The FWP weekly digest of wondrous wildlife happenings
and other interesting items from the natural world

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Lisa S. French
Owl in tree trunk
2020 Year in Review

As this downside-up, outside-in year draws to a close, we would like to extend our heartfelt gratitude to our dear readers, who made time to make room for nature at Weekly Wondrous. Whether you’re far or whether you’re near, we want you to know we’re so glad that you’re here!

The WW Year in Review

Bionic corals,
one trillion new trees,
shiny, cloud parasols,
resilient, smart bees

Precious koalas,
zen jellyfish,
Earth Day at 50,
and our planet’s last wish

The flower power of pigment,
New Guinea’s last singing dog,
a weirdly wonderful bird
with a mouth like a frog

Boogying monkeys,
bickering bats,
and the laser-sharp focus
of the eyes of big cats

Imported beavers,
cool hummingbirds,
a poet named Walser
who had the best words

Two baby whales’
happy, hopeful debut,
shy, stripey okapis
hidden from view

A mini-marsupial’s
Indigenous name,
the Tree of the Year’s
leafy, green fame

Hard-working scientists
in need of big hugs,
tool-using tamarins
skilled at harvesting bugs

Bringing back nature
to make cities sweet,
cooling the planet
with hoofed reindeer feet

Matching red pandas,
an owl all alone,
copycat dolphins,
and a tree-planting drone

A green, flightless parrot
that won the top prize,
a whale of a shark
with teeth on its eyes

Protecting the pollinators
to help flowers bloom,
saving the elephants
by carving out room

An urban sky garden,
robotic bees,
how nature heals sadness,
making music with trees

Keeping tabs on sea turtles,
the floral language of love,
miniature sky labs
tending whales from above

An egg-laying mammal
with an eerie blue glow,
and a fat city cat,
stalking mice in the snow

And that’s that!

From our Favorite World to yours, best wishes for an all-around kinder, gentler, seriously more splendid 2021!

LSF   •   WW   •   FWP

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Aurora Borealis
How the Light Gets In

So the darkness shall be the light, and the stillness the dancing.
Whisper of running streams, and winter lightning.

T.S. Eliot

This holiday season, and always,
may you find comfort and joy
in the poetry of nature.

Wishing you peace.

LSF   •   WW   •   FWP

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Cat in snow
Aspiring Snow Leopard

Because she’s been grumbling about her lack of internet exposure this year, we offer a rare glimpse of Stella, the FWP in-house, aspiring snow leopard, traversing the rooftop tundra in search of elusive subarctic mice. So fierce!

And in the spirit of the season, a little snow day glow.

Stay safe and warm out there—brrrr!

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Baby whale with mom
Welcome Little Big Whales

1.5-minute read

In the how-about-some-hopeful-news category, two baby bright spots have appeared in the Atlantic Ocean, helping to dispel a bit of the 2020 gloom. As recently reported by CNN, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has announced dual special deliveries. North Atlantic right whales, 13-year-old Chiminea, and 16-year-old Millipede have successfully given birth and been observed swimming alongside their newborn calves off of the coasts of Georgia and Florida.

At a time when the small remaining population of fewer than 400 North Atlantic right whales is struggling to survive, these two youngsters are very welcome additions to their pod. According to an April 2020 study from universities in Denmark and Australia, the critically endangered species has been declining at a rate of about 1% a year. The two biggest threats to the rare animals are ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear. In one year alone, between November 2016 and November 2017, 17 juvenile and adult whales died from strikes and entanglements. More than 83% of North Atlantic right whales carry scars from getting caught in fishing gear.

Scientists aiming to come up with strategies to keep northern right whales safely in the swim have been analyzing how their health and environmental conditions compare to those of the growing populations of tens of thousands of Southern right whales (pictured above) in Argentina, Australia, and New Zealand.

Although right whales can grow up to 50 feet long and weigh up to 140,000 pounds, North Atlantic right whales are significantly smaller, have less blubber, and are in poorer overall condition compared to southern whales. Researchers believe that the reduced body size is negatively impacting resilience and female whales’ ability to support their calves. Northern right whales only give birth every seven years, while southern whales reproduce about every three years. Not a single northern whale was born between 2017 and 2018.

The primary difference between the two populations is the location. Southern right whales live in remote environments while their northern relatives occupy heavily developed coastal areas with some of the world’s busiest and noisiest shipping lanes. As oceans warm due to climate change, North Atlantic right whales follow their food supplies into cooler waters and higher traffic areas leading to strikes. In light of the daily challenges to the animals’ existence, the birth of two healthy calves is all the more remarkable. Well done, ladies!

It’s clear that North Atlantic right whales are going to need additional support to increase their chances for survival. You can learn more about the ongoing efforts to keep one of the planet’s largest mammals out of harm’s way from the North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium.

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Platypus
The Platypus: You Could Even Say It Glows

1.5-minute read

As quirky creatures go, the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) is a pretty tough act to follow. The web-footed, duck-billed, paddle-tailed, venom-producing water dweller is one of only five egg-laying mammals on Earth. Although the ancient, semi-aquatic oddity has been paddling around the streams, lakes, and lagoons of eastern Australia for around 110 million years, researchers have only recently discovered another unusual platypus-ian trait—biofluorescence. Platypus fur contains special proteins that absorb sunlight and re-emit it as a blue-green glow under ultraviolet (UV) light.

Why the need for built-in brightness? Because the platypus is primarily active at night, scientists believe its biofluorescence could be an adaptation to the murky, low-light underwater world it inhabits. By absorbing rather than reflecting UV light, the fluorescent fur of the platypus may help keep it hidden from the prying eyes of predators with UV sensitive vision. Navigating in stealth mode could be especially important to the animal’s survival, given that it closes its eyes and ears underwater and can’t see or hear when trouble is headed its way.

While St. Nick’s reindeer could probably do with a break, it looks like he won’t be hitching a submersible sleigh to a team of platypuses anytime soon. Unlike Rudolph’s blinking, bright-red nose, the nocturnal animal’s blue-green fluorescence isn’t visible to the naked human eye.

You may also be interested to learn that the platypus doesn’t glow it alone. Fluorescent substances that emit light in shades of yellow, green, red, blue, and pink have also been found in the bones, fur, and skin of birds, reptiles, amphibians, and other night critters, including the flying squirrel, which glows hot pink and the water opossum, which glows purple.

Blue platypuses, pink flying squirrels, and purple opossums! We might have to spring for a UV flashlight!

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