Editor & Proofreader

Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Friday, 9 February 2024

February 9 2024

 

 

 

NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS

February 9, 2024

 

Nature Moncton members as well as any naturalist in New Brunswick or beyond are invited to share their photos and descriptions of recent nature sightings to build a fresh (almost) daily edition of Nature News

 

 

To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the information line editor,  nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com .

 

Please advise the editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com  if any errors are noted in wording or photo labelling.


For more information on Nature Moncton, check the website at
www.naturemoncton.com .

 

 

Proofreading courtesy of Louise Nichols at nicholsl@eastlink.ca

 

 

**A well-written feature article recently appeared in the Times and Transcript newspaper on the return of the Atlantic Salmon to the Petitcodiac River.

Tim Robinson and Edmund Redfield have played a lead role in this project since the causeway gates were opened and a lot of their efforts were shared at Petitcodiac River Appreciation Day. The results of their efforts must be very rewarding!

Several other fish species have also been swelling in numbers.

Photographs of the newspaper article appear in the photo lineup below.

 


TIMES & TRANSCRIPT FEATURE ON SALMON RETURN TO PETITCODIAC RIVER 1


TIMES & TRANSCRIPT FEATURE ON SALMON RETURN TO PETITCODIAC RIVER 1

**Rheal Vienneau sends a Monarch watch article on eastern Monarch Butterfly numbers in Mexico. Not good news as the decline is the lowest ever at 59%.
https://monarchwatch.org/blog/
 
(Editor’s note: most of us saw very few Monarch Butterflies this past season. Rheal mentioned he saw only a few in his yard. I saw none in my yard even with 3 species of milkweed. I did see a few on Common Milkweed plants by a railway track in Miramichi.)
 

**Rosanna Armstrong photographed a new condo on the Sussex Nature Trail, spotting the contractor at the top of the freshly excavated tree seemingly looking for new jobs. Rosanna had to use full zoom to catch him at all because he was at such a height. It was a Pileated Woodpecker.

 

 

**Nelson Poirier has had a pair of Northern Cardinals as daily regular birdfeeder yard patrons for 3 months. They have been silent as expected; however, it was a surprise on Thursday afternoon to hear them loudly vocalizing.

Possibly Northern Cardinals do vocalize during the nonbreeding season but it is the first time Nelson has heard them doing so in February. Do they know something we don’t about the onset of spring or is this winter vocalization to be expected?

 

 

**Friday has arrived in time for a preview of next week’s night sky courtesy of sky guru Curt Nason who will be presenting on the upcoming solar eclipse in April at this month’s Nature Moncton meeting on Tuesday, February 20.

 

This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2024 February 10 – February 17
Binoculars are great instruments for observing the brighter star clusters and nebulae in the night sky, and Orion is a great place for binocular treasures. Its most prominent naked eye feature is the angled line of three stars that make Orion’s Belt. This trio, part of a star cluster called Collinder 70, will fit easily within almost any binocular view. They are hot giant stars with the one on the right, Mintaka, being a little dimmer than Alnitak on the left and Alnilam in between. Although they appear to be near each other, at a distance of 2000 light years Alnilam is nearly twice as far as the other two. Between Alnilam and Mintaka binoculars will show an S-shaped asterism, Orion’s S, which peaks above his belt.

Below the belt is a string of a few dimmer stars that makes Orion’s sword, one of which looks fuzzy to the eye. Binoculars reveal this to be the Orion Nebula or M42, a vast cloud of gas and dust where stars are forming. Just above the nebula is an asterism that resembles a person running or perhaps the figure in a WALK sign. Several double or multiple stars can be seen in this general area. Binoculars will also enhance star colours so check out Orion’s two brightest stars, blue-white Rigel and orange Betelgeuse. Defocussing your binoculars slightly will enhance the colours even more.

This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 7:30 and sunset will occur at 5:37, giving 10 hours, 7 minutes of daylight (7:33 and 5:43 in Saint John). Next Saturday the Sun will rise at 7:19 and set at 5:47, giving 10 hours, 28 minutes of daylight (7:23 and 5:53 in Saint John).

The slim crescent Moon is at perigee this Saturday, creating extreme tidal ranges over the weekend. It passes below Saturn that evening, near Jupiter on Wednesday, Uranus on Thursday and the Pleiades next Friday. Saturn is getting lost in twilight, heading toward conjunction at the end of February. Telescope users might see Jupiter’s Red Spot for two hours centred on 7 pm Monday, and later see its moon Io be occulted around 10:51. Mars will be a difficult target rising an hour before sunrise this week and half an hour after Venus. Mercury is lost in morning twilight, meeting up with Saturn in conjunction near the end of the month.

The Saint John Astronomy Club meets in the Rockwood Park Interpretation Centre on this Saturday at 7 pm, and the Fredericton Astronomy Club meets in the UNB Forestry-Earth Sciences building on Tuesday at 7 pm. On Sunday evening at 8 pm, tune in to the Sunday Night Astronomy Show via the Facebook page or YouTube channel of Astronomy by the Bay.

Questions? Contact Curt Nason at
nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.

 

 

 Nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

 Nelson Poirier

Nature Moncton




NORTHERN CARDINAL (MALE). FEB. 8, 2024. NELSON POIRIER


PILEATED WOODPECKER FRESH EXCAVATIONS. FEB. 8, 2024. ROSANNA ARMSTRONG


PILEATED WOODPECKER. FEB. 8, 2024. ROSANNA ARMSTRONG


Orion binoculars

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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