Keystone Krisis

Shot of the Month – November 2022

Pacific Salmon-Brown Bear, Katmai NP (9293)

Pink Salmon (female) Fleeing from a Brown Bear (Katmai NP)

WoW!  Look at that amazing animal.  The power it has is mind-boggling.

Oh yeah, and that brown bear in the background is pretty impressive also.

bdbdbdbdbbdbdbd-Whaaaat?

Yep, I am actually, talking about the fish.  Look, brown bears are impressive and all, but Pacific Salmon (Oncorhynchus) attain an entirely different level of amazingness.

Despite their diminutive size, at least compared to a brown bear, the Pacific Salmon drives the survival of entire ecosystems across the northern Pacific Ocean as shown in this map below.

Stop for a second and let the scale of that sink in.  This includes ecosystems found across thousands of miles from South Korea to Japan to Russia, across the Aleutians, and down the coastline of Alaska, Canada, Washington, and California.

There are seven species of Pacific Salmon.  Five of them are found in North American waters: chinook, coho, chum, sockeye, and pink.  The other two species, masu and amago are only found in Asia.  The seven species use the entire Pacific Rim coastline and can venture hundreds of miles inland in every direction from South Korea to Southern California.  The coastal areas of the Sea of Okhotsk are the only regions to host all seven species as shown below.

Pacific Salmon impact so many ecosystems because of their anadromous lifestyle.  Anadromous fish:

  1. Live the first years of their life in freshwater.
  2. Migrate to the ocean where food is more abundant, and then
  3. Return years later as adults to the same streams, where they were born, to spawn and die.

Phase 1:  Freshwater to the Ocean

Pacific salmon are born in freshwater rivers and streams, and then as young fish, they begin their journey to the ocean.  On this trek, more than 50% of the young salmon’s diet is insects that fall from the surrounding trees.  Without the salmon there would be an explosion of insects to deal with.  Salmon are the main predator of insects in aquatic environments and for this little feat alone they are Superstars.  But there is more.

Phase 2: Ocean Life

Salmon gain a tremendous amount of mass while living in the rich ocean environment.  As they gain mass, salmon play a vital role in the survival of key ocean species.  For example, the Chinook salmon is the primary prey of the southern resident killer whale.  Other ocean predators include seals, sea lions, porpoises, sharks, and lampreys to name a few.  There is still more.

Phase 3: Return to Fresh Water Streams

Pacific Salmon spend 1 to 5 years in the ocean, depending on the species, before migrating back to fresh water.  Each summer millions of Pacific Salmon migrate back to the streams, where they were born, to spawn and then die. The fish bring millions of pounds of nutrients from the nutrient-rich marine environment to the nutrient-poor river ecosystems.  The salmon migration helps replenish the entire ecosystem, from the animals that eat the salmon, to the decomposers who break down their dead bodies, to the trees that grow from their broken-down nutrients.

Brown Bear, Katmai National Park (3519)

Everybody is looking for a Salmon Meal

For example, over 137 species of fish and wildlife depend on the Pacific salmon for survival.  Of this list, 41 species of mammals rely on the salmon including orcas, brown bears, black bears, wolves, river otters and so many more.  Over 89 bird species feast on salmon including bald eagles, Caspian terns, and grebes amongst others.  Predators feast upon the salmon, their eggs, their carcasses, or on their young.  Over millions of years, many predators have adapted their movement and behavior to take full advantage of the annual salmon migration.

In areas rich with salmon, bears will eat an average of 15 salmon/day — a significant portion of their diet.  Coastal bears get 33-94% of their annual protein from the salmon.  In the upper reaches of the Chilkat River in Alaska, the return of half a million chum salmon attracts thousands of bald eagles to the feast.  It is one of the largest concentrations of bald eagles in the world.  Wolves normally hunt for deer, but once the salmon runs start, they shift their focus to salmon.  In some areas, salmon represent more than 50% of the diet of wolves.

When salmon die their carcasses provide valuable nutrients to streams and rivers.  Salmon Carcass, Katmai NP (3458)The significant nutrients in their carcasses, rich in nitrogen, sulfur, carbon, and phosphorus, are transferred from the ocean and released to inland aquatic ecosystems.  The nutrients can also be washed downstream into estuaries where they accumulate and provide significant support for invertebrates and breeding waterbirds.

