Salvation: One Way to Pray in Appalachia | TIME.com 090913
    Andrew Hamblin handles poisonous snakes every Sunday in the name of Jesus. At just 22, he leads Tabernacle Church of God in LaFollette, Tenn., a Pentecostal church that practices a rare, century-old Christian tradition of worshipping God with venomous snakes like timber rattlers, cottonmouths, and copperheads. He plays mandolin, loves zombie movies, receives food stamps, has five children, and now is he is a star in a new 16-episode National Geographic reality series, Snake Salvation, premiering Tuesday about Appalachia’s serpent-handling churches.
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Internet Naturalist – October 6, 2013

  • Why Dippers Dip | Audubon Magazine 093013
    [This story comes to you through a partnership between Audubon and BirdNote, a show that airs daily on public radio stations nationwide.] An American Dipper calls across a rushing mountain stream. Its rotund, stone-gray body bobs rhythmically up and down, its feet firmly planted. The bird’s white feathered eyelids flash like a semaphore. So why do dippers dip? Let’s consider three theories: One suggests the dipper’s repetitive bobbing against a background of turbulent water helps conceal the bird’s image from predators. A second asserts that dipping helps it sight prey beneath the surface of the water. A third theory holds the most promise. Dipping – as well as the rhythmic flicking of those flashy white eyelids – may be a mode of visual communication among American dippers in their very noisy environment. That dippers make exaggerated dipping movements during courtship and also to threaten aggressors lends support to this theory.
  • Meteor Explodes Over Ohio, Kills Two 2013 ~ ADG (UK) 092713
    The event was captured in northeast Ohio on a NASA all-sky camera in Hiram, Ohio, at 11:33 p.m. Spaceweather.com reported the meteor hit the atmosphere at 114,000 m.p.h. and was visible in 14 states. Fragments from the fireball reportedly hit a home in northern Adams County, Ohio, a few miles outside the city of Peebles causing a house fire. Those reports are unconfirmed. The six alarm fire left fireman battling the blaze into the early hours of the morning. It is unknown at this time if the residents made it out safely. A neighbor said the meteor crossed over the city and hit near the Locust Grove Cemetery just four miles from the Great Serpent Effigy Mound.
  • Raptor Sightings Map | National Audubon Society
    Interested in learning more about Audubon Centers and raptor hot spots across the continent?
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Internet Naturalist – September 30, 2013

  • Video: Northern Goshawk Flight in Slow Motion | Audubon Magazine Blog 091613
    Alisa Opar: “The northern goshawk is an incredible aerialist. The bird inhabits dense northern forests and maneuvers through impossibly tight spaces in pursuit of prey. A fierce hunter, its quarry includes squirrels, crows, hares, and even other raptors, including merlins and American kestrels (no wonder Attila the Hun’s helmet bore a northern goshawk). See for yourself just how remarkable the accipiter is, in the BBC video below with naturalist Chris Packham.”
  • Blue whale earplug reveals lifetime contaminant exposure and hormone profiles | PNAS 091613
    Lifetime contaminant and hormonal profiles have been reconstructed for an individual male blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus, Linnaeus 1758) using the earplug as a natural aging matrix that is also capable of archiving and preserving lipophilic compounds. These unprecedented lifetime profiles (i.e., birth to death) were reconstructed with a 6-mo resolution for a wide range of analytes including cortisol (stress hormone), testosterone (developmental hormone), organic contaminants (e.g., pesticides and flame retardants), and mercury. Cortisol lifetime profiles revealed a doubling of cortisol levels over baseline. Testosterone profiles suggest this male blue whale reached sexual maturity at approximately 10 y of age, which corresponds well with and improves on previous estimates. Early periods of the reconstructed contaminant profiles for pesticides (such as dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethanes and chlordanes), polychlorinated biphenyls, and polybrominated diphenyl ethers demonstrate significant maternal transfer occurred at 0–12 mo. The total lifetime organic contaminant burden measured between the earplug (sum of contaminants in laminae layers) and blubber samples from the same organism were similar. Total mercury profiles revealed reduced maternal transfer and two distinct pulse events compared with organic contaminants. The use of a whale earplug to reconstruct lifetime chemical profiles will allow for a more comprehensive examination of stress, development, and contaminant exposure, as well as improve the assessment of contaminant use/emission, environmental noise, ship traffic, and climate change on these important marine sentinels.
  • Ear Wax From Whales Keeps Record Of Ocean Contaminants : NPR 091613
    How often do whales clean their ears? Well, never. And so, year after year, their ear wax builds up, layer upon layer. According to a study published Monday, these columns of ear wax contain a record of chemical pollution in the oceans. The study used the ear wax extracted from the carcass of a blue whale that washed ashore on a California beach back in 2007. Scientists at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History collected the wax from inside the skull of the dead whale and preserved it. The column of wax was almost a foot long.
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Blue Hole, Little Miami River (1851)

