Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Fossa of Madagascar


           A slender-bodied, quizzical-looking creature, slinking along the forest floor; bounding through tree tops at an amazing rate (so fast that scientists have a hard time observing it); almost flying after lemurs and birds…This is the Fossa of Madagascar.

The largest carnivore (meat eater) in Madagascar, the Fossa is truly a one-of-a-kind predator. The tail is almost as long as the elongated, muscular body and provides balance when jumping through tree tops.  A surprisingly short snout and small head add a curious look to this animal.  The fur is very short and reddish to golden brown in color. And the extra small ears might make you think you are looking at a weasel. Though similar in appearance to a feline (for their body shape and face), monkey (for their long, long tail and agility in trees), and weasels (look at those little round ears!) they are actually related to mongooses and civets. Male Fossas usually weigh from 13 to 22 pounds and measure 31 inches long. Females are somewhat smaller, weighing 11 to 15 pounds and measuring 27 inches long.

 This unique species has some more interesting features, including semi-retractable claws (You know how a cat can pull in its claws? Fossas can only pull them in part of the way), and flexible wrists, which make it a lot easier to climb down a tree head-first. They are comfortable running along the ground like a bear, however.

Another interesting feature is the laughing, grunting sounds that they make when they are happy. Fossas also chirp and purr.

Fossas are usually forest dwellers, sometimes living in deciduous forests, sometimes in rainforests, and occasionally in spiny forests. They hunt by day or night. They can fly through the treetops like monkeys, and often do their hunting there. Lemurs make up more than 50% of the diet of forest dwelling animals, but insects, crabs, reptiles, birds (including ground birds), and rodents may all become prey. Fossas are the only predator in Madagascar able to prey on adult lemurs. The largest of these lemurs can be up to 90% of the Fossas weight.  They ambush their prey, pouncing on it with their front feet and killing it like a cat would.
            One to six (typically two to four) blind and toothless baby Fossas, called pups, are born after 3 months in the womb. The mother will make a den underground, in a rock crevice, hollow tree, or old termite mound just before the pups are born. They usually weigh from 3 to 3 ½ oz.  They are very dependent on their mother at first, drinking her milk for food, and depending on her for protection and shelter. Their eyes open after 15 to 25 days, and they will be weaned after 4½ months. Fossa pups are very slow to develop, and will not leave their den until they are four months of age. They will stay with their mother for up to a year. Fossas are solitary creatures, and after the pups leave home they will scent mark an area to be their home. The size of the area will vary according to the amount of prey in that climate. They will usually stay there, sleeping in a different place every night, though it is known that they can travel up to 16 miles a day. These pups will keep growing until they are two years old, and when they are four years old they will start their own family.  
      
            Fossas live only in Madagascar. Though you can find a few in nearly every forest, they are rare. In 2,000, there were less than 2,500, and their numbers today are unknown. Fossa habitat destruction plays a major role in the decline of their numbers. Fossas also occasionally kill chickens, and so locals kill them. Sometimes they have to compete with introduced animals, such as civets, for their food. 

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Is He important to you?
When we are buffeted about,
With trials and hardships sore,
We know we could not live without Him,
We feel our need for Him more and more.
But what of the lulls in the storm?
Do you love Him with all that you are?
Do you die to yourself every morn?
Does this peace your relationship mar?


When the sea is as soft a shadow,
And as still as a marble floor,
And the sun seems to shine as bright as
A ray from heavens open door;
Then what is the song of your heart?
Is Jesus the love of your life?
Do you feel from Him far apart?
Do you feel need for Him in your life?


By Emerald Dew

Friday, February 3, 2012


The Shoebill
Let’s peek for a moment into the life of an extraordinary bird. We will fix our eyes on a papyrus marsh in eastern Africa, and specifically on a female Shoebill who lives there alone (these birds are solitary creatures). She is about 4 ½ ft tall, weighs around 12 lbs, and is slate grey all over. There are feathers sticking out of the back of her head that lend to the image of an unruly cowlick. Her legs rather resemble a heron’s legs, and in some ways she looks like a stork, or a pelican. And then, of course, there is that impossible bill, a massive thing,  being 9 inches long and 4 inches broad (can you see why they call them Shoebills?), with a vicious hook on the end. This bird is an interesting sight, don’t you think?
 Since Shoebills are nocturnal, her days are spent sleeping. Come evening, however, our Shoebill is standing motionless, tucked away in the reeds, waiting for an African Lungfish (her favorite food) to swim by. She is not exactly graceful as she attacks and grapples it, but then again, that’s not the point. The point is to swallow the fish, which is something her clog of a bill can certainly accomplish. A few other things on the menu for our lady are baby crocodiles, rats, waterfowl, other fish, frogs and other amphibians, small turtles, and water snakes.

There is no specific season when Mrs. Shoebill will lay her eggs, but she will probably wait until the onset of the dry season, when the nest is less likely to be flooded. Anyway, about once a year, 1 to 3 eggs will be laid on a flat nest of sticks in the swamp grass, and after about one month the babies will hatch. Amazingly, they will not be able to stand up until they are 2 ½ months old! I suppose those spindly legs take awhile to develop. They will not be able to hunt for themselves until they are 3 ½ months old.

It is thought that there are 5,000 to 8,000 Shoebills in the world today, living in swamps and wetlands from Sudan and western Ethiopia all the way down to Zambia. The main threat to this species is destruction of habitat, illegal hunting and trapping, and the drying up of the marshes where they live.

                 Oh, and one more thing: Did you know that mother Shoebills will sometimes fill their bill with water and pour it over their overheated nestlings?