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Monthly Archives: March 2013

An EPIC Partnership

Environmental Protection in the Caribbean (EPIC) has been doing conservation work and biological research on St. Martin for over ten years, including some of the longest-running bird studies in the Caribbean. EPIC’s U.S. non-profit has also partnered with me to accept contributions towards my program to get my wildlife book in schools, libraries and other public institutions, and to do […]

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How the Anole Got Its Beard

This is the Bearded Anole, Anolis pogus, which is found only on St. Martin. I have an amusing story of how this anole got its beard. The biologist Skip Lazell was in St. Martin in 1963 and 1966 as a graduate student, studying and collecting these lizards. Shortly afterwards, he described it as a new subspecies (later it became its […]

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Fish Hawk

Volunteering to survey a beach for sea turtle tracks and nests is a great excuse to get out to a beach early in the morning once a week. Even if I don’t see turtle tracks, I inevitably see something. Yesterday it was this osprey. It’s not unusual to see them, particularly during the winter, but they aren’t common, either. I’m […]

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Young Entomologists

Here’s a classic clip of my sister and I as young bug collectors. As it turns out, my method of identifying insects has remained largely unchanged over the years.

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Mystery Larva Pupates

I posted a strange-looking insect larva a few days ago, thinking it could be a sawfly larva. Since then it has pupated, and I have to revise my opinion because the pupa looks like it will be some kind of beetle. Or perhaps a model for a terrifying creature in an upcoming alien movie. With over a million known species, […]

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Bat Maternity Colony

In this photo, things are pretty crowded. It is a maternity colony of Lesser Antillean Fruit Bats, as seen in the Grotte du Puits de Terres Basses in the Lowlands. In this cave, maternity colonies can be seen seasonally in the round depressions in the ceiling of the cave. I believe these depressions are caused naturally by erosion from water […]

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More Juvenilia

I know this isn’t really related to St. Martin wildlife, but I thought it would be useful to share a few things from my past so people can understand why I spend all my time hiking the hills looking for insects, and why I want to give the kids of St. Martin a chance to learn more about the wildlife […]

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American Kestrel Launch

Along the trail that leads from Cul-de-sac to Anse Marcel, you can often see American Kestrels sitting on the rocks or columnar cacti near Eastern Point. Their diet is mostly grasshoppers and lizards, and the grassy area near the point is a great place for them to spot potential prey. To take a photo like this one, find a kestrel […]

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Education and Outreach

I take lots of wildlife photos, but I don’t do nearly as good a job documenting education and outreach work. Here are a few photos showcasing that part of what I do. Over the next few months there should be plenty more. We are working on a program to bring books to schools, libraries and other public institutions and conduct […]

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The Very Ugly Caterpillar

I believe this is a sawfly larva. They usually look and act like caterpillars, although this one looks like a really ugly caterpillar. In fact, they are wasps. Their ancestors may be one of the most primitive groups of wasps, which later gave rise to many of the bees, wasps and ants of today. A big thank you to our […]

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