- Видео 107
- Просмотров 107 159
Long Island Natural History Conference
Добавлен 18 фев 2014
This Channel houses the videos from the Annual Long Island Natural History Conference held at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Northern Long-eared Bats - Casey Pendergast
Northern Long-eared Bats - Casey Pendergast
Просмотров: 108
Видео
Disappearing Southern New England River Herring - Kevin job
Просмотров 306Год назад
Disappearing Southern New England River Herring - Kevin job
Vernal Pools and Diamondback Terrapins - John Turner
Просмотров 61Год назад
Vernal Pools and Diamondback Terrapins - John Turner
The Long Island Mammal Survey - Arielle Santos
Просмотров 133Год назад
The Long Island Mammal Survey - Arielle Santos
Assessing Salt Marsh Health on Long Island - Dr. Nicole Maher
Просмотров 136Год назад
Assessing Salt Marsh Health on Long Island - Dr. Nicole Maher
The Flora and Fauna of Fishers Island - Terrence McNamara
Просмотров 104Год назад
The Flora and Fauna of Fishers Island - Terrence McNamara
Peconic bay scallops: Current status and potential solutions to restore species - Harrison Tobi
Просмотров 156Год назад
Peconic bay scallops: Current status and potential solutions to restore species - Harrison Tobi
Diet and behavior of a pair of Eastern Coyote (Canis latrans) in Nassau County - Stephane Perreault
Просмотров 476Год назад
Diet and behavior of a pair of Eastern Coyote (Canis latrans) in Nassau County - Stephane Perreault
Spotted Turtles, Otters, and Coyotes - Mike Bottini
Просмотров 148Год назад
Spotted Turtles, Otters, and Coyotes - Mike Bottini
Wildlife Science Collaborative for Offshore Wind - Carl LoBue
Просмотров 32Год назад
Wildlife Science Collaborative for Offshore Wind - Carl LoBue
Living on the Edge in the Face of Climate Change
Просмотров 854 года назад
Living on the Edge in the Face of Climate Change
Encounters with the Raccoon and Possum
Просмотров 974 года назад
Encounters with the Raccoon and Possum
Conservation Update Research in Central Pine Barrens
Просмотров 524 года назад
Conservation Update Research in Central Pine Barrens
Tracking Spotted Turtles Over the Year
Просмотров 5536 лет назад
Tracking Spotted Turtles Over the Year
Very cool and interesting presentation. I realize this was a presentation that was posted and many of the laser pointer portions didn't make in, but if you have new videos in the future I'd recommend putting the common name on the slides.
@36:17, is that Chris standing there in the wet suit?
I have seen New England Cottontail in East Northport LI
Great video good information.
Great video 🫡🫡🫡🫡👍
Bravo 👏 What a fantastic presentation 👍🏻🇺🇸
It's juvenile spotfin butterflyfish. Lots of cool critters to catch this time of year up there. Todd Gardener has some cool RUclips videos about other ornamentals he's collected off Long Island.
Thats a picture of Yosemite
I remember seeing shad trying to get up river by the mill pond in valley stream. That is another Dam that probably should be removed.
Why does the dec stock trout in warm water ponds? They are not doing anyone a favor…
Great video. My dad and I have been out collecting tropical strays this past week over in Rhode Island. This video helped fill the gaps on a some of the mystery fish we have been seeing!
Easily the best video I've seen in a very long time. This guy gets it
As soon as I heard your voice I was like “wait a minute, I just watched another video of this same fella talking about Long Island’s geography!” Good sir if you ever feel like entertaining the hyperfixation of a local Rockhound, PLEASE come out with me to Lloyd Harbor and Fisherman’s Point at Caumsett and tell me all about the different rocks and geology there! I eat this stuff up!
N J 肯定有 SAT補習班或學校。應 fit your son.
Wait? Biological warefare island! The one responsible for Lyme disease? The place that welcomed nazi researchers gave them a pardon if they came to work for the government
thanks so much for posting this, great and very useful information!
Here in East Texas we have quite a few Chuck-Wills during the summer. Their eyes are crazy at night
I captured the first documented river otter on Long Island. The story about it was featured in the Suffolk Times. Unfortunately, DEC had no interest in taking weight, measurements or tagging the otter as they should have.
Ive had two living in greens creek in sayville for over a decade.
Excellent presentation about the diminishing numbers of River herring (Alewife and Blueback) and the significant ecological implications that has for all saltwater and freshwater life forms.
First of all they art king Cobras, in fact they're not even poisonous they dont even have fangs, the only defense mechanism they have is to look scary when they spread out and hiss like that hence the name spredding adder's . King cobras are black and gold, if those was king cobras that monkey would have already been down in that little bit of time.