Bears play an important role in transferring nutrients from the coast and rivers to the woodlands and forests.  The bears capture salmon and feed on carcasses, and often carry them into adjacent wooded areas. There they deposit nutrient-rich urine and feces and partially eaten carcasses. Bears are estimated to leave up to half the salmon they harvest on the forest floor, in densities that can reach 4,000 kilograms per hectare, providing as much as 24% of the total nitrogen available to the woodlands. The foliage of spruce trees up to 500 m (1,600 ft) from a stream where grizzlies fish salmon have been found to contain nitrogen originating from fished salmon.

Brown Bear, Katmai NP (4250)

The main reason that Pacific Salmon die after spawning is to give their offspring the best chance for survival.  As mentioned previously, woodland river systems along the Pacific Ocean are nutrient-poor.  The rotting carcasses of the adult salmon are a major source of food for the baby fish and give them the best chance at survival.  One research study showed that 40-60% of the stomach contents of young salmon could be traced to salmon carcasses.  (Ewww, but, amazing)

Brown Bear Cub, Katmai NP (7459)

Brown Bear Cub Getting a Nutritious Salmon Snack

Throughout their life cycle, salmon f-u-n-d-a-m-e-n-t-a-l-l-y transform the way ecosystems function.  As predator, they keep insect populations in check.  As prey, they provide essential nutrients to mammals, fish, birds, reptiles across the entire northern Pacific Rim.  In death, they transfer key nutrients from the sea to inland woods needed by their offspring.   But they also provide the essential chemicals that are the building blocks of entire habitats of wetlands and forests.

Because of all this awesomeness, Pacific Salmon are considered a KEYSTONE SPECIES.

Named for an architectural term—the keystone is the topmost stone in an arch that holds the entire structure together—keystone species are defined as species that have a disproportionately large effect on the communities in which they occur. They help maintain biodiversity and there are no other species in the ecosystem that can serve their same function. Without them, their ecosystem would change dramatically or could even cease to exist. (source)

This can’t be overstated – without Pacific salmon, many species, and entire ecosystems, are at risk for failure.  We are seeing salmon populations drop in many locations, due to pollution, dams, logging, over-fishing, disease, etc.  We are also seeing almost immediate ripple effects.   The decline of the chinook salmon population is a major reason that the southern resident killer whale is now listed as critically endangered (only 76 individuals remain in the wild).  In the US Northwest the declining salmon population is causing great stress on the populations of bald eagles, brown bears, grizzly bears, black bears, osprey, harlequin duck, Caspian tern, and river otter.  To name a few.  The salmon disappeared in McDonald Creek in Glacier National Park in 1981, and the bald eagle population plummeted from 600 to 25 in less than a decade.  Today, salmon are extinct in almost 40 percent of the rivers where they were known to exist in California, Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.  Wild Salmon have declined by 90% in Washington, Oregon, and California.  Hundreds of salmon runs have collapsed across the Pacific Rim.

 

Normally, this is where I would end with a pithy wordplay, or a bad pun, but this situation is too serious to joke about.  We need the Pacific Salmon to thrive. It is not lost on me that the coastline of the northern Pacific Rim is shaped like an arch.  The keystone of that arch is crumbling.  Let’s hope that humanity can act quickly to protect this Superfish.

If you want to learn more and see how you can help, check out these links:

Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition

Wild Salmon Center

Patagonia Provisions

 

Thanks…until next month…..michael

 

Nikon Z9, Nikon 80-400mm (@ 260mm), f/5.6, 1/1000, ISO 900

 

Sources

Ecosystem Keystone:  Salmon Support 137 Other Species

Pacific Salmon (Wild Salmon Center)

Salmon: a keystone species (PacificWild)

Nature up close: Salmon, a keystone species in the Pacific Northwest (CBS News)

Salmon in Food Web (ScienceWorld)

Salmon Run (Wikipedia)

Brown Bear?

Shot of the Month – October 2022

Brown Bear, Katmai NP (Alaska) (3426)

Whoa, that is a BIG bear.  Is it a Grizzly Bear?  Or perhaps a Brown Bear?

