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Endangered Species

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Detector Dogs Sniff Out Endangered Orchids in Virginia

Monday, September 30th, 2024

by Mona Patterson and Kristen Goodhue

Two men in gray T-shirts and caps stand in a forest with two detector dogs in front of them: a black Labrador and a chocolate Labrador.
Carl Dunnock (left) with his detector dog, Encore, and Carl Messick with his detector dog, Grand. (Credit: USDA)

Dogs, with their ability to sniff out unseen objects, have become key players for many teams, from search and rescue missions to hunting. But lately, they’ve received a new welcome—onto the team of plant conservation. This summer, orchid scientist Melissa McCormick embarked on a search for the endangered orchid Isotria medeoloides, commonly known as the “small whorled pogonia.” Accompanied by two Labradors and their handlers, McCormick set out to survey Fort Walker, Virginia, for any sign of the elusive orchid.

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“Soft Sweep” Evolution Helps Bats Resist Deadly White-Nose Syndrome

Friday, February 26th, 2021

Two hands with purple gloves hold one of the New York brown bats with wings outstretched

A little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus) from Williams Mine, New York, where bats have evolved mutations to resist white-nose syndrome. (Credit: Sarah Gignoux-Wolfsohn)

by Kristen Minogue

For decades, a fungal disease known as white-nose syndrome has devastated bat colonies across North America. But evolution may finally be turning in the bats’ favor. In a new study, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center postdoc Sarah Gignoux-Wolfsohn discovered genetic evidence that some bats are evolving traits that help them survive the disease—and passing those traits onto their descendants.

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Sharks Tags Reveal Endangered Species Returning To Natural Refuge

Wednesday, November 18th, 2020

by Kristen Minogue

In the coastal waters of the mid-Atlantic, an endangered shark is making a comeback. Led by former Smithsonian postdoc Chuck Bangley, scientists at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) tagged and tracked nearly two dozen dusky sharks over the course of a year as part of the Smithsonian’s Movement of Life Initiative. They discovered a protected zone put in place 15 years ago is paying off—but it may need some tweaking with climate change.

Dusky sharks are what Bangley calls “the archetypal big, gray shark.” Born three feet long, as babies they’re already big enough to prey on some other shark species. But they’re slow growing. It can take 16 to 29 years for them to mature. If their populations take a hit, recovery can take decades.

The sharks’ numbers plummeted in the 1980s and 1990s, when well-intentioned managers offered sharks as an “alternative fishery” while other stocks, like cod, were collapsing. The overfishing that followed wiped out anywhere from 65 to 90 percent of the Chesapeake’s duskies, said Bangley, now a postdoc at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia. Managers banned all intentional dusky shark fishing in 2000. Five years later, they created the Mid-Atlantic Shark Closed Area encompassing most of the North Carolina coast. The zone prohibits bottom longline fishing, which can accidentally ensnare dusky sharks, for seven months of the year.

But is the partial refuge working?

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Orchid Hybrids Offer Clues for Conservation

Thursday, August 27th, 2020

Yellow orchid with dozens of tiny flowers along its stem

The hybrid orchid Platanthera canbyi forms when the White Fringed Bog Orchid crosses with the Crested Orange Bog Orchid. (Credit: Melissa McCormick)

by Aliya Uteuova

This article is part of a series of posts highlighting research the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) is continuing to do amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Learn more about SERC’s work to conserve threatened and endangered orchids by visiting the North American Orchid Conservation Center website.

When it comes to orchids, delicate, rare flowers with striking colors and shapes might come to mind. But did you know orchids make up 10 percent of the world’s flower species? With roughly 30,000 known species, they grow on all continents but Antarctica, ranging from the tropics to north of the Arctic Circle.

Orchids grow on soil, on trees and even on rocks. And like so many plant species in the world, orchids are vulnerable to habitat loss. While they can grow wherever there are fungi, the key is to have the right fungi.

