The Magazine of the CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES |
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Naturalist's Almanac What To Look For This Winter
December Chilly winter rains prompt many animals to head for shelter, but are also the siren song calling forth sleepy California newts. Along the western Sierra Nevada and the length of the coast, these gentle creatures appear overnight from underground hiding places and begin waddling towards breeding ponds and streams. Beginning in December, males congregate at favored sites to await the arrival of females. Courtship involves a male clasping the female in his arms and softly rubbing his chin on her nose for an hour. When the time is right he moves to one side and deposits a gelatinous sperm packet on the mud. She picks it up with her cloaca in preparation for laying eggs. Because each female mates only every other year, males outnumber females at breeding sites and may surround the ladies in frenzied courting clusters. January Fly agarics appear out of the forest gloom like hallucinogenic thunderbolts. You can hardly believe you’re actually seeing one of those dazzling red mushrooms with white-spotted caps caricatured on posters and as plastic lawn ornaments. They are acually fairly common in the conifer and madrone forests in the Sierra Nevada and coast ranges of California, and widespread in Europe and Asia. As one of the toxic amanita mushrooms, the fly agaric is shunned by gourmets. But before alcohol was widely available, this mushroom was reportedly an important intoxicant, and a good case has been made for it being the Soma plant of the sacred Hindu RgVedas texts. However, their toxicity ranges so widely from ’shroom to ’shroom and population to population that ingesting one can be a fatal gamble. It’s better to admire these fungi from afar. February Although rarely seen except at low tide, the red sea urchin is very common along rocky stretches of the California coast. Looking like seven-inch space pods with spines, these creatures spawn from February to March. While exact counts are difficult to make, it’s known that a related species may produce 20 million eggs per year. With these numbers it’s not surprising that red sea urchin populations have soared in the absence of predators such as sea otters, and in some areas have decimated vast kelp beds with their grazing. Point Lobos State Reserve (831-624-4909) tidepools offer chances to find both red and purple urchins. After a midwinter visit to the warm bays and lagoons of Baja California’s Pacific coast, gray whales begin swimming northward in late February and early March. This aspect of their annual migration is easily overlooked; the first waves of northbound juveniles and nonbreeding adults remain well offshore as they pass the California coast. It is much easier and more enjoyable to watch females migrating with newborn young. These pairs meander playfully along our shore in April. But don’t underestimate the urgency of early migrants as they head back to arctic feeding grounds. Three to five months without food will push even 30-ton whales to the edge of survival.
David Lukas leads natural history tours and programs in the Bay Area. He can be reached at david@naturalists-in-action.com. |