Seems like a simple enough question, but as I have learned over the years, the classification or naming of critters can be a very, very messy affair.

First, let’s start with “What is a Brown Bear?”

The Brown Bear species (Ursus arctos) is the most widely distributed bear across the globe. They can be found in many countries throughout Europe and Central Asia, China, Canada, and the United States. There are approximately 200,000 brown bears in the world; with Russia having the largest population at 120,000 bears. North America is home to about 55,000 brown bears; wherein Western Canada has roughly 25,000 bears, while the United States has about 30,000.  Most of the U.S. brown bears live in Alaska (about 98%) with a small population found in Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, and Washington. (source)

Next, “What is a Grizzly Bear?”

Grizzly bears are only found in North America and many feel that they are simply brown bears.  Some say that they are a sub-species of Brown Bear.  Others say they are a separate clade.  Yeah, let’s not go down this rabbit hole or we may lose our minds…

In common usage, meaning not using any fancy Latin words, most folks go with this explanation:

The grizzly bear is a kind of brown bear. Many people in North America use the common name “grizzly bear” to refer to the smaller and lighter-colored bear that occurs in interior areas and the term “brown bear” to refer to the larger and typically darker-colored bear in coastal areas.

Did you catch that terrifying nuance?  Grizzly bears, as huge as they are, tend to be the SMALLER version of brown bears.  Why is that you may wonder?  Brown bears, given the “definition” above, tend to live along the coast and therefore have access to salmon which provide a tremendous calorie boost to their diet, allowing them to grow to massive proportions.  Have you heard of the Fat Bear Contest (check out this video)?  Yeah, those are Brown Bears, who are all getting fat on salmon.  Alaskan Brown Bears, like the female I photographed in Katmai NP above, can eat 80-90 pounds of food/day gaining 3-6 pounds of fat each day in preparation for hibernation.

So grizzly bears are just North American brown bears that are found in forests, interior landscapes, and other places where one cannot dine on salmon.  Below is one of those “small” grizzlies that I photographed (read more about that here) in Yellowstone NP a few years ago:

Grizzly Bear, Yellowstone NP (8742)

Male grizzlies tend to max out around 400 pounds (females at around 250 pounds) while brown bears can reach double that size.  Take all this weight talk with a grain of salt as brown bear/grizzly bear size and weight can vary dramatically depending on location/climate/diet/genetics.  The Yellowstone grizzly that killed the elk in the image above, Grizzly 791, is one of the biggest seen in the park and weighs about 600 pounds so he obviously did not get the memo about being smaller.

And where does one find the biggest brown bears?  That would be on Kodiak Island in Alaska.  The Kodiak bear is a recognized sub-species of brown as they have been isolated from other bears for about 12,000 years – since the last ice age.  Those bruisers can reach 1,700 pounds.  Yelp.

 

So if you managed to follow all that, we can say, for the most part, that all grizzly bears are brown bears, but not all brown bears are grizzly bears.  And for their size, all we can say is that brown bears and grizzlies are always big.  And sometimes really big.  And other times, terrifyingly big.

And I didn’t even get into the fact that “Brown” bears are only sometimes brown in color (can vary from almost white to dark tan and everything in between)…..but, my head hurts, so let’s save that for another day.

 

 

Until next month….m

 

 

 

 

Sources

Bear Identification

Brown Bear (National Geographic)

Brown Bears (NPS)

Brown Bear (Alaska Fish and Game)

Brown Bear (Wikipedia)

Bears of North America

Grizzly Bear

 

 

 

Nikon D5, Nikon 24-120mm (@ 32mm), f/11, 1/350 sec, ISO 360, +0.333 EV

 

Elemental Struggle

Shot of the Month – September 2022

Bison, Yellowstone (1326)

I sat in front of my computer scrolling through thousands of images.  Scroll.  Scroll…….Which image should I write about this month?  Scrolling…..scrolling.  The photo above crossed my screen and something about the image caught my eye and I stopped.

This image, taken in Yellowstone in 2014, had been on my computer for 8 years and I had done nothing with it.  But I hadn’t deleted it yet so I must have seen something of interest way back then.  I enlarged the image to fill my screen.

