Thursday, June 30, 2011

Loggerhead Turtles

Loggerhead turtle
via http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8e/Loggerhead_sea_turtle.jpg


A recent review on movies.nytimes.com of the new film Turtle: The Incredible Journey got me thinking about this endangered species that visits New Jersey waters.

Though the reviewer is critical of special effects enhancements in the film, there's no doubt that the story is compelling.
The journey of the loggerhead turtle is, by any measure, an amazing life voyage, one that here reaches from the beaches of Florida to the eerie calm of the Sargasso Sea and the watery speedway known as the Gulf Stream before heading to Africa and then the call of motherhood. It’s a trip that eats up thousands of miles, takes some two dozen years and is fraught with dangers, though sometimes in the movie that threat may be more imaginary than actual, as when a basking shark, the second largest fish in the world, cruises by with its weird wide mouth open, yawning in water and prey. Armed with little teeth, the basking shark feeds on krill and plankton, but its size and cavernous mouth do make for dramatic viewing.

In 1978, loggerheads were listed as threatened and in 1979 the state of New Jersey classified four marine turtles - the Atlantic hawksbill, loggerhead, ridley and leatherback turtles - as endangered. (Also the Atlantic green turtle as threatened.)

Adult Atlantic loggerhead turtles, Caretta caretta, weigh from 170 pounds (77 kg) to 350 pounds (159 kg) and measure 31 inches (79 cm) to 45 inches (114 cm). The loggerhead sea turtle is omnivorous, feeding mainly on bottom dwelling invertebrates. Its large and powerful jaws serve as an effective tool in dismantling its prey.

The greatest concentration of loggerheads is along the southeastern coast of North America and in the Gulf of Mexico, but they are common throughout the temperate and tropical zones around the globe.

Scientists from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration proposed last year a reclassification of the loggerhead sea turtle’s designation from “threatened” to the more critical “endangered” category. That tells you that most efforts to protect the species have been ineffective.

The loggerhead sea turtle is found in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans as well as the Mediterranean Sea. It spends most of its life in saltwater and estuarine habitats, with females briefly coming ashore to lay eggs.

One problem the loggerhead sea turtle encounters today is that it has a low reproductive rate. Females lay an average of four egg clutches and then become quiescent, producing no eggs for two to three years. The loggerhead reaches sexual maturity within 17–33 years and has a lifespan of 47–67 years.

Untended fishing gear is responsible for many loggerhead deaths. Turtles may also suffocate if they are trapped in fishing trawls. Turtle excluder devices (TEDs) have been implemented in efforts to reduce mortality by providing the turtle an escape route.

Two other problems are the increasing loss of suitable nesting beaches, and the introduction of exotic predators has also taken a toll on loggerhead populations.

It is also more difficult to protect this species because it requires international cooperation since the turtles roam vast areas of ocean and critical nesting beaches are scattered among several countries.

The young loggerheads are threatened by a number of predators and the eggs are especially vulnerable to terrestrial predation.

Once the turtles reach adulthood, their formidable size limits predation to large marine organisms such as sharks.

Turtle: The Incredible Journey


Turtle: The Incredible Journey - Trailer from Rockfish on Vimeo.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Have You Seen An Endangered Species?

Red Wolf

A brief pictorial regional guide of endangered species from The New York Times. The plants and animals shown are among either the nearly 1,400 endangered or threatened species or populations.

They also feature some of the 260 candidates waiting to be listed under the Endangered Species Act. The Red Wolf (Canis rufus) has been driven to the brink by overhunting and habitat fragmentation. This wolf has a wild population of about 100 in northeastern North Carolina.

For our Northeast, they show the piping plover and the endangered roseate tern.

Piping Plover


http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2011/05/13/travel/endangered-species.html?ref=travel

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Mosasaur fossil found in Mantua Township

http://www.oceansofkansas.com/Varner/varner.jpg

Well beyond "endangered" are dinosaurs. And dinosaur finds in New Jersey may be even more rare.

Mosasaurs (from Latin Mosa meaning the 'Meuse river', and Greek sauros meaning 'lizard') are large extinct marine lizards. The first fossil remains were discovered in a limestone quarry at Maastricht on the Meuse in 1764. Mosasaurs are now considered to be the closest relatives of snakes, and were varanoids closely related to terrestrial monitor lizards. They probably evolved from semi-aquatic aigialosaurs, which were more similar in appearance to modern-day monitor lizards, in the Early Cretaceous.

So, it's exciting that the assistant curator of natural history at the New Jersey State Museum has found one as part of a paleontological expedition working a site at Inversand [in Mantua] recently.

