Photo of the Month February 2013

Photo of the month February 2013
Photo of the month February 2013

This month a slightly different picture. We had another period with snow in the Netherlands, during which I went out several times to take some pictures. Previously I always tried to avoid any signs of human elements in my landscape photography. I wanted to show a pristine landscape away from human society, sometimes even cloning away small elements like the cables of electricity pylons cleverly hidden behind trees. The problem is, however, that everywhere there are signs of humans in the landscape, especially in the very crowded Dutch landscape. Therefore, I decided to change my thinking and I made it a New Year’s resolution to focus this year on showing the landscape as it is, with all the human elements, while still conveying the beauty of the natural world.

I have already passed these electricity pylons many times, always trying to keep them out of my pictures, irritated when they were in between me and a beautiful sunset. However, this time I tried to use the fact that they dominate the landscape by including them as the main element in my picture.

Canon 5DmIII, 29mm, 1/125 @ f/8, iso 400

Geese

Greater white-fronted geese in a snow covered meadow Canon 5DmIII, 70mm, 1/200 @ f/8, iso 400
Greater white-fronted geese in a snow covered meadow
Canon 5DmIII, 70mm, 1/200 @ f/8, iso 400

Today, most of the snow melted in the ongoing rain (at least here in Wageningen), ending the second period of snow this winter in the Netherlands. Fortunately, I took some time yesterday to take pictures while it was actually snowing again. I was looking for patterns and abstract forms in the snow, when I came across a large group of greater white-fronted geese. The geese were happily foraging in a meadow, and luckily they didn’t take too much notice of the strange photographer on his bike. I positioned myself in such a way that the geese made a nice line through the landscape and took some shots, of which one is shown above.

The nice thing about greater white-fronted geese, is that one of my colleagues (Mikhail Grishchenko) is studying them, which increased my interest in the species. They stay in the Netherlands during the winter, after which they migrate north. It is this spring migration that Mikhail studies, and especially the relation between the change in land-use in Russia during the last few decades, and the effect this has had on the migration routes and patterns of the geese.

Hibernating Bats

Whiskered Bat
Hibernating Whiskered Bat
Canon 5DmIII, 51mm, 1/100 @ f/5.6, iso 400, 2 Speedlite flashes

Today I helped with the counting of hibernating bats in the surroundings of Wageningen. Several places in the area, such as some old brick-yards and an old ice house, are monitored every year for hibernating bats by a group of volunteers, and this year (for the third time), I joined them.

Counting hibernating bats involves looking into every crack and crevice that you can find, while twisting your body into every imaginable position in order to see every corner. All the while looking upward in a dark, mouldy tunnel/chamber/hole. However, when you spot a small ball of fur with some ears and wings, your adrenaline starts rushing, as you have found another bat. People who have never seen a bat up close most probably can’t imagine it, but bats are actually very soft and fluffy! Unfortunately, spotting the bat is not everything, it has to be identified as well. Luckily we had some experienced people with us, and after a while everybody could identify most common species. During the day we saw quite some bats, of four species in total.

In the old ice house, the bats are always hanging more in the open, and I was able to photograph a whiskered bat, deep in hibernation.

Cold

Dawn at the Jufferswaard
Dawn at the Jufferswaard
Canon 5DmIII, 23mm, 25s @ f/16, iso 400, 0.9 ND grad, tripod, cable release

Finally winter is back in the Netherlands with subzero temperatures during the night. To celebrate this, I set the alarm at a time when it was still properly dark, and put on as many clothes as I could to cycle to a nearby Nature reserve. I was hoping for a nice sunrise with some fog, as the sky had been clear all night. Unfortunately, there was not a bit of fog in sight when I arrived at the Jufferswaard to take some pictures of the frozen water and hoar frost. There were also no clouds, so I minimized the amount of sky in the frame and took al my pictures before sunrise, as after sunrise the light quickly became to harsh and I could go home again.

When I arrived at my bike, the hoar frost had taken my bike and transformed it into an icicle. Luckily it still functioned and I was back home right in time for breakfast and a warm cup of coffee.

Rodents: Pest or pleasure?

Sometimes when going through databases of publications, you find something interesting on a topic you were not looking for in the first place. It can be something related to the topic you were looking for, or something totally different. This recently happened to me. While going through all the publications in Lutra (the scientific magazine of the Dutch mammal society) looking for information on polecats for a publications I am working on together with Jasja Dekker, I saw a title which caught my interest. ‘Why do some rodents become a pest, while others barely survive?’ A question that I had never thought about, but now that I saw it, I wanted to know the answer.

I love working with rodents as they are relatively easy to study (for a mammal) and because they are so interesting in many ways. Rodents are on the lower end of the food chain, as they are the staple food for many raptors and predators. They are themselves predators of plants and seeds, working as dispersers and gardeners. They have very interesting population dynamics. And last but not least, rodents play an important role in many disease systems. All of these reasons make rodents a pleasure for me as an animal ecologist, while they make them a nuisance or pest for farmers and public health institutes, and this contradiction, I hoped, would be addressed in the paper with the interesting title.