“While we tend to think of fungi as bad and associate them with fungal infections, here’s this beautiful plant that turned the tables around,” said Melissa McCormick, principal investigator at SERC’s Molecular Ecology Lab.
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U.N. Report Puts Spotlight on Seagrasses

Friday, July 31st, 2020

by Isabella Eclipse

Video created by United Nations Environment Programme

Appearances can be deceiving. At first glance, the humble seagrass meadow resembles a weedy underwater lawn. A closer look reveals one of the most important—and threatened—marine ecosystems in the world. Unfortunately, conservation efforts have often overlooked seagrass habitats.

“For a long time, people saw seagrass as a nuisance,” explained Jonathan Lefcheck, a biologist with the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. It had a reputation for clogging boat propellers and washing up on beaches. “Tropical resorts would hire people to dig up seagrass in front of their beach because people would complain,” he added.

Though public perceptions have been changing, many people today are still unaware that seagrass meadows are rich and vibrant ecosystems like coral reefs or rainforests. A new report from the United Nations Environment Programme hopes to change that. Released June 8 on World Oceans Day, Out of the Blue compiles the latest findings from around the world on seagrasses and the valuable services they provide. SERC biologist Emmett Duffy served on the steering committee and helped synthesize the report.

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The Secret Orchids of Palau

Friday, July 20th, 2018

Three orchids found only on Palau: Dendrobium brachyanthum (white), Crepidium calcereum (purple) and Dipodium freycinetioides (yellow with red spots). Photos by Benjamin Crain/Smithsonian

by Kristen Minogue

Most visitors to Palau don’t come for its forests. The chain of 300-plus Pacific islands is more famous for its coral reefs, giant rays and hundreds of flamboyantly-colored fish species.

“It’s known as one of the top dive sites on the planet,” said Benjamin Crain, a postdoc at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC). Crain is the exception. He’s visited Palau twice in the last year. Naturally fair-skinned, with a dark blond beard and ponytail, Crain has earned plenty of suntans and callouses trekking across the islands’ uneven terrain. He was seeking some of Palau’s forgotten gems on land—its rich diversity of orchids. Click to continue »

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Is Your Plant Dead or Just Dormant?

Thursday, May 10th, 2018

by Mollie McNeel

pink lady's slipper orchid

Pink lady’s slipper (Cypripedium acaule), an orchid that can remain dormant for over 20 years. (Credit: SERC)

If a gardener told you that her plants had died and had come back to life years later, you might think she had gone crazy. But actually, she may be on to something.

Some fully-grown plants can “hibernate” in the soil for up to 20 years, researchers from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) discovered in a study published in the May issue of Ecology Letters.

The so-called “Rip Van Winkle” plants, nicknamed after the fictional character who slept for two decades, include many species of orchids and some ferns. Click to continue »

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Manmade Docks Offer Surprising Refuge for Endangered Fish

Friday, October 20th, 2017

Biologists discover endangered Isthmian goby and other elusive fish thriving around dock pilings

by Kristen Minogue

Isthmian goby and black grouper

Top: Endangered Isthmian goby (Gobiosoma spilotum) found beneath a dock of Bocas del Toro, Panama. Bottom: Threatened black grouper (Mycoptera bonaci) found beneath a Belize dock. Photos: Simon Brandl & Jordan Casey/Smithsonian

The Panama Canal is home to one of the rarest fish in the world: the Isthmian goby, an endangered, brown-speckled fish less than 3 centimeters long. For years scientists thought it remained only at the locks of the canal’s Caribbean entrance, until a team of Smithsonian biologists found one nearly 200 miles away in a place no one expected.

Isthmian gobies (Gobiosoma spilotum) thrive in shallow waters like tropical tidepools. The expansion of the Panama Canal, along with other coastal development, has eaten up much of their habitat. So scientists were shocked to find the goby circling another manmade structure, a dock off the Panamanian island of Bocas del Toro. The team, from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) and the National Museum of Natural History, reported their discovery in a new study in the journal Ecology and Evolution.

“I didn’t even know what it was at first,” said Simon Brandl, the study’s lead author and SERC biologist. Though he knew it was a goby of some kind, he was unable to pinpoint the species. So Brandl sent the mystery photo to scientists at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History. “They were like, holy cow, this is Gobiosoma spilotum.” Click to continue »

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