My Cousin & Me: And Other Animals
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Predators and prey do a dance together in the struggle for existence. Each hones the other to perfection. It's not a good day to die -- it never is! So this eternal chase continues. In the course of this chase, as Darwin writes, "There is no fundamental difference between man and animals in their ability to feel pleasure and pain, happiness,and misery."
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My Cousin & Me - Gordon Harrison
editions.
CHAPTER — 1
AMOTE—a mote in the eye of the universe. Near this mote is one of the largest structures in the cosmos, a gargantuan gathering of galactic superclusters into a single gravitationally bound assembly called the Laniakea (Hawaiian for immeasurable heaven ). The mote, of course, knows nothing of this. It drifts.
The speck moves toward the Virgo Supercluster. Millions of years pass before it enters
this cluster. After more eons, our mote moves toward a minor collection of galaxies called the Local or Home Group. This galaxy group comprises two magnificent island universes, the Andromeda and the Milky Way, each with its attendant minor galaxies. The mote coasts between these titans while they move toward each other. The larger Andromeda with its one trillion stars will eventually devour the smaller Milky Way. This latter island universe lies at the utmost edge of an insignificant tendril of the mighty Laniakea Assembly. The mote, of course, knows nothing of this. It drifts.
A Milky Way Look-Alike Galaxy: NGC 6744
Casually it floats toward the Milky Way and close
to one of its smaller spiral arms, the Orion. After more eons, it approaches an ordinary star in this arm, the one we call the sun. Around this star is a collection of planets, asteroids, icy objects, comets, and debris. The mote drifts in the direction of the third planet from the sun.
It has been a long night’s journey from the Laniakea Assembly to the Local Group to the Milky Way to the Orion Arm to a common place star and, ultimately, to the beautiful blue dot we call the Earth. As far as we know, this planet is the only place in the entire vastness of the universe that supports life. Everywhere else, you die instantly! Instantly!
Red Spot on the Blue Planet
The mote has arrived a billion years too late to participate in the greatest show on earth—the evolution of life. The forms are so wondrous, so varied, and so ingenious that the naive eye might conclude a grand designer did all this instead of evolution. Darwin would say all these wonders are the result of descent with modification.
Unexpectedly, the mote knows something of evolution. For it was created in the core of a massive star and cast out on its long odyssey by a supernova explosion to wander the cosmos until it fell to earth on the Red Spot in the photograph of the Blue Planet.
As Carl Sagan says,
The nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstuff.
By chance, the mote landed on the 45th parallel, midway between the North Pole and the equator. Apparently, all of its incredible journeys were now at an end, but, as I said, it arrived late. Innumerable members of its family of elements had arrived in the previous five billion years: iron, oxygen, carbon.... These elements by processes science is now discovering combined and rose to consciousness and ultimately reflected on itself and the universe.
We are puny creatures! We are parasites devouring the third planet of an ordinary star, one of 300 billion, in a small arm of an out-of-the-way spiral galaxy, a minute part of the mighty Laniakea. Yet we are privileged to have a vision of creation built on evidence. We are splendid creatures! You and I are rolled out of stardust, baked in the furnace of creation. What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason! ... in action how like an angel! in apprehension how like a god!
(Hamlet, Act II, Scene 2).
A Place in the Universe
This mote of carbon found itself in a jungle of grass, flowers, and weeds more abundant than Darwin’s entangled bank.
The rains washed it into the soil and the following spring it was absorbed in the growth of a flower that some call a weed, others, the devil’s paintbrush. These come in red and yellow swaths splashed across the wild fields of Ontario. All of this happened on my lawn
in the red spot shown in the photograph. Look closely and you will see my home located at seven o’clock relative to the dot. The grass, flowers, and weeds grow luxuriantly here, directly over the septic system.
A white-tailed yearling deer, attracted by the rich pasture above the septic tiles, devoured the devil’s paintbrush along with a mouthful of grass. And so the journey of the mote began again. Like Tennyson’s Ulysses,
it cannot rest from travel. The following winter a pack of five wolves caught this yearling on a nearby frozen lake. After their feast, they ran into the wilderness of the evergreen forest. Now this mote of carbon was truly gone. Gone forever—lost in a vast and intricate landscape. But the mote wasn’t the least inconvenienced by any of this. It was now running with the wolves.