I stared at the photo pondering, “I like this image, but why?”  “What does my subconscious see that I can’t put words to?”

I interrogated myself.

Brain:  “What is the subject of this photo?”

Me: “It is a picture of bison.”

Brain:  “OK, sure, there are bison in the photo.  But, it is not a very good image of bison.  The bison in the back is completely out of focus.  The bison in the front is in sharp focus but we can’t really see his eye so we can’t make much of a connection which is usually essential for a compelling image.”

Me:  Sigh, “True”

Brain:  “What else??”

Me:  “Well, I see a lot of snow.  The bison are framed by snow on the ground.  The air is full of heavy snowflakes.  In fact, one could argue that the snowflakes are the dominant element in this image.”

And then it hit me.  (One could say that the answer came into focus, but that would be a terrible photography pun, and I wouldn’t do such a thing…. 🙂  )

This photo captures not a thing, but reveals a relationship.  It tells a story about a struggle.  About a fight.  Bison face many threats to survival – we mostly hear about the challenges they face from predators like wolves and bears.  This image however highlights yet another threat they face, this time, from the very environment they live in.  Winters in Yellowstone are long and taxing and many animals do not survive them.  In fact. wolves tend to thrive in late winter because prey animals like elk and bison are easier to catch due to their weakened condition.

The elements of this image capture that struggle well.  Winter is on the attack – the bison in front had its head lowered as it trods forward, enduring the onslaught.  Its body is covered in snow, and the heavy snowflakes obscure much of its being.  And the bison in the back is completely blurred while the snowflakes falling around him are in sharp focus.  The shift in focus drives home the attack on the lumbering beast.  Is he losing the battle and simply fading into oblivion?

The bison counter the offensive by taking refuge in and near the river.  Why?  The grass they need to eat to survive is buried under deep, heavy snow during much of the winter.  However, the snow is less deep right along the banks of the river so the bison forage there, as shown below, as they have to expend less energy to reach the grass.  Smart.

Bison, Yellowstone (1469)

While not as dramatic as a cheetah chasing a gazelle, the first image nonetheless captures an epic life-and-death struggle that has played out for millennia.  The heart-pounding race between gazelle and cat can be over in seconds.  Winter’s attack drags on for days.  Weeks.  Months.  Winter’s pursuit is tireless and unyielding.  Freezing temperatures.  Howling winds.  Whiteout snow storms.  Treacherous ice.  Tons of snow blocking every move.  Day after day after day after day…

For their part, the bison have adapted both their bodies and their behavior to give them the best chance for survival. (Sidenote:  Alas, the photographer was not well adapted to these conditions.  Nearly a decade later I vividly remember how my frozen hands felt like they were on FIRE after shooting this sequence).

Here is the battle in black and white:

Bison, Yellowstone (1326-bw)

Another view of the combatants, first in color:

Bison, Yellowstone (1441)

And in black and white:

Bison, Yellowstone (1441-bw)

 

Bison in winter, an Elemental Struggle of the ages.

 

Until next month……m

 

 

 

Nikon D4S, Nikon 600mm, f/5.6, 1/1000 sec, ISO 1000, EV +1.33

Stolen Moments

Shot of the Month – August 2022

Cedar Waxwing, Vermont (9644)

Shhhhhhhhhhhhh……ooh, how delicious.  I feel like one of those paparazzi photographers spying on the rich and famous.  Peering through the bushes with my high-powered lens to capture an illicit embrace.  To get this shot I did lie on my back with my lens resting on my knees – it was the only way to shoot through that small opening in the branches and leaves.

What we actually have here is two lovely Cedar Waxwings performing a courtship ritual known as “courtship feeding.”  Usually, it goes down like this:

The male goes off and finds a suitable gift – this could be a piece of fruit, an insect, or even just a flower petal.

He flies over to the female and lands on the same branch.  He hops, hops, hops his way over next to her.

He offers the gift.  If she digs the guy she will accept it.  Now she hops, hops, hops down the branch away from the male.

She then hops, hops, hops back over to him.  She offers the gift back to the male.  He takes it.

And now repeat, many times.  Eventually, the female eats the gift.

