Thursday, 2 September 2004
Saturday, 28 August 2004
Saturday, 3 July 2004
Saturday, 15 May 2004
Saturday, 24 April 2004
Wednesday, 21 April 2004
Saturday, 13 March 2004
Tuesday, 3 February 2004
Sunday, 4 January 2004
Monday, 20 October 2003
Monday, 13 October 2003
Thursday, 2 October 2003
Tuesday, 23 September 2003
Tuesday, 9 September 2003
OH, SHE'S A BEAUTY :: CASTLE PEAK NORTH OF GOLDBRIDGE
Thursday, 4 September 2003
Friday, 4 July 2003
Thursday, 15 May 2003
Friday, 9 May 2003
Friday, 2 May 2003
Thursday, 24 April 2003
Monday, 21 April 2003
WHEN THE TIDE IS OUT THE TABLE IS SET
Have you ever watched salmon jump, twist and leap their way past the many hurtles to return to their place of birth to spawn?
We are all familiar with the image of salmon returning to fresh water, to the rivers of their youth, to spawn and complete their lifecycle, in fact, it is one of the staple images of British Columbia. As adults, we bring our children to witness this cycle, rushing to the banks of our local rivers to watch as the adults, keen in their fight for reproduction and survival, struggle to complete their epic journeys against currents and predators. Arriving as they do, year upon year, season upon season, it seems to us that this is how it has been since time immemorial.
But we now have evidence that migration to the sea may be a relatively recent behaviour. Fossil beds at Driftwood Canyon, near Smithers, contain large numbers of fossil salmonid remains from the Eocene age, approximately 45 million years ago. What is interesting is that the fossil beds are filled equally with both juvenile and larger adults.
If these salmon were heading off to sea in their juvenile form and returning to spawn as adults we would expect to find an abundance of larger carcasses in the lake sediments and relatively few juveniles. Given the equal numbers, we can conclude that the salmonids of the Eocene, lived out their lifecycle as a landlocked species, the way Kokanee do today.
Thursday, 20 February 2003
Sunday, 9 February 2003
GRIZZLY & BLACK BEARS
Both grizzly and black bears descend from a common ancestor, Ursavus, a bear-dog the size of a raccoon who lived more than 20 million years ago. Seems an implausible lineage given the size of their large descendents.
Monday, 3 February 2003
Friday, 24 January 2003
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