Devil’s Paintbrush
The wolves run on through the evergreen forests in their eternal pursuit of the deer. And for their part, the deer lead the wolves on a deadly chase. Each hones the other to perfection by natural selection. It’s not only the weak and the old who falter and fall; it’s the inefficient—the ones who stray too far from the edge. To those who do the dance, whether deer or wolf, belongs the day and the future. It’s not a good day to die. It never is. And so the wolves run on through the evergreen forests.
The Yearling
The Algonquin Wolf—Canis lycaon
In the last paragraph of On the Origin of Species, Charles Darwin—referring to evolution—writes one of the finest sentences in the English language:
There is grandeur in this view of life, with its several powers, having been originally breathed by the Creator* into a few forms or into one; and that, whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful [emphasis added] have been, and are being, evolved.
We will search this land for all its forms of life. We will turn over old barn boards and sheets of metal roofing to find snakes, ants, voles. We will look for birds’ nests under eaves, in hollow fence posts, in bushes and trees. We will wade through creeks and search ponds for minnows, frogs, and salamanders. In the cool evening, we will listen for owls, wolves, and mysterious night noises and watch our porch lights for giant silk moths as big as your outstretched hand. We will watch the fields for bears, deer, and moose. We will revisit those secret places that, as boys, only we knew: places where snakes still shed their skin, gilled salamanders glide through shallow golden pools, and striped skinks dart away. And we will inspect rock piles for weasels and woodchucks. We will find those forms most beautiful and most wonderful
that Darwin spoke of.
Come, let us walk together and see the world anew through the eyes of a child. We will explore this land, and, in the end, we will know this place for the first time.
* Interestingly, this phrase by the Creator
was not in the first edition of November 1859. Due to popular pressure for the mention of god, it was inserted into the second edition of January 1860 and subsequently retained.
CHAPTER — 2
My earliest memories are of animals: goldfinches, squirrels, minnows, frogs, and deer.... These are as clear to me as if they had appeared this morning rather than decades ago.
My family lived in a rambling old building called the Boyd House on Brady Lake not far from the Red Spot—a place in the universe. Mother was the cook for a large crew of loggers, sawyers, and drivers—the only woman among fifty men, and she loved it. Our large blue and white house was situated on a rise overlooking the lake, which seems much smaller now than in earlier years.
When you are a child, every day is sunny, even when it rains. So whether it rained and then the sun came out, or the sun was out and then it rained, I cannot recall. But I do know my mother called me to the window to see a doe and her fawn step out of the mist on the far shore of the glassy lake for a drink. From that moment until this, I have been as deeply imprinted
as any of Konrad Lorenz’s geese. The white-tailed deer is the quintessence of grace and beauty, a supreme example of the results of natural selection. Both animals, doe and fawn, hurriedly drank from the lake, turned and bounded away swallowed up by the eternal green forest. I never saw them again except in my mind’s eye where they will never grow old or die.
Doe, a Deer, a Female Deer!
At two years of age—and every year thereafter—females get pregnant and normally have one to three fawns in April or May. For their safety, mom visits her babies just a few times each day so they may nurse. Once the fawns can run (bound), mother and child are inseparable. By fall, their camouflage spots have vanished, and their coat darkens to blend with winter’s hues and possibly absorb more sunlight.
I once cradled a fawn in my arms—it was a memorable experience, such a bundle of warmth, softness, and legs. Its complete and utter helplessness produced a protective instinct in me as if it were my own child. No, I didn’t find this fawn on the forest floor but in a veterinarian’s office on a table.
