By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Merge.
Blossoms and stone merge in spring…
Spring 2007 in Central Park, New York City. More photos are here.
A second interpretation of “Merge” is here.
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Merge.
Blossoms and stone merge in spring…
Spring 2007 in Central Park, New York City. More photos are here.
A second interpretation of “Merge” is here.
Posted in Nature, New York City, Photography
Tagged Central Park, Merge, New York City, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Spring, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Wrong.
Stand up paddle boarding is becoming very popular. There’s the right way to do it…
… and the wrong way.
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More photos are here.
Posted in Humor, Photography
Tagged Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Stand Up Paddle Board, SUP, Weekly Photo Challenge, Wrong
By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa‘s Travel-Themed Photo Challenge for this week is Signs.
We travel around by kayak. So, you wouldn’t think we would run into too many signs. But we do!
Scylla and Charybdis
……..Some years ago, Erik Baard and I paddled down from Manhattan and landed on the beach near the northwestern tip of Sandy Hook. We had a leisurely lunch, took a stroll along the beach, lazed about, and after a couple of hours were ready to paddle back to Manhattan. But just before we launched, we thought that we might, just out of curiosity, find out what those two big signs that stood there, facing away from us, said…
In the meantime, on the opposite, eastern side of Sandy Hook, there is another set of signs…
Bitter Sweet Heaven
……..In January, an aborted kayak trip left us wandering through the streets of Red Hook, Brooklyn, aliens in our drysuits, observing the earthlings and their strange signs…
Read the full story here.
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Judgment Day
……..Last year, Johna and I were kayaking down the Hudson from Albany to New York City. Several days into the trip, we saw this sign promising, for the next day, devastating earthquakes that would usher in the Rapture… We hoped it wouldn’t disrupt our trip too much. But we were certainly glad to be out of New York City during this event. Traffic was bound to be terrible…
Posted in Photography, Society
Tagged Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Signs, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
Ailsa‘s Travel Theme for this week is Leading Lines.
Here’s one that doesn’t travel: his world comes to him. All his lines lead in to the center…
Posted in Nature, Photography
Tagged Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Spider, Travel, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Growth. I’ve already posted two responses to this challenge, here and here, but I can’t resist yet a third one.
New beginnings:
Posted in Nature, Photography
Tagged Growth, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Spring, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Growth. I’ve already posted one response to this challenge, but here’s another one:
Tropical growth in the Cordillera Central of Puerto Rico. More photos are here.
And here is yet a third take on “Growth”.
Posted in Nature, Photography, Travel
Tagged Growth, Jungle, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Puerto Rico, Rain Forest, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Growth.
The Strangler Fig.
From the Encyclopaedia Britannica:
…Beginning life as a sticky seed left on a high tree branch by an animal such as a bird, bat, or monkey, the young strangler lives on the tree’s surface… As it grows, long roots develop and descend along the trunk of the host tree, eventually reaching the ground and entering the soil. Several roots usually do this, and they become grafted together, enclosing their host’s trunk in a strangling latticework, ultimately creating a nearly complete sheath around the trunk. The host tree’s canopy becomes shaded by the thick fig foliage, its trunk constricted by the surrounding root sheath, and its own root system forced to compete with that of the strangling fig. This process can kill the host; if not, the host tree, being much older than the strangler, still dies eventually and rots away and a magnificent fig “tree” is left behind whose apparent “trunk” is actually a gigantic cylinder of roots.
Posted in Nature, Photography
Tagged Ficus, Growth, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Strangler Fig, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge has got me thinking about the color Purple.
The most vivid purple that I’ve ever seen was not the purple of flowers, nor of sunsets. Rather, I see it in my lab. One of the experimental animals we work with is a large marine slug from California, Aplysia californica, popularly known as the sea hare. When disturbed, the sea hare releases a cloud of ink that has the most intense, rich purple color.
Those of a classical bent will recall Tyrian Purple, also known as Royal or Imperial Purple, a dye greatly prized in antiquity, which was made from a similar ink produced by several Mediterranean snail species:
Tyrian Purple was expensive: the 4th-century-BC historian Theopompus reported, “Purple for dyes fetched its weight in silver at Colophon” in Asia Minor. The expense meant that purple-dyed textiles became status symbols, and early sumptuary laws restricted their uses. The production of Tyrian purple was tightly controlled in Byzantium and was subsidized by the imperial court, which restricted its use for the colouring of imperial silks…
Interestingly, the purple color of the sea hare’s ink, as well as the purple tinge of its skin, actually derives from its preferred diet of red seaweed. If sea hares in the lab are fed green seaweed, their skin eventually turns green. I wonder if they then release green ink?
What is the biological function of the ink? We all know about squid, which release a dense cloud of ink (black in that case) into which they quickly vanish when danger threatens. But sea hares, despite their name, are sluggish. Their ink cloud is sparse to begin with, and when it disperses, the sea hare is still there.
It turns out, however, that the ink, together with other secretions that are released at the same time, provides a chemical, rather than a visual, defense. A 2005 paper by Kicklighter et al. analyzed the chemical composition of the secretions and their effect on attacking predators such as spiny lobsters. The secretions contain a complex mix of chemicals that elicit multiple, conflicting behaviors in the lobster. Indeed, while some of the chemicals are aversive, as one might expect, others actually stimulate lobster feeding behavior and mimic a food source. The result is that the lobster is not just coated with sticky goo and repelled, but, if it persists, it is diverted to attack a phantom food stimulus—the inky cloud—while the real food item slips, slowly, away:
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In multiple such sea hare–lobster pairings, Kicklighter et al. found that, if the sea hare was allowed to release its defensive secretions, it escaped from the lobster 60% of the time. But if it had had its secretory glands removed, it escaped only 19% of the time—most of the time, without its chemical defenses, it was eaten.
Reference:
Kicklighter CE, Shabani S, Johnson PM, Derby CD. Sea hares use novel antipredatory chemical defenses. Current Biology 15:549-554, 2005.
Posted in Nature, Science and Technology
Tagged Aplysia, Chemical Defense, Ink, Lobster, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Purple, Sea Hare, Sea Slug, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Purple.
Purple is a color created by mixing red and blue. So there is a range of purples, depending on how much red and how much blue you mix together.
And the entire range of purples can be seen simultaneously at sunrise or sunset, as the red tinge of the rising or setting sun infuses the blue of the sky…
All from our recent Long Island Kayak Circumnavigation.
Posted in Nature, Photography
Tagged Colors, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Purple, Sunrise, Sunset, Weekly Photo Challenge
By Vladimir Brezina
This week’s Photo Challenge is Inside. I’ve already posted one response to this challenge, but here’s another one.
The view from inside as the day begins…
Inspired by our recent adventures on Long Island.
Posted in Kayaking, Photography
Tagged Camping, Inside, Kayak Camping, Photography, postaday, postaweek, postaweek2012, Sunrise, Tent, Weekly Photo Challenge