Mkjcaylor
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Mkjcaylor5 karma
Tur-bin or tur-bine? The entire scientific community (and me) seems to want to pronounce the long i, but when I spent 3 months at a wind facility last year I heard everyone at the farm call them turbins. We made fun of them because it sounds like a headpiece. I am sure they made fun of us because we were getting paid to pick up dead animals. Which one do you use? Is it regional?
Mkjcaylor2 karma
Sure! Sorry, I did not realize you were Canadian until after I asked about all of this US stuff.
Here is the potential 4(d) ruling:
http://www.fws.gov/midwest/news/765.html
Basically it gives many large companies (pipelines, etc) a pass during the summer to continue construction/habitat destruction if the northern is listed threatened.
I am actually a bat biologist myself. I was recently at the Midwest Fish & Wildlife Conference giving a presentation about the NLEB in which many USFWS members were present that may be responsible for deciding whether the NLEB should be listed as threatened or endangered in the US. I am hoping endangered for the sake of the species, although any listing is better than no listing. Luckily with the listing in Canada there is more of a chance in the US!
I really respect your work on wind farms and I hope some day to meet you at a conference.
Mkjcaylor2 karma
I was a bat advocate at 8 years old! I actually made a little video and I dressed up as a bat and called myself "Mother Bat"... Anyway. Encourage her! There are lots of women in this field. We all love bats and think they are adorable.
While the books I read are probably outdated at this point, depending on her reading comprehension she can take a look all of the "Bats of..." series. Bats of Indiana, Bats of Missouri, Bats of Kansas, etc. She can learn about the bats in her backyard!
Mkjcaylor9 karma
Yes. All birds have knees, they are just tucked up by their bodies.
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