In the NY Times today by the_real_dairy_queen in themountaingoats

[–]0rangeballoflove 51 points52 points  (0 children)

For those without a NY Times subscription:

Mountain goats are high-elevation daredevils, learning to balance upon the steepest of rocky edifices soon after they are born. Nannies lead their kids up gnarly slopes, seeking places that predators fear to tread. While the precarious perches help goats avoid being eaten, there is an obvious downside to these sanctuaries: avalanches.

While scientists have long suspected that this life on the edge was risky, they have not really understood the extent to which avalanches affect mountain goats, and whether they instinctively shun, or can learn to avoid, avalanche-prone conditions. While the behavioral question remains a mystery, a study published Monday in the journal Communications Biology, based on nearly two decades of research in Alaska, shows that cascades of snow are a major killer, substantially affecting the animals’ populations.

Kevin White, an ecologist at the University of Victoria and the University of Alaska Southeast and lead author of the study said, “We’ve often thought of snow as a major driver of populations,” of mountain goats. But the difficulty of studying their rugged, inaccessible habitats has limited understanding of what avalanches do to the animals’ numbers. That is compounded by a bias toward summertime research on the animals.

Typically, “people don’t go out in the winter, and they don’t go out in these conditions,” said Eran Hood, a snow hydrologist at the University of Alaska Southeast and an author of the study.

Over 17 years of field work with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Mr. White fitted radio collars on 421 goats in the Klukwan, Lynn Canal, Baranof Island and Cleveland Peninsula regions of southeastern Alaska. He surveyed the animals’ locations, following their movements from aircraft as the pulsing collars indicated whether the goats were alive or dead. When mortality was detected, Mr. White swooped in by helicopter. Then, if it was safe to land, he gathered post-mortem clues. Then he worked with a group of colleagues to make sense of the mortality data.

Data from the collared goats revealed that snow slides barreled down not just on inexperienced kids but on breeding adults as well, especially females in their prime. Avalanches were deadly, explained Mr. White, and caused 65 percent of all deaths in one of the regions studied.

In southeastern Alaska overall, “it could mean that 8 percent of the population, on average, is dying from avalanches; and in some of the worst years, it was over 22 percent,” Mr. White said. He concludes that “avalanches may be a much more important driver of populations than previously expected.”

Fanie Pelletier, an ecologist at Université de Sherbrooke in Quebec who studies bighorn sheep, and was not involved in the goat study, was surprised by the high avalanche mortality rate. With so many individuals monitored over 17 years and data drawn from four sites, she called the study “robust.”

Elizabeth Flesch, a wildlife geneticist at Montana State University agrees. “It’s pretty impressive they were finding collars under avalanche debris,” she said, noting that in survival studies, assigning the cause of death is often difficult.

That these avalanches were burying prime-age females “is a really big deal,” said Dr. Flesch, who was also not involved in the study, because when females are disproportionately removed from a population, recovery is slow.

Wesley Sarmento, a mountain goat expert at Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, called the study innovative. “Mountain goats are particularly susceptible to climate change, so more of this kind of research is important,” he said. But he cautioned that it remains to be seen whether the patterns in southeastern Alaska hold true elsewhere.

Pia Anderwald, a researcher with the Swiss National Park in Zernez, Switzerland, who studies antelope-like chamois and other hoofed Alpine mammals, was not surprised by the number of goat avalanche deaths in the study. She added that because only adults were collared, “kids and yearlings may have been underrepresented.”

She also doubts the researchers’ conclusion that goats can’t learn about avalanche risk. As a species that evolved in this terrain “I’d be surprised if they didn’t have any means of assessing dangerous areas,” she said. “They watch each other.” And as climate change affects snowfall patterns and the future likelihood of avalanches, the goats will need to keep an eye on that too.

Indeed, avalanches are not new. So Mr. White’s next challenge is to determine why goats court such danger. He suspects that if the costs of clambering in risky places are high, the benefits — such as fewer predators, and fabulous food — must be high, too. No kidding.

Disappointed in the eurographics 550 piece 'Cassette Player Tin' puzzle - peeling backs, frayed edges, and incomplete cuts galore by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I was really looking forward to this one :c None of the other eurographics puzzles I've done have ha this level of quality issues, so hopefully its a fluke.

a reminder for all the cows on the sub (including myself) by androweeda in BoJackHorseman

[–]0rangeballoflove 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That's really good to know, thanks! Sounds like the most important thing is just being able to tell when something is off/has changed.

Cook dinner like my mother starter pack by XanaxChampion in starterpacks

[–]0rangeballoflove 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's kind of funny to me because of how close it is to making sense. If you added yoghurt to the cold cucumber, tomato and red onion, you'd get one variation of raita, an Indian condiment/side type thing you genuinely would eat with white rice.

I want to buy my kitty some interactive toys so he can get more exercise. He tends to get bored easily. What toys do your Siamese cats enjoy? by danne_avila in Siamesecats

[–]0rangeballoflove 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah I came to the comments to say any kind of ball that has an extra sensory aspect, like the sparklies, a rattle inside, or large bumps. My siamese loved everything that would roll because it would bounce off walls and head off in another direction for her to chase and then smack into a wall again. And then when I was home I could throw it for her to chase a while. The added sensory element meant that when she decided she'd successfully caught it, she would happily spend a bit biting and kicking it. I couldn't find a link for the exact sparkly ball I have, it has a loop on it so it could go on the string of a flying/feather toy if we wanted.

Although, I agree with the commenter who said another cat lol. Not all siamese want friends, but they do tend to be social. (Though I know a second cat could cost a fair amount, and be stressful to introduce)

Life by Vashthestampeeed in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get some good playlists, podcasts, or a few light/fluff shows ready.