The barrier islands to the south seem to have been neglected in this lecture.
They’re not that complex, to be fair. Waves carry off sediment from the shore and deposit them parallel to it
I'm a HUGE fan of the wall lizards! I've occasionally seen one in an area of Queens, NY, but I haven't seen any for the past few years. This saddens me. I've heard that there's a native species of lizard called the "fence" lizard, but I've never seen any in the greater metropolitan Long Island-New York City area.
I was born in Rockville Center in 1943, but even though I don't live on Long Island now, I did live there for 34 years and have a lot of memories, especially about Jones Beach with are really nice.😊
nice one Sixto I think that skate was sunbathing
They had a huge part in destroying the great south bay
There is a much worse reptile living in the Whitehouse named joke biden and he has mental problems and no business in any form of Government beyond possibly dog catcher
Off topic
Fascinating animals. Very interesting talk.
Can you bring me too this island ? 369
2:57 oh brother….😩
Worth a viewing. We have glacial erratic in our backyard on Cornell Street that was removed from our basement during construction.
As a child in the 60’s living near the origin of the pet center, I used to catch them and sell them back to the pet center for $1, and use the money to go eat pizza with my friends. This was one of our daily summer activities. This was not an accidental release by the pet center, but supposedly the result of an accident with the truck carrying the lizards where the got loose on the corner of Cherry Valley Ave and Hempstead Turnpike. It so happens that there was and still is a baseball filed and nursery where they took shelter, and where we used to catch them.
He made a point about glaciers not moving back and forth " like a pick up truck " then at 11 minutes in, he completely contradicts himself. So if a glacier moved south as he suggests what about the depth of Long Island sound ? Was the sound filled? Did the glacier glide across it ? Or Did the glacier drop down and up ? lol yes he knows little .
Full lecture on freshwater fish, please
In the 1990s, my friend moved into a house whose street bordered a park in Queens called Alley Pond Park. As its name indicates, there is a pond there, though it regularly dries up during times of drought. When he first moved there, during the spring and summer the street became swollen with hundreds of small toads after it rained; it was like a plague. When I recently became interested in hognose snakes, I asked my friend if the toads were still plentiful, but alas he hasn't seen any in many years. If there's places in Queens where there might be hognoses, this park is one of them. I intend to look for them soon. Another place in Queens that might have them is the area near Gateway Park. I've heard it has a huge Fowler's Toad population and the habitat is perfect. I might be dreaming, but who knows?
When they play dead, during the initial writhing phase, they're spreading their stinky musk all over their bodies to make themselves smell like a rotting corpse. So it is adaptive. Predators do not want to eat a rotten, disease addled carcass.
Long Island is a geological time stamp of the greatest extent of the Laurentide Ice Sheet, and then the return of the ice from the Younger Dryas period, likely caused by an impact event. South Fork before; North Fork after.
Great
Man, I never realized I went to school on a hill when I took that bus from Merrick to Mineola. At least it was true when I told my kids I had to go uphill to school every day.
Damn, the first 12 minutes of this video were so interesting but then it switches and cuts to talking about horseshoe crabs. Where can I find the full video about Long Island fish?
Excellent lecture on L.I. orchids. Thank you. Linda
An American Bald Eagle (National Bird) flew over my house in Commack NY (11725) on Sunday at 3PM. It was flying at a high rate of speed (maybe 40 mph). Coordinates New Highway and Commack Road. 100% a Bald Eagle as bird watching is one of my hobbies. ( NOT a Redtail). Full white crown and the rest was brown. First time ever in my life that I have seen a bird like this in the wild. I was amazed how large it was. Probably 150 feet off the deck and very powerful looking. WOW!!!
I learned so much!
Lucertola, we have plenty here in south west Ohio.
Interesting video on how Long Island was formed by tens of thousands of years of climate change.
We need predators for deer and other mesopredators like raccoons and stray cats to help the native song bird populations. Cats kill millions of birds a year and they shouldn’t be loose outside. Coyotes are a good thing.
Glad they are long gone from Long Island. Too many children playing in the fields and woods. There's plenty of other places for them to dwell.
So says the “expert”.
it’s not all about people
Did you even pay attention to the video whatsoever? The chances of a child dying to a rattlesnake on Long Island are almost zero. Rattlesnakes have just as much of a right, if not more of a right to exist on Long Island as humans.
Very interesting presentation.
This is absolutely insane
I wonder if they will eventually evolve better cold tolerance in the near future, because it seems they are only able to survive the winters by depending on human created habitats