Robert S. Duncanson. Blue Hole, Little Miami River. 1851. Cincinnati Art Museum.
Robert S. Duncanson. Blue Hole, Little Miami River. Oil on canvas, 1851. Cincinnati Art Museum.

You can see this painting in a darkened, ornate gallery at the Cincinnati Art Museum. And you can see the place depicted here anytime in Clifton Gorge. The scene looks surprisingly close to what Robert Duncanson saw in 1851. Trees have grown back on the hilltop where the painter stood. State park managers have built a fence with pressure-treated lumber at the river’s edge, as if it could keep skinny-dippers or immersion Baptists from wading in the water. But the river’s outflow at the painting’s focal point still looks as luminousl and revelatory as the day the last glacier retreated.

Robert S. Duncanson was one of the nation’s first African-American painters. He was associated with the Luminists, 19t-century landscape painters like Thomas Cole and Frederic Edwin Church. Two Duncanson paintings are exhibited with the Luminists  at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

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Internet Naturalist – September 22, 2013

  • Sage Grouse Strut their Stuff – YouTube
    This video was taken at the Mount Biedeman Wilderness Study Area in the Bodie Hills. The strutting grouse sound like coffee percolators. This is one of the larger leks; BLM wildlife crew counted 116 birds the day before. Video by Bob Wick, BLM
  • Ottawa to protect endangered sage grouse in Sask. | CTV Regina News 091713
    After having its legal feathers ruffled in court, the federal government says it is moving to protect the endangered sage grouse. Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq said Tuesday the government intends to introduce an emergency protection order for the bird native to the southern Prairies.She said the order would impose obligatory restrictions to protect the sage grouse and its habitat on provincial and federal crown lands in Alberta and Saskatchewan. The restrictions would not apply to activities on private land, or on grazing on provincial or federal crown lands.
  • Federal government must prevent extinction of sage-grouse in Canada — Ecojustice 032113
    The iconic bird, known for its elaborate courtship dance, saw almost 90 per cent of its Canadian population die off between 1988 and 2006. As few as 13 male birds currently remain in Alberta and at last count, as few as 42 males were left in Saskatchewan. Scientists predict that, in the absence of meaningful protection, sage-grouse will disappear from Alberta by next year and be completely extinct in Canada within a decade.
  • Piping plover program affected by sequestration | Michigan Radio 050213
    The piping plover is a tiny bird. They’re endangered. Last year there were just 58 breeding pairs in the Great Lakes region. One third of the population nests in the Sleeping Bear Dunes area. “The chicks, they look like they’re little cotton balls running up and down the beach. They’ve got these gangly legs, and … a very endearing bird.” Sue Jennings is the wildlife program manager at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore. She says because of the federal sequester, they’ve had to cut back on their seasonal staff. They set up fences to keep people and predators away from the plovers when they’re nesting.
  • West Michigan birders compete to find the most species | Michigan Radio 052113
    If you’ve always thought of birding as a quiet, relaxing hobby… you haven’t been to a Birdathon. During the recent West Michigan Birdathon, I met up with Team Fallout (as in migratory fallout) at the Blandford Nature Center. Shortly after I arrived, we were scrambling to the top of an overlook. It’s similar to a walkathon – the birders raise money, and the donations go to the Grand Rapids Audubon Club’s environmental education program for 4th graders, Audubon Adventures. There are birdathons around the country, and the rules vary. In this one, the goal is to find as many bird species as you can in six hours.
  • Making Food From Flies (It’s Not That Icky) : The Salt : NPR 091913
    n the quirky little college town of Yellow Springs, Ohio, home to many unconventional ideas over the years, there’s now a small insect factory. It’s an unassuming operation, a generic boxy building in a small industrial park. It took me a while even to find a sign with the company’s name: . But its goal is grand: The people at EnviroFlight are hoping that their insects will help our planet grow more food while conserving land and water.
  • U.P. residents weigh in on proposed wolf hunt (part 1) | Michigan Radio 050713
    For many years, gray wolves were listed as an endangered species in Michigan. That ended last year. But the battle between the wolves and locals in the Upper Peninsula has been going on for some time. | The Department of Natural Resources estimates that there were 658 wolves prowling the Upper Peninsula this winter, down slightly from the year before.
  • Are people in Ironwood really afraid of wolves? (part 2) | Michigan Radio 050913
    Governor Rick Snyder signed a law yesterday afternoon that will allow a state wolf hunt in the Upper Peninsula. Later today, Michigan’s Natural Resources Commission is expected to vote on whether to authorize the hunt. That decision could have an effect on one town on the far western edge of the Upper Peninsula. Ironwood is about as far west as you can go in the Upper Peninsula. This town of about 5,000 is a small town with a big wolf problem. More than 90 wolf complaints have been filed from the city of Ironwood since 2010. The problem is, deer are attracted to the city for safety and food, and the wolves follow the deer into town.
  • Wolf pups a good sign for struggling population on Isle Royale | Michigan Radio 081513
    The wolves of Michigan’s Isle Royale National Park have not been doing well, but there’s some unexpected good news. Earlier this year, researchers from Michigan Technological University who study the wolves reported there were just eight wolves left – and they reported they were unable to find any evidence of pups born to those wolves. But now, that has changed. Michigan Tech researcher Rolf Peterson heard two or three wolf pups in July. Peterson doesn’t have phone access on the island. But by email, he told me he thinks the pups were born this spring, and they were probably born to a pack called the West End Trio.
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Internet Naturalist – September 9, 2013

