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Too Much Deer Pee Hurting Environment (yeah, you read that correctly)

How much deer pee is too much you ask?

Too much deer pee changing northern forests

By Becky Oskin

How Green

Published June 06, 2013

LiveScience

  • deer

    White-tailed deer congregate under evergreens like northern white cedar for protection from winter weather, creating nitrogen hot spots that change the plant community. (Michigan Technological University)

The booming deer population in the northern United States is bad for the animal’s beloved hemlocks, a new study finds.

During Michigan winters, white-tailed deer converge on stands of young hemlocks for protection from winter chill and predators. The same deer return every year to their favorite clumps of the bushy evergreens, called deeryards. The high concentration of deer in a small space saturates the soils with nitrogen from pee, according to a study published online in the journal Ecology. While deer pee can be a valuable source of nitrogen, a rare and necessary nutrient for plants, some deeryards are now too rich for the hemlocks to grow.

“Herbivores like deer interact with the ecosystem in two ways. One is by eating plants and the other is by excreting nutrients,&quot said Bryan Murray, an ecologist and doctoral student at Michigan Tech University. &quotUrine can be a really high nitrogen resource, and hemlock can be out-competed by other species in really high nitrogen environments.”

Slow-growing hemlocks prefer low-nitrogen soil, and the prolific pee results in nitrogen-loving species like sugar maple outgrowing the hemlocks, the researchers found.

Hemlocks are already struggling to recover from logging and other ecosystem changes that reduced their numbers to 1 percent of pre-settlement populations in some parts of Michigan, Murray said. “At the moment, it’s difficult to find hemlock stands where there are saplings in the understory that are going to replace the hemlocks in the overstory when they die,” he told OurAmazingPlanet. The lack of regeneration could be due to a number of issues, but deer overpopulation is a factor, he added.

With the reduced hemlock cover available for deer, the booming white-tailed deer population means more deer crowd into the remaining forest. The researchers found more than 100 deer per square mile in popular deeryards. And young hemlocks have a tough time recovering from the deer nibbling and browsing.

In the eastern United States, an invasive sap-sucking bug called the adelgid is also killing off hemlocks.

“The Upper Midwest represents one of the last strongholds of hemlocks,” Murray said.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/06/06/too-much-deer-pee-changing-northern-forests/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz2VrJmYGI1

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Boys Find Mastodon Bone

Boys Find Mastodon Bone Along Stream in Shelby Township

Two 11-year-old boys will go down in Macomb County’s artifact history after discovering an American Mastodon bone near 24 Mile and Dequindre roads in Shelby Township, Michigan.

Eric Stamatin, 11, left, and his cousin, Andrew Gainarlu, 11, are pictured in front of Cranbrook Institute of Science with the Mastodon bone they discovered in Shelby Township. Credit Cranbrook Institute

Eric Stamatin, 11, left, and his cousin, Andrew Gainarlu, 11, are pictured in front of Cranbrook Institute of Science with the Mastodon bone they discovered in Shelby Township. Credit Cranbrook Institute

It’s nearly every young, adventurous boy’s dream to stumble upon a prehistoric fossil while playing in his backyard.

For an 11-year-old Shelby Township boy, Eric Stamatin and his cousin Andrew Gainariu, 11, that dream came true this summer.

On a warm June day, the boys were hoping to find crayfish while exploring a stream about a quarter of a mile from Stamatin’s house on 24 Mile and Dequindre roads. Instead, they stumbled upon an American Mastodon bone.

“At first it just looked like a rock but it had a hole in it so we thought maybe it was a bone,” said Stamatin.

The boy’s family sent a picture of the bone to Cranbrook Institute to be examined. John Zawiskie geologist with Cranbrook later identified it as the axis bone of the extinct American Mastodon.

“The axis is one of two specialized vertebrae that secure the head to the vertebral column, and judging from the size of this find the animal was probably an adult around 8 or 9 feet high at the shoulders and weighing roughly 6 tons,” said Zawiskie.

The mastodon bone is likely between 13,000 and 14,000 years old.

The boys led an archaeological team from Cranbrook back to the spot where they found the bone, but no more artifacts were found.

The stream where the bone was found, near 24 Mile Road and Dequindre Road in Shelby Township, cuts through sand and gravel of an old glacial lake plain and is very near the source of the Middle Branch of the Clinton River. Stephen Pagnani with Cranbrook Institute said mastodon bones are normally found near boggy areas and where there is a lot of sand and gravel.

Mastodons are furry elephant-like mammals, and are close relatives to the woolly mammoth.

They lived about 3.7 million years ago until they became extinct at the end of the last glacial period around 10,000 years ago.

Zawiskie said this is the fourth record of an American Mastodon to be found in Macomb County. Nearly 2/3 of an American Mastodon was found in neighborhing Rochester, on Adams Road, back in 2006. Road crews unearthed a three-pound molar, tusk and leg bone, among other bones.

“It’s a common archaeological find, but it’s still a fun one,” said Pagnani.

Nothing Like a Prehistoric Show and Tell

Stamatin, a Roberts Elementary School student, showcased his great find at school on Friday, according to Utica Community Schools.

“This has been a wonderful experience. He’s been struggling in school and this has helped him with self-confidence and inspired him to learn more about science,” said Christina Stamatin.

Pagnani said the bone is the boys’ to keep. Christina Stamatin said she will allow her son to decide whether or not he’ll donate the bone to a museum or keep it. However, she will advise him to donate it.

More than 211 mastodons have been discovered in the southern portion of the Lower Peninsula, and the mastodon is Michigan’s state fossil.

To learn more about mastodons, visit the permanent exhibit at Cranbrook Institute of Science. Investigating Michigan’s Winter—Both Past and Present begins Dec. 26 through 30 from 1 to 4 p.m. each day.

For more information on Cranbrook, visit www.science.cranbrook.edu.

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