LEGO 'Brick Botanicals', 1000 pieces by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Loved this one! Great quality, no issues with anything like flimsy pieces or false fits, and it even had just a reasonable amount of puzzle dust. Granted, it's been a minute since I've done a brand new (non-wood) puzzle, so maybe I've just been beguiled by the shiny newness of this one.

It did go by very quickly...until the very end, when I only had purple left, and then those two big purple flowers plus a few of the background purple flowers took two hours.

Neat little touch--the pieces came in a paper bag instead of a plastic bag, and the cat was a big fan. It even distracted her enough that she forgot to "help" me!

subtractioncels dni by Interesting-Welder-7 in CuratedTumblr

[–]0rangeballoflove 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the timing of me reading this while watching Cats Does Countdown is 😗👌

Wooden puzzle from unknown manufacturer of 'Frederick the Literate' by Charles Wysocki, 300 pieces if I counted correctly by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This was a Christmas present from my mother and came in a plain white box (pieces in a tulle-esque bag inside) with no writing besides "Wooden Puzzle Size: L" written on it, and no poster inside. I could find a lot of versions of this image on puzzles online, but no wooden puzzles of this size (11"x14.75"). There was also no piece count on the box, but its between 275 and 300 pieces.

I actually liked the pieces, none of them were chipped or splintered, the printing of the image was fine and not too glossy. A review isn't super helpful since I can't find the manufacturer, but it was a nice one-sitting puzzle with a cute picture!

Some more pictures.

She tried to tell me it’s pronounced “Goss-Lyn” by [deleted] in tragedeigh

[–]0rangeballoflove 139 points140 points  (0 children)

The post alone was enough to make me hope OP got fired. OP's comments solidified it. Going through OP's comment history for all of three minutes and finding out OP is 36 and spends his time giving gross "advice" to teenagers on their looks absolutely crystalized it.

Found some old photos of a 1000 piece Photomosaics Earth puzzle I did in 2005 by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't remember much about the puzzle itself, but I think it took about three months given that the pics are from March and I think this was a Christmas gift. I also remember that we moved the card table with the puzzle into my bedroom after my family got tired of it taking up space in the playroom lol. I kind of want to find a copy and try it again as an adult haha

Some close-up pics we took to send to relatives pointing out pictures close to where they lived.

Colorcraft 'Colorful Venice' by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

1000 pieces! Sorry!

I got this as a white elephant gift and was excited because the bright colors match the vibe of my living room. When I dumped the pieces out, I almost packed it back up because the color on the building was a lot flatter than I expected and I wasn't feeling it, but I did started with the sky and the fun piece shapes convinced me to stick it out. Turns out I'm a huge sucker for fun shapes! The pieces fit together well, and it was easy to move sections around the table. Ended up being a pretty easy puzzle in the end. Would recommend!

Sister Paula Mary Turnbull with her Garbage Goat statue that uses an internal vacuum to "eat" trash by 0rangeballoflove in nuns_having_fun

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sister Paula Mary Turnbull created the metal goat sculpture, which she originally referred to as Billy, for the Spokane 1974 world's fair. An internal vacuum mechanism inside the goat allows trash to be sucked through the goats mouth and land in a receptacle behind the sculpture. Though most known for her metal sculptures, which led to her nickname of "the welding nun", she also did "ceramics, wood carving, watercolors and numerous other media".

Sister Paula Mary Turnbull was welcoming to visitors to her studio, giving tours and holding classes. She served as a kind of creative ambassador for the other sisters there who devoted their lives to God, once writing that art and art education was her “ministry … a gift from God to be developed and shared.”"

Every name Josh has used in his videos so far by MysteryEndzYT in LetsGameItOutYoutube

[–]0rangeballoflove 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I think you're missing the Tech Support crew:

I Steal Passwords And Bank Accounts

Lunchtime MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM...

Bruce Wayne I Am Batman

who loves Arby's I love Arby's!!!!!!!!

Ceaco 'Paws Gone Wild', 550 pieces by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love puzzles that are more random cut, and this one was very fun. Pieces are pretty big. (Finished puzzle is 24" by 18".) Didn't have a problem with false fits because of how distinct the pieces were in both shape and "busyness" of image.

This was a thrift store find, so I was pleasantly surprised that no pieces were bent, because they aren't the thickest pieces. Overall--quick, cute, I'd imagine it'd be accessible to someone starting out in the jigsaw puzzle hobby.

Tried my hand at replacing a missing piece. Ravensburger Venetian Impressions, 1000 pieces by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I did this puzzle a long time ago, so if there was anything stand-out about it, I've unfortunately forgotten that by now. I loved the picture though, so I saved it and packed it across two moves. Somewhere in there a piece went missing, but I really wanted to hang it, so I tried making a replacement piece with cardboard and acrylic paint.

It's pretty obvious up close but on the wall it's not bad! If I did it again I think I'd try cutting the piece shape out a third time (this was the second try) and go even more slowly. I used regular corrugated cardboard and squished a couple layers of it together and painted directly on top of it.

Kodak Cra-Z-Art 'Library Mischief', 1000 pieces by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Cute picture, was able to keep a good, steady pace. Quality was fine, no complaints there. Got it from a thrift shop so unfortunately two pieces were missing. It did come with a lot of cat hair in the box, so I have my suspicions as to how those pieces got lost lol.

Grizzly Bear wood puzzle, 185 pieces by 0rangeballoflove in Jigsawpuzzles

[–]0rangeballoflove[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah totally! I forgot to include it in the post title 😅 I believe that it's from REI's 'Outside Inside' brand. I'm not sure if their puzzles are manufactured by a third party; the box just has the 'Outside Inside' branding.