  • Interview: John Bradshaw, Author Of ‘Cat Sense’ : NPR 090513
    Cats have come a long way from being animals charged with catching mice to treasured, adorable creatures that snuggle with us in our beds. But this relatively new arrangement is creating issues for cats and the people who live with them. John Bradshaw has studied the history of domesticated cats and how the relationship between people and cats has changed. He’s the author of the new book Cat Sense: How the New Feline Science Can Make You a Better Friend to Your Pet, which is a follow-up to his book Dog Sense. Bradshaw is the foundation director of the Anthrozoology Institute at the University of Bristol in England. As an anthrozoologist, he studies the interactions between people and animals. He’s also the former science chairman of the International Association of Human-Animal Interaction Organizations. He joins Fresh Air’s Terry Gross to talk about how our relationship with cats has evolved over time and how toning down cats’ hunting instincts will ensure them a future on an increasingly crowded planet.
  • Bald Eagles Are Back In A Big Way — And The Talons Are Out : NPR 090413
    “It’s a jungle if you’re an eagle right now on the Chesapeake Bay,” says , a conservation biologist at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va. “You have to watch your back.” Americans have long imagined their national symbol as a solitary, noble bird soaring on majestic wings. The birds are indeed gorgeous and still soar, but the notion that they are loners is outdated, Watts and other conservationists are finding. After nearly being wiped out, inadvertently, by strong insecticides that were in widespread use until the 1970s, bald eagles have come roaring back in places like the James River, south of Richmond, Va. Today the raptors fly around together above the James in big groups, hang out in communal roosts and are fiercely competitive.
  • Band Of Ojibwe Begin Occupation Of Penokee Hills | Wisconsin Public Radio News 052913
    The Lac Courte Oreilles (LCO) Band of Ojibwe began an occupation in the Penokee Hills this weekend, at a proposed open pit iron ore mine site. The LCO harvest camp is small — five acres as compared to the four and a half miles proposed for the mine here. But LCO tribal elder Melvin Gasper says that this is not just a way to protest the mine plans, but also to get in the way by occupying part of it. Gasper says this is an exercise of their 1842 treaty rights in the Ceded Territory of northern Wisconsin to hunt, fish and gather.
  • Climate Change Could Spell Final ‘Chuckle’ For Alpine Frog : NPR 080713
    Across the Western U.S., yearly areas of snowpack are decreasing, and researchers are trying to figure out what that means for everything that relies on the snowmelt — from farms to power plants to a little creature known as the Cascades frog. The frog lives way up in the mountains of the Northwest and thrives in alpine wetlands fed by melting snow. Scientists are now trying to figure out how these frogs will adapt to their shrinking habitat. In Washington’s Olympic Mountains things are looking dryer than normal. On a recent day, Maureen Ryan is out looking for the wet spots. She’s a researcher with the University of Washington and an expert on amphibians that live at high elevation. These mountain trails are Ryan’s lab, so to speak. She studies tiny snow-fed potholes of water, cupped in the folds of high mountain ranges in the Northwest, a perfect habitat for Cascades frogs. But as the global climate warms, that habitat is receding.
  • The Old Gig: Catching Frogs On Warm Summer Nights : NPR 082313
    Bick Boyte plops a 1-pound bullfrog in his aluminum canoe, still half alive. He resumes his kneeling position, perched upfront, on the hunt for a big bellower. Boyte hears the “wom, wom, wom” and knows frogs are within reach. Boyte and Tommy Peebles have been “gigging” Tennessee ponds together since their daddies first taught them. Boyte now owns a truck dealership. Peebles is a real estate lawyer. But in the warm moonlight, they revert to their boyhoods. Peebles does the paddling. The more deadly half of this duo is Boyte. Instead of a paddle, he wields a 12-foot bamboo cane with four barbed tines on the end — his homemade frog gig. On his head, Boyte wears a miner’s headlamp. The light freezes the frogs.
  • 7 Day Forecast | Sault Sainte Marie MI
    Latitude 46.5°N and Longitude 84.33°W (Elev. 597 ft)
  • USGS Multimedia Gallery: (Video)–Whooping Cranes
    Whooping crane project at Patuxent National Wildlife health center, with interview of Dr. John French, discussing health, exercises, diet and training of these birds once on the brink of extinction.