The occasion of it being there is a drama itself. Road-killed deer are a common occurrence in Ontario. A quick-thinking medical doctor who witnessed a pregnant doe dead or dying on the roadside performed an emergency caesarean section to rescue her twin fawns. The doctor rushed the fawns to my vet’s clinic where one was DOA and the other still struggling for existence. Its adorability inspired everyone to do whatever he or she could that it might live. My vet even took the fawn home that evening, so she could care for it all through the night. It died from insufficiently developed lungs as I learned later. The material universe is not compassionate—it cares for neither you nor me, so we must care for each other and all living creatures.
Bambi in the Gooseberries
A Fawn in the Grass
Fawns grow quickly! They have to. For if summer is here can winter be far behind? When winter comes, they must run from the wolves not with them, perhaps even from our carbon mote of the previous chapter. Does do not, however, abandon their fawns—the males stay with her for one year, the females for two.
Fawn in Fall with Flag Up Ready to Run
Madonna and Child
The Kiss
These seemingly mild and gentle animals are not defenseless. They have deadly two-pronged hooves and multi-pronged antlers. Bucks with a large rack will stand their ground against a pack of wolves and even gore a mountain lion before tossing it in the air like a plaything. Most animals will stand and deliver if the situation requires. There is a banality of heroism among all creatures great and small, including humans.
Consider the baby woodchucks pictured here:
Mother Woodchuck and Her Five Little Chips
While rambling through ancient fields near my grandfather’s old bam, I noticed some movement in the grass. Investigating I discovered a very young woodchuck, popularly called a chip.
Since the nearest woodchuck den was about 300 yards (275 meters) distance, I surmised this little wanderer was leaving home permanently. Chips are weaned at six weeks and leave the birth burrow shortly afterward. Being herbivores, they are walking on their food.
My Grandfather’s Bam Being Eaten by the Forest
The chip immediately sensed my presence and turned to face this terrifying challenge. Because the field was large and his den distant, he had little choice but to stand and deliver. To increase his size, he instinctively stood on his hind legs, scratching the air with his front claws all the while uttering an aggressive whistle. I marveled at his courage: he was Odysseus to my Polyphemus—man to cyclops. I wish he could talk or write that he might regale his children with tales of how one sunny afternoon a young silverback chip drove off a one-eyed giant. But nature’s bravery is an everyday event, unheralded and quickly forgotten.
What is true for the lowly woodchuck is also hue for the graceful deer. Every winter I put out deer food
—a nutritional mixture of oats, cracked com, and molasses. In three or more feet of snow, this food source is welcome and often needed, especially by the fawns and the older bucks and does. In the presence of such abundance, however, in an otherwise grindingly harsh environ-ment, fights often erupt among deer. Analogously, humans often squabble over a rich parent’s will. Jane Goodall observed similar behavior among chimpanzees in the presence of a large banana cache.
In winter, deer gather in groups on a much-reduced range called a deer yard. And it’s these groups of a dozen or more that regularly came to my feeding center. When two or more does arrived with their fawns, the mothers frequently rose up on their hind legs to box with each other (see photograph). They do this to allow their fawns— their genes—to feed first. Clearly, selection pressure encourages aggression at bonanza sites. Those in the past, the distant past, who stood up and fought for their fawns to feed first were more likely to leave healthy progeny. Aggression increases the survival of the aggressor’s genes. Remarkably, I have never observed anyone injured. However it could happen. Certainly, hooves hurt!
You go for it Mom!
Herd at Feeding Area
Handsome and Dangerous
Antlers are grown and lost annually, unlike homs, which are grown once and last permanently. Bucks use their antlers to impress does and other bucks. Fights between bucks are uncommon; usually each sizes up the other and the less well endowed wisely retreats. Nonetheless, when two are evenly matched a fight will ensue and everything goes. The winner gets his choice of the ladies and his genes survive. Again, aggression increases the survival of genes—at least with deer.
One-Antlered Buck
An old cliché states that beauty is all in the eye of the beholder—that’s partly true but not the whole truth. Beauty is something else, something objective we can measure. The one-antlered buck is not as attractive as his former self (pictured above the caption Handsome and Dangerous
) His lack of symmetry hints at a certain diminished virility, as does the cane of an old man. In some societies youth and virility are synonymous with beauty. When your left side is identical to your right side (bilateral symmetry), people judge you to be beautiful and healthy. Many mothers realize their infants prefer looking at symmetric rather than asymmetric patterns. Or perhaps it’s a form of imprinting; after all, the loving face that babies first focus on has bilateral symmetry, providing a reference for security and survival.
