2017-10-01 Sanctuary Asia

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Warbler Special


Unsolved Prehistoric Mystery


Sanctuary | Natural History


The Yellowstone National Park in the U.S.A is an active supervolcano. It last erupted 6,40,000 years ago and it is believed that
the next eruption could be anytime now.

Did You Know?

The Kirtland’s Warblers’ story of near-extinction and
unprecedented revival is the stuff of legend. First identifi ed in
1951, this warbler is a habitat specialist and an extreme one
at that! It only occupies patches of forests cleared by wildfi res
comprising jack pine Pinus banksiana that stand one to fi ve
metres tall. The wildfi res must be of a particular intensity that
aids pine seed germination. For this reason, it is often referred
to as the ‘bird of fi re’. Habitat shrinkage, the species’ rigid
preference of young pines and open clearings along with a
deadly invasion by Brown-headed Cowbirds pushed Kirtland’s
Warbler numbers to a record low of less than 200 singing
males in the early 1970s.
After the threats to the warbler were identifi ed (one of the
fi rst persons to identify the cowbird parasitism threat was
a suspected murderer!), a wave of inspirational conservation
action that controlled and replicated the effects of wildfi res,
cowbird trapping, awareness and education initiatives,
plus regular surveys, saw a welcome revival of the species.
The numbers of singing males was believed to have risen
to 2,365 by 2015 according to the IUCN Red List of
Threatened Species.

Even before the Cambrian ‘explosion’ or period, about 545
million years ago, when most known animal groups fi rst emerged on
the planet, there was a mystery creature lurking in the depths of the
primordial ocean. At the turn of the present millennium, in the early
2000s, a fossil bed in Newfoundland was discovered replete with
fossils of these mysterious organisms. They called them rangeomorphs
and found that they belonged to the Ediacaran period some 635-542
million years ago. They bore complex structures, much like a feather
with central stems sprouting fractal (self-repeating) branches and were
soft-bodied. They might have anchored themselves to the ocean bed by
anchor discs or embedded themselves in the mud. There are indications
that they had a mouth or gut, or for that matter some complex organs
along the lines of existing animals. The fossils bear quite a striking
resemblance to modern-day fern fronds, but are not related to plants at
all. Rangeomorphs lived in the depths of the sea, with some growing
up to two metres in length. At these depths, even light was unable to
penetrate to trigger photosynthesis. How they acquired the necessary
nutrients to survive is still a puzzle. Though the existence of these
creatures has been now known for a good 50 years or more, experts
are still at a loss to explain what they might have been or how they fi t
into the tree of animal life on the planet. Rangeomorphs aren’t the only
mysterious Ediacarans known to science, but are undoubtedly one of
the most charismatic and iconic!

Most of the world's population of the Kirtland's
Warbler Setophaga kirtlandii is limited to the state of
Michigan in the U.S.A.

A cast of the rangeomorph Charnia masoni.
Discovered in England in 1957, it helped
establish the age of rangeomorph fossils
as Precambrian.

The warblers of North America New York,D. Appleton & Company,1907.


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