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Internet Naturalist – September 1, 2013

This young whooping crane is on its first fall migration, guided by an Operation Migration ultralight aircraft. Each whooper in this population wears an identification band, and many carry tracking devices that record their movements in detail. [Source:Joe Duff/Operation Migration USA Inc./NPR]
This young whooping crane is on its first fall migration, guided by an Operation Migration ultralight aircraft. Each whooper in this population wears an identification band, and many carry tracking devices that record their movements in detail. [Source:Joe Duff/Operation Migration USA Inc./NPR]

  • Wise Old Whooping Cranes Keep Captive-Bred Fledglings On Track : NPR 083013
    Being a wildlife biologist in the 21st century increasingly means rescuing rare animals from extinction. Among the success stories is the whooping crane. Seventy years ago there were only about 16 birds left on the planet. Now there are about 600. But breeding more birds isn’t enough. Scientists want to restore the crane’s way of life, too. And a team of ecologists at the University of Maryland have discovered something that suggests they are succeeding: Captive-bred are picking up tips from older birds about how to skillfully navigate south for the winter. It’s a sign that those whooping cranes are passing knowledge from one generation to the next and, in a sense, rebuilding their culture, scientists Thursday in the journal Science.
  • Social Learning of Migratory Performance | Science 30 August 2013: Vol. 341 no. 6149
    Successful bird migration can depend on individual learning, social learning, and innate navigation programs. Using 8 years of data on migrating whooping cranes, we were able to partition genetic and socially learned aspects of migration. Specifically, we analyzed data from a reintroduced population wherein all birds were captive bred and artificially trained by ultralight aircraft on their first lifetime migration. For subsequent migrations, in which birds fly individually or in groups but without ultralight escort, we found evidence of long-term social learning, but no effect of genetic relatedness on migratory performance. Social learning from older birds reduced deviations from a straight-line path, with 7 years of experience yielding a 38% improvement in migratory accuracy.
  • HawkCount – Whitefish Point, Michigan – 2013 spring migration
  • AOU | Birds of North America Online
    In two centuries of American ornithology, The Birds of North America (BNA) is only the fourth comprehensive reference covering the life histories of North America’s breeding birds. Following in the footsteps of Wilson, Audubon, and Bent, BNA provides a quantum leap in information beyond what those historic figures were able to assemble. The print version of BNA was completed in 2002 – 18 volumes, 18,000 pages – a joint 10 year project of the AOU, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, and the Academy of Natural Sciences. Now as an online project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, BNA is becoming a living resource. Account contents are updated frequently, with contributions from researchers, citizen scientists, and designated reviewers and editors. In addition, BNA Online contains image and video galleries showing plumages, behaviors, habitat, nests and eggs, and more. And most online BNA accounts now feature recordings of the songs and calls of their species, recordings selected from the extensive collection of Cornell’s Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds. Members of the AOU receive free access to this valuable resource.
  • Where The Whale Sharks Go : NPR 082213
    Of all the creatures in the sea, one of the most majestic and mysterious is the whale shark. It’s the biggest shark there is, 30 feet or more in length and weighing in at around 10 tons. Among the mysteries is where this mighty fish migrates and where it gives birth. Now scientists have completed the biggest study ever of whale sharks, and they think they have some answers to those questions. The study was conceived by Robert Hueter, a marine biologist at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Fla. Hueter swims with sharks, and has done so for 40 years, but he has a special fondness for whale sharks. “This is the largest fish as far as we know that’s ever existed — there’s nothing bigger in the fossil record,” he explains. “But it’s a very unusual kind of shark in that it’s not a top predator; it feeds on plankton.”
