Thursday, May 24, 2012

In the news, Thursday, May 24, 2012


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WED 23      INDEX        FRI 25   
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30-year mortgage rate falls to record 3.78%
Associated Press

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why does this sound like junk science:

Study shows link between body weight, house valueAssociated Press

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human stupidity remains infinite:

Paper or plastic? L.A. votes neither
David Zahniser      Los Angeles Times

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These look a lot like what we used to call rock rabbits, which were very common around Coulee City in the '50s and '60s.

Endangered population of pygmy rabbits jumps
Michelle Mcniel      Wenatchee World

A biologist holds an infant pygmy rabbit on Friday.
EPHRATA, Wash. – With pillowcases hanging from their back pockets, metal toilet snakes capped with tennis balls coiled in their hands and dirt covering their clothes, Dave Volson and Chad Eidson looked like they were on some childhood adventure.

The state biologists were in a group that spent two days last week crawling under sagebrush and sticking their hands down rabbit holes looking for babies.

They didn’t go away empty-handed.

“We’ve got rabbits coming out our ears,” said Penny Becker, a research scientist for the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

It was an unexpected and celebrated turn of events in the rocky, decade-long effort to save the tiny, endangered Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit from extinction.

As of Friday afternoon, they’d captured 80 baby pygmy rabbits at a rabbit reintroduction site in the Sagebrush Flat Wildlife Area, north of Ephrata.

Becker said there are several babies still to be captured – and the fertile bunnies are only partway through their breeding season. There are now 130 adults and babies living in fenced enclosures, and unknown numbers of them roaming outside the pens.

“It’s incredible. We didn’t expect this,” Volson said as he searched for babies last Friday. “It’s an embarrassment of riches.”

Volson and Eidson teamed up to round up rabbits in a 6-acre enclosure. They pushed the ball-capped toilet snakes down the holes and then caught the bunnies in the pillow cases when they hopped out a second entrance.

The babies were all weighed and marked for identification. Some were released back into the enclosure, some were moved to a new pen that will be next year’s breeding stock, and some were outfitted with radio collars and released into the wild to start recolonizing the sage lands.

Last year, the government’s efforts to save the tiny rabbit shifted from captive breeding, which failed to produce enough babies, to a field operation that is supplemented with pygmy rabbits from nearby states.

The goal is to preserve at least some of the unique genes of the Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit, which is protected under the Endangered Species Act, while mixing them with healthier populations of kindred Western rabbits.

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