Although they have been undisturbed for 65 million years, Jason Schein is rushing to get his hands on the fossilized skeletons of sea-dwelling animals and dinosaurs from the depths of a marl pit here.

Schein’s fear is that, if he waits a day, the opportunity to excavate skeletons from the site may disappear forever.

Inversand’s manganese greensand pit in the township — the company has long asked that the exact location not be disclosed — is the last known site of its kind in South Jersey.

“In South Jersey in the late 1800s and early 1900s, there were dozens and dozens of these pits,” Schein explained as he took a break from the triple-digit heat on Thursday.

How do you think towns such as Marlton and Marlboro got their names, he asked.

The paleontologists who would dig in the pits hung out in Philadelphia, sharing finds and stories.

“Some of the most famous stories in the history of science got started here,” Schein observed.

Farmers had no use for the skeletons found in the pits.

“They originally dug it up as fertilizer,” he said of marl. Inversand markets the material that it digs from the pit here as a municipal and industrial water treatment.

Marl was also the right material to preserve the skeletons of what was trapped inside.

This week’s dig, financed with $1,500 from the Delaware Valley Paleontological Society and involving scientists from the state museum in Trenton, Drexel University and the Academy of Natural Sciences, has yielded “lots of good stuff.”

Wednesday, the team “took out of the ground the entire top shell of a big sea turtle.” The shell, Schein said, is “three feet across.”

More importantly, it is both “very well preserved” and “almost 100-percent complete.”

Thursday, the ground yielded the brain case of a mosasaur — a giant swimming komodo dragon.

“If there was ever a real life sea monster, this was it,” Schein suggested.

Sixty-five million years ago, South Jersey was a shallow sea home to fish, sharks, birds, sea turtles, crocodiles and mosasaurs.

The skeletons are headed first to Drexel and eventually to the state museum for study and possible display.

Such sites in the past have yielded the first substantially complete dinosaur skeleton — known as Hadrosaurus foukii. That skeleton was unearthed in Haddonfield and turned over to the Academy of Natural Sciences.


Mosasaur fossil found in Mantua Township marl pit | via NJ.com

Monday, June 6, 2011

NJ Had the First Drive-In Movie Theater

Camden Drive-In
It was on this day in 1933 that the first drive-in movie theater opened, in Camden, New Jersey. But drive-in movies became an endangered species nationwide during the last quarter of the 20th century. New Jersey's last drive-in theater, Hazlet's Route 35 Drive-In, closed in 1991.**

The first one in the nation was the brainchild of a young man named Richard Hollingshead Jr., a Riverton, NJ native.

Hollingshead is said to have gotten the idea for a drive-in theater from his mother. His mother was a large woman who was uncomfortable in the seats at regular movie theaters. Hollingshead got an idea to help his mother that would combine his two main interests: cars and movies. He worked as a sales manager at his dad's store, Whiz Auto Products.

His test bed for the theater was his own driveway where he took a 1928 Kodak movie projector and mounted it on the hood of his car. For a movie screen, he nailed a sheet to the trees in his backyard. He placed a radio behind the screen to test for sound.

The challenge was figuring out how a person in a car parked behind another car could see the screen. Hollingshead tinkered with the spacing of the cars and put blocks under the front wheels. Eventually, he was able to build ramps that, when properly spaced apart, allowed every person to see the full screen.

In May 1933, Hollingshead got a patent for his drive-in theater, obtained funding and formed a company called Park-In Theaters, Inc.

After the first drive-in opened in 1933, more than forty drive-in theaters were opened over the years throughout New Jersey. The Newark Drive-In, with spaces for 2,400 cars, was the fifth largest drive-in theater in the nation.

An interesting innovation was the combination drive-in and fly-in theater. On June 3, 1948, Edward Brown, Jr. opened the first theater for cars and small planes. Ed Brown's Drive-In and Fly-In of Asbury Park, New Jersey had the capacity for 500 cars and 25 airplanes. An airfield was placed next to the drive-in and planes would taxi to the last row of the theater. When the movies were over, Brown provided a tow for the planes to be brought back to the airfield.

The Ten Commandments (1956) at the drive-in (from Life magazine)

In the 1970s, rising property values made the land used for drive-ins more profitable for other things. Add to that the fact that drive-ins often showed "B" movies (rather than the newest top releases), cable television and videocassettes for movies at home, and the business went into deep decline.

By 2003, the number of drive-ins in the U.S. was 432 and they were located largely in the warmer southern states where a longer season for outdoor movies was possible.

Plans had been announced to open a drive-in theater in Wall Township, NJ. The Wall Drive-In Theatre, located at the Wall Township Speedway, was set to be open from April to October when the racetrack is not in use and would have parking for 650 vehicles with an 80-foot screen and sound provided through car radios.