  • Beatrice the Biologist
    Mission: “To make science fun and interesting for the casual reader. I firmly believe that science is important, fascinating, and relevant to every day life, and my goal is to make everyone on the planet agree with that (and pretty much everything else I have to say). I also want to make you laugh.”
  • On A Rocky Maine Island, Puffins Are Making A Tenuous Comeback : NPR 082113
    Rocky, windswept Eastern Egg Rock, about 6 miles off the coast of Maine, was once a haven for a hugely diverse bird population. But in the 1800s, fishermen decimated the birds’ ranks — for food and for feathers. When ornithologist first visited 40 years ago, the 7-acre island was nearly barren, with only grass and gulls left. Not a puffin in sight. Not even an old puffin bone. “But it had great habitat because there were great boulders on the island, and I could imagine the puffins standing on top of them,” Kress says. No imagination is needed now. Thanks to a relocation experiment pioneered by Kress and his co-workers in the Audubon Society’s , this treeless little island is now kind of a bird tornado.
  • Scott Weidensaul – Of a Feather
    From the moment Europeans arrived in North America, they were awestruck by a continent awash with birds-great flocks of wild pigeons, prairies teeming with grouse, woodlands alive with brilliantly patterned songbirds. “Of a Feather” traces the colorful origins of American birding: the frontier ornithologists who collected eggs between border skirmishes; the society matrons who organized the first effective conservation movement; and the luminaries with checkered pasts, such as Alexander Wilson (a convicted blackmailer) and the endlessly self-mythologizing John James Audubon. Scott Weidensaul also recounts the explosive growth of modern birding that began when an awkward schoolteacher named Roger Tory Peterson published “A Field Guide to the Birds in 1934.” Today birding counts iPod-wearing teens and obsessive listers among its tens of millions of participants, making what was once an eccentric hobby into something so completely mainstream it’s now (almost) cool.
  • Jack Longino, ‘The Astonishing Ant Man,’ Finds 33 New Species : NPR 080113
    While many of us spend our working days staring into an electronic box or dozing at meetings, there are some who prefer to crawl through tropical rain forests. People like “the astonishing ant man.” That’s what his students call Jack Longino. Longino started out collecting stamps in his childhood, but that got boring fast. Man-made things just didn’t thrill, so Longino decided to “get small.” As in: “If you’re shopping for a home entertainment system,” he says, “you can’t do better than a good dissecting microscope.” In school, Longino put insects under the microscope, and voila! A new world emerged. “With insects, I kept finding things I could never have imagined,” he said. Like amazing jaws: “These strange sideways mandibles with all the teeth on them,” he says, with wonder still in his now grown-up voice, “and these shield-like faces.” They’re scary, he says, “and they made me think of Hollywood monsters, the creature in Alien and Predator.”
  • Researchers find gray wolf-grizzly bear link in Yellowstone – latimes.com 073113
    Reintroduction of the gray wolf to Yellowstone National Park has boosted an important food source for the threatened grizzly bear, researchers have found in an example of how the return of a top predator can have far-reaching ecological effects. A study published this week in the Journal of Animal Ecology is essentially a tale of who eats what. When wolves returned to the park in 1995 after a 70-year absence, they preyed on elk herds that browsed on trees and shrubs. The elk population, which had exploded without the wolves, dropped. The over-browsed plants began to rebound, including berry-producing shrubs that provide nutritious summer meals for grizzlies when they are fattening up for hibernation.
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