The male will go off and find another worthwhile gift and the courtship continues.  And if all goes well…..well, you know.  Baby waxwings…

Below, this time in black and white, we have the same pair handing off another gift:

Cedar Waxwing, Vermont (9659)

On a different occasion, I found two waxwings in a similar pose.  The birds were highly backlit so it became this silhouette:

Cedar Waxwing, Vermont (7443)

 

Remember this childhood taunt?

Jack and Jill
Sitting in a tree
K-I-S-S-I-N-G!
First comes love
Then comes marriage
Then comes baby
In a baby carriage!

 

I am starting to get an idea of where that came from…

 

Ahhh, courtship feeding – a time-tested strategy shared by bros and birds alike.

 

 

Until next month…..m

 

 

Check out these videos if you want to see some courtship feeding in action:

Courtship-1

Courtship-2

 

And here is a previous post I did on Cedar Waxwings.

 

Nikon D4S, Nikon 600 mm, f/4, 1/1000 sec, ISO 3200, +0.333 EV

Landscape to Lovers

Shot of the Month – July 2022

Lime Kiln Lighthouse, Washington (27-33 HDR)

The Lime Kiln Lighthouse, shown above, is located on the western side of San Juan Island and is in just the right spot to accentuate a sunset image (#6 on the map below).  The lighthouse was built in 1919 and still serves as a navigational beacon to those sailing in the Haro Strait.  This location is also known as one of the best places in the world to view whales from land.  Orca whales can often be seen swimming by from May to September each year.  From this lovely spot, one can also see Minke whales, porpoises, seals, sea lions, otters, and bald eagles.

I arrived at the lighthouse a good hour before sunset to get the lay of the land and try and explore potential compositions.  The water was unusually calm and as the sun slowly set I had an amazingly peaceful hour sitting on the rocks listening to the gentle sound of the water caressing the shoreline.  Ahhhh….seaside serenity at its best.

As the sun slipped below the horizon the scattered clouds began to explode with color.

The clock had started — Time to MOVE!

Non-photographers may not realize that one does not simply walk up to such a scene, raise the camera, snap a few shots, and go home.  No, usually there is an absolute frenzy of activity behind the camera that beguiles the serenity before the lens.

In my case, I was running from one outcropping of rocks to another and frantically adjusting my tripod to find JUST the right position and composition.  This tripod leg up a bit.  This leg, down a bit.  That leg has to go over there.  Nope, this leg is now too low.  Raise again.  Now the horizon is crooked.  Adjust the camera.  And all that is even before figuring out the proper exposure settings.  Once the camera is in the right position I then run through a range of different shutter speeds and apertures to find the best combination that can expose the bright sky while trying to keep the exposure on the building from going too dark.  For this image, I also took a series of shots at different exposure levels that I merged later with software to capture the full range of brightness in the scene.  For more on how that is done, check out this post I did on photographing a lighthouse in Maine.

Ok, got that particular shot?  Now rush over to a different outcropping and do it all again.

With each moment the light is changing and the colors may be getting better, or worse.  With each second that is passing, I am scrambling to maximize what the scene is offering in THAT moment.

This race with the light may last mere seconds, or can go on for 45 minutes.  The pressure/stress can be intense to seize the fleeting moment before it is gone.

Either way, by the end, I am usually exhausted.

But so much fun!!

Is the running around worth it?  Sometimes yes, (usually yes), sometimes not.

On this outing, I captured several scenes that I really liked.  In the above image, we have a classic seascape that oozes serenity and calmness.  It is like a visual sigh for the soul.

But in the image below, I found a completely different story and feeling:

Lime Kiln Lighthouse, Washington (7-12 HDR)

By moving closer, I still captured a seascape with a dramatic sky, but now I found a more intimate scene as the couple on the right becomes more prominent in the scene and turns this into a love story.  The upper image will most likely have the viewer looking outward to the world while the second image will nudge the viewer’s mind inward as s/he remembers a similar sunset embrace.

Photography is about storytelling and by continuing to move around the scene I was able to find two lovely, but very different, stories.  On this night, I was able to go from Landscape to Lovers in just a few feet.

 

Until next month…….

 

 

 

Nikon D850, Nikon 24-120mm (@24 mm), f/10, 1.0 sec, 7 shot Bracket (HDR merge)