The paper starts by setting a definition for when a rodent is a pest as “a rodent that, at a given time and a given place, causes damage, or constitutes a risk for such damage, that is unacceptable to humans”. This definition includes the transmission of diseases from rodents to animals and humans, as well as the perceived risk of the occurrence of burrowing rodents near a dyke. It does not include a strict damage threshold above which the rodents become a pest, as many other definitions of pests do. It does, however, include a subjective damage threshold, which is defined as “unacceptable”. To emphasize this subjectivity, the author gives a personal account of a situation which he encountered during his work. He was working on black rats (Rattus rattus) in Zanzibar, of which he caught a lot in rural houses. When he asked how the local leaders perceived this problem they answered that they “were aware of the large numbers of rats, that the rats now and then would bite the fingers of small babies, but that they did not cause real problems”! So as you can see, a pest can only be defined in a subjective way, because it is humans that perceive a rodent as a pest or not, irrelevant of any economic or epidemiological data.

According to the author, only five out of 61 European rodents are generally considered pests, which is a very small number. Also there are no clear characteristics that describe these species, apart from the fact that they are numerous and occur in environments where the chance of doing damage to humans is large (agricultural and urban/sub-urban areas). Also, one species can be considered a pest in one place, while it is the subject of many conservation efforts in another place. A nice example of this is the European hamster (Cricetus cricetus), which is strictly protected in Western Europe, while it is considered a pest in Eastern Europe (although there are signs that the Eastern European population is declining). The author shows that it is environmental conditions and often man initiated changes to the environment that cause rodents to become pests, and that it is not innate characteristics of the species that make them pests. In the end, it is the subjective opinion of the observer that determines if a species is a pest or not. So it is entirely up to you, if rodents are a pest or a pleasure!

 

Want to know more?

Leirs H. (2002) Why do some rodents become a pest, while others barely survive? Lutra, 45(2), 75-82.

Forlorn

Common juniper on a desolate field
Common juniper on a desolate field
5D mIII, 40mm, 1/160 @ f/8, iso 800

The last two days I was on a short trip to the Dwingelderveld, a National Park in the Dutch province Drenthe. The weather was grey and wet, which combined very nicely with the open plains and lonely juniper bushes, especially when converted to black and white. The Dwingelderveld is a beautiful area, which I can strongly recommend, although I would advise people to go there during the spring or summer, when the fens are filled with amphibians and surrounded by insects.

Linking economy to ecology and disease

Since I started as a PhD candidate in March 2012, I have read a lot about the relationship between biodiversity and disease. Actually, I am studying this relationship by looking at the effect of mammal diversity on Lyme disease risk in the Netherlands, where I define Lyme disease risk as a combination of the tick density and the percentage of infected ticks. If we go back in time, the current discussion about the effect of biodiversity on disease risk started about 10 years ago, with a number of publications by Richard Ostfeld and colleagues in which they proposed the dilution effect, which in short argues that disease risk increases when biodiversity decreases (I have to say here that Ostfeld and colleagues state it much more elaborate, as there are a number of criteria that have to be met before this statement is true). There has been a lot of debate about this, with people arguing both for and against the dilution effect. However, I recently noticed a paper published by an economist which drew my attention.

Bonds and colleagues argue (click here to read the full paper) that biodiversity is not only related to disease risk, but also to per capita income. This seems quite a bold statement only to increase the support for the protection of biodiversity, and perhaps it is, but it made me think. Bonds et al. argue that there is a strong link between the natural environment and economy, by pointing to the latitudinal gradient that is visible in all kinds of processes from animal body size, to biodiversity, human disease burden and economy. The relationship between economy and latitude could be caused by vector-borne and parasitic diseases (VBPDs), which are most common around the equator, and which are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in poor countries, influencing the economy in these countries.

In their analysis, they perform a multiple linear regression, where they show that biodiversity had a significant negative effect on VBPDs, when controlling for all other factors. Indicating that a loss in biodiversity would indeed increase disease risk. Furthermore, VBPDs had a significant negative effect on income, when controlling for all other factors. Could this mean that protecting biodiversity could increase or at least stabilize income in poor countries?

As the authors state, there are many complex mechanisms underlying diseases, and only by unraveling these, can we gain more insight into how things work, but it does make you think!

Photo of the Month January 2013

Photo of the Month January 2013
Photo of the Month January 2013

The first Photo of the Month on the new website is an image I took during the short period of snow we had in the beginning of December 2012. I didn’t have much time to go out and take pictures, so I took my camera with me during field work and spend 30 minutes during lunch brake taking some pictures. Because I didn’t have a tripod with me, and because of the amount of branches sticking out from the snow, I decided to experiment with unsharp pictures due to camera shake. I really liked this black and white version, which conveyed the mood I was looking for.

Canon 40D, 50mm, 1/8 @ f/16, iso 100