** CORRECTION   As our first commenter notes, the Delsea Drive-In is alive and well and showing as of today the 4 top movies (not B-films)  delseadrive-in.com

Sources:

Friday, June 3, 2011

Turtle Back Zoo Free Admission June 4


Joseph N. DiVincenzo, Jr., Essex County Executive and the Board of Chosen Freeholders invite you to attend the 9TH ANNUAL ESSEX COUNTY OPEN HOUSE on Saturday, June 4 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Essex County Turtle Back Zoo
(560 Northfield Avenue, West Orange, NJ)


Free Admission

~ Games and Family-Friendly Activities
~ Learn about Essex County Programs & Services
~ Ride the Carousel ($2 per ride)
~ Play miniature golf on the miniGOLF Safari ($5 children/$7 adults)
~ Walk through the Outback Adventure and Aviary ($2 per feedstick)
~ Visit our Natural Habitat Exhibits featuring Gibbons Apes, Black Bears, White Naped Cranes, Penguins, Otters, Alligators, Bobcats, Eagles, Cougars, Tropical Currents Aquarium and the Reptile House

For information, call 973-621-4400 or go to http://www.turtlebackzoo.com/tbzoo/

Help New Jersey Brewers

After a lot of collaboration, New Jersey's small brewers are happy that there are two bills now in the state Assembly and Senate that will allow both brewpubs and production breweries more opportunity to market and grow their businesses.

The bills will help create jobs, increase tourism and cut red tape for small businesses. As a consumer/voter/constituent, you have the most powerful voice in helping make that a reality.

Contact your state representatives and ask them to support Senate Bill 2870 (S-2870) and Assembly Bill 3969 (A-3969).

The Garden State Brewers Guild has tools to help you find you representatives, a template for a letter that you can adapt and an overview of what the bills would accomplish. Go to
http://njbeer.org/news/help_nj_small_brewers_contact_your_legislators.php

This is a small, homegrown industry whose members rely on consumers and fans to help keep it growing.

Microbreweries produce small batches of beer for sale to wholesalers and retailers both inside and outside New Jersey. That means you can purchase New Jersey micro brewed beer from the shelves of liquor stores and in pubs around the country. Call the brewery for a list of retailers who carry your favorite micro brewed beers.

Strange Brew's 1/2 Gallon Amber Growlers (Case of 6) with Polyseal CapsBrewpubs are restaurants that produce small batches of craft brewed on site and may sell their own beer by the glass for consumption on premise. They may also sell their beer for carry out in bottles, jugs known as "growlers" and in kegs. Brewpub beer is not available outside the restaurant.

You can download The Guide to New Jersey Craft Breweries.

Garden State Brewers Guild is at njbeer.org

Garden State Annual Beer Festival


The Garden State Craft Brewer's Guild will hold their 15th Annual Beer Sampling Event on the Battleship New Jersey on June 18th.
 
16 Breweries from New Jersey will be attending. This is a rain or shine event held on the Fantail under tents. Food & Specialty Vendors will be present along with entertainment by the Cabin Dogs from 1:00-5:00.

Your festival ticket
also offers a sampling glass with logo and a self-guided tour of the most decorated Battleship in U.S. History.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Cape May Ocean, Land and Air To Explore

Spoontiques Resin Lighthouse - Cape May, NJ - Limited Edition  Cape May Light, NJ Bookmark

Some resources online for folks who want to do some birding in that beautiful and most southern tip of New Jersey.

BirdCapeMay.org offers birding maps

There is also info for kayaking the waters in and around Cape Island which are excellent for trips along the Delaware bayshore just North of the Cape May Canal, or through Spicers and Cape Island Creek. There are many spots to put in and casually enjoy the natural beauty and wildlife of Cape Island.  For a tour plan and map, visit Circumnavigation of Cape Island.
And for folks who don't want to go out into the ocean and who keep their gaze to the ground...

Cape May's Gingerbread Gems
Cape May's Gingerbread Gems

Explorer's Guide The Jersey Shore: Atlantic City to Cape May: A Great Destination (Second Edition) (Explorer's Great Destinations)
Explorer's Guide The Jersey Shore: Atlantic City to Cape May: A Great Destination 

Cape May Walking Tours: Short, Fun, No-stress Tours for All Ages and Abilities
Cape May Walking Tours: Short, Fun, No-stress Tours for All Ages and Abilities

Cape May Point: The Illustrated History : 1875 to the Present (Schiffer Books)
Cape May Point: The Illustrated History : 1875 to the Present