Flora & Fauna

November 3, 2009, 4:12 pm
Scientists from around the country found more than 1,200 species of plants and animals in Yellowstone National Park in a 24-hour research marathon in late August. The park's first BioBlitz has documented the species with taxonomic and DNA experts still analyzing lab results, which "will surely increase our numbers,'' said organizer Kayhan Ostovar, an assistant professor of environmental science at Rocky Mountain College. Some of the finds included new species, such as the tiger beetle, previously undocumented in the park, Ostovar said.
November 2, 2009, 3:43 pm
Thousands of endangered Rio Grande silvery minnows reared at a national hatchery in New Mexico were being prepared Wednesday to be trucked to Texas, where the tiny fish will be released into the Rio Grande near Big Bend National Park. The release is part of a five-year experiment by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to establish a population of minnows in the river's southern reaches. More than 400,000 silvery minnows were released at Big Bend last year and surveys have shown that there are still minnows in the area.
November 2, 2009, 3:30 pm
National Park Service managers are mending livestock fencing at a volcanic monument in southcentral Idaho to help a herd of pronghorn antelope along its 160-mile roundtrip migration across the northern Snake River plain and into Rocky Mountains valleys.
November 2, 2009, 3:27 pm
A long-gone species returned home Friday, not with a thunder of hooves, but with muffled snorts and a short gallop from muddy pen to grassy range.A baker’s dozen of bison had been plucked from a herd of 500 in South Dakota and trucked to east-central Kansas 10 days before.Once here, they were crowded in a snug pen on the pasture that would be their new home. The time in tight quarters was intended to bond them as a new mini-herd and get them accustomed to the sights, sounds and smells of the grassland around them.
November 2, 2009, 3:10 pm
Opponents of a plan to kill hundreds of deer at Valley Forge National Historical Park are asking members of Congress to halt the effort before the shooting starts.Officials at the park, the site of the Continental Army's 1777-78 encampment, want to reduce a deer population now estimated at 1,277 to between 165 and 185 over four years. They say the herd is eating so many plants, shrubs and saplings that the forest cannot regenerate.
soccer165
What are some points of interest in Grand Canyon National Park?
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Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, Flora & Fauna
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Check out our Grand Canyon points of interest page for a map of sights to see and trailheads. Also check out our sights to see pages for the North Rim and South Rim for some of our favorites!
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Without question one of the things you should definitely do is get up early (yes, very early) for Sunrise over the rim.  Really, anywhere on the rim is a great vantage point.  Sunset is beautiful too, but sunrise is beyond words!!!

Enjoy the trip.

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EAZ805@ao...
How do beavers select the trees that they take down?
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Wildlife Watching, Flora & Fauna
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Beavers enjoy bark, buds, stems, and twigs of trees: aspen, maple, willow, birch, black alder, and black cherry trees. It's easiest for a beaver to take down a small tree because it's quicker, but they're also known to spend several days taking down a larger tree. A beaver's front teeth are growing all the time all the time, so it must constantly chew on wood to trim their teeth down.
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In a related question, I was recently in the Adirondacks and spotted a tree about two feet in diameter that was chewed half way through at the base by a beaver.  Do they use trees that size just to sharpen their teeth, or are they actually trying to cut the tree down for construction purposes?
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October 29, 2009, 3:44 pm
In this place where the prairie meets the Ponderosa Pine, the rainbows are brilliant. For a brief hour, rays of sunshine win the battle with a cold South Dakota mist, and the result is a full rainbow — its arc touching two points on the rolling range.
October 27, 2009, 2:26 pm
The National Park Service wants to poison trout in some high-country lakes and streams to save a native species of frog. But some outdoor and environmental groups are worried. The trout were planted years ago by wildlife agencies in the Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks. They eat mountain yellow-legged frogs, contributing to a 90% decline in the species throughout the Sierra.A preliminary project to eradicate trout from 11 lakes in the two parks since 2001 has yielded dramatic results: Yellow-legged frogs have made spectacular rebounds at these lakes.
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What is the quickest transportation available from the West Rim to the South Rim?
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Grand Canyon National Park, Auto/Motorcycle, Ranger-led Programs, River Rafting, Flora & Fauna, Lodging, Park Passes and Fees
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We are assuming that by West Rim, you mean the Havasupai Reservation?  The only way between the two points are to drive.  There are tour buses that go between, but no helicopters or other flight options.  For more info on directions between the two click here.
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