In a broad sense, physical symmetry is related to health and beauty—at least as applied to the bodies of mammals. Show me an animal with a large asymmetry, and I’ll show you a sick animal. Much of the cosmetic industry and the work of plastic surgeons attempt to retain or restore bilateral symmetry. On the other hand, small exceptions can be intriguing—witness the mole above the upper left lip of supermodel Cindy Crawford.
Bucks shed their antlers in the new year and clearly at different times. Search for them after the snow melts and before the green growth of spring, a time I call the brown season. Their ivory-like sheen contrasts with the tanned forest floor, allowing these gems to shine like a beacon. Be aware that you’re not the only one looking for sheds. Mice, porcupines, and ermine* chew on the tines; even foxes, wolves, and bears gnaw on the main beams, which are full of calcium, phosphorus, and mineral salts. Once I discovered a colony of yellow slugs on the tines of a massive antler.
Ermine On Antlers
White-tailed deer are wondrously evolved to deal with the harshness of the north woods. And since this book celebrates the results of evolution rather than its processes, let’s see how.
The largest deer live furthest north; the smallest, in Florida (the Key deer) and furthest south. Why should this be? The answer is simple, even elegant, and it works for other animals: bears, birds, and beavers. As your size (volume) increases, your skin (area) increases at a slower rate, and it’s your total skin area that cools you. That’s why a large cup of coffee cools more slowly than a small cup—it has more coffee for less increase in paper. Mice, squirrels, snakes, and numerous other creatures also huddle for warmth; humans do as well. In a cold bed, we draw up our legs into a fetal position and pull our arms close to our bodies in an effort to reduce our surface area by becoming more spherical, so to speak. Dogs curl up like a ball; geese, swans, and other birds tuck their heads under their wings—examples are all around us. I once came upon an adorable fawn as I returned from a walk (see The Afternoon of a Fawn
). Instinctively she had pulled her long legs under her body to reduce her surface area and so conserve heat.
The Afternoon Of Fawn
Nonetheless, this fawn is resting directly on ice and snow—cold, penetrating, relentless snow. Deer in their darker, thicker winter coats, however, are impervious to such privations. Remarkably, under the area your thumbprint covers are at least a thousand individual deer hairs: outer, darker guard hairs and inner body-hugging, heat-retaining coats. These inner hairs are hollow, so this fawn is wrapped in a million tiny thermos bottles. Snow falling on her back or face does not melt. Often in chance wanderings in the winter woods back of my grandfather’s bam, I’ve happened upon a deer-bedding area—depressions in the snow on a small rise so they may be ever watchful for wolves, runners of these northern forests. These depressions provided little evidence any snow had melted from the heat of their bodies.
Inner Deer Hair
The Book of Psalms says, I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
Great poetry, poor science! None of us is made
as if by an intelligent creator. Rather we are molded
by natural selection, and the products of this process are truly wonderful. And the writer of the Psalms was parochial in speaking only of human animals. We have seen, at least, one non-human animal that has been wonderfully molded by millions of years of descent with modification. In conditions in which we would quickly and miserably perish, they appear as if they had just stepped out of a grooming salon.
Our fawn resting on the snow will, with some good fortune, grow into the exquisite doe stepping out of the snowy wilderness—into another Great Princess of the Forest.
The Great Princess of the Forest
The animal humans know and love best is the dog, Canis lupus familiaris. Dogs are domesticated wolves. Thousands of years ago, some wolves discovered that hanging around a campsite of hunter-gatherers was beneficial—these sites were excellent sources of free food. The hunters soon realized these semi-tame wolves could help in tracking deer and other game, and sound an alarm of unwanted nighttime intruders. Hunter and wolf became codependent and that bond continues to this moment.