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#sonora

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👀 March 18, 2025

"Tuolumne County, CA – The Tuolumne County Public Health Department (TCPH) is currently investigating suspected cases of measles of two Tuolumne County residents. As part of the investigation, Summerville High School is coordinating closely with Public Health. Public Health officials are actively investigating the suspected cases but would like to proactively advise the public of potential risk of exposure to measles at Summerville High School between the dates of March 10, 2025 and March 11, 2025 and at Adventist Health Sonora Emergency Department during the late evening of March 15, 2025 and early morning of March 16, 2025.

This is an emerging situation, details are pending, and we will update the public as soon as further information is available."

Continued thread

Here's a quick sample of the plant photos I shot. It was a real time consuming process, since I made an effort to make the pictures look "pretty" while also being good "vouchers" — i.e. something that proves that a species was in fact found in that location, usually a physical specimen, photo, or statement by a qualified botanist.

This plant will be identified and turned into a record in this public database:
madreandiscovery.org

It's fun to be adding these small contributions to the scientific record for anyone to use.

Continued thread

I've been telling people on the trip "I really want to find or at least see a Gila monster! This morning, the first formal documentation day, on the drive up, the people in the lead vehicle found one right in the 4WD road!

The skin is hard and bumpy. Tom Van Devender is holding it, my hand "petting" it in the second photo.

They deliver an **extremely** painful bite. They don't inject venom like rattlesnakes, but latch on and chew saliva into your skin.

#herps #GilaMonster #Sonora #biodiversity.

Nature interrupted: Impact of the #USMexico #BorderWall on #wildlife

Scientists on both sides of the border are working to understand how the barrier is affecting the area’s #biodiversity. Meanwhile, communities try to save animals left without access to #water.

By Iván Carrillo 06.27.2024

"In a vast stretch of the #SonoranDesert, between the towns of #SanLuisRíoColorado and #Sonoyta in northern #Mexico sits a modest building of cement, galvanized sheet metal and wood — the only stop along 125 miles of inhospitable landscape dominated by thorny ocotillo shrubs and towering saguaro cactuses up to 50 feet high. It’s a fonda — a small restaurant — called La Liebre del Desierto (The Desert Hare), and for more than 20 years, owner Elsa Ortiz Ramos has welcomed and nourished weary travelers taking a break from the adjacent highway that runs through the arid Pinacate and Grand Desierto de Altar Biosphere Reserve.
Landscape showing an arid land with bushes and a mountain in the background. The land is divided by a brown wall. In the foreground is a huge cactus.

"But the dedication and care of this petite woman go beyond her simple menu. Every two weeks, she pays out of pocket for a 5,000-gallon tank of water to distribute to a network of water troughs strategically placed in the area. By doing so, she relieves the thirst of #BighornSheep, #ocelots, #pronghorn, #coyotes, #deer and even #bats that have been deprived of access to their natural #WaterSources.

"'The #crows come to the house and scream to warn us that there is no more water ... it’s our alarm,' says Ortiz Ramos in her distinct northern Mexico accent. Her words sound straight from an Aesop’s fable, but they take on stark realism in this spot. Covering large parts of #Arizona, #California and the Mexican states of #BajaCalifornia and #Sonora, the #SonoranDesert — along with the #LutDesert in Iran — was catalogued in 2023 as having the #hottest surface temperature on the planet, at 80.8 degrees Celsius (177 degrees Fahrenheit).

"Through narrow steel bollards 3.5 inches apart, I observe lush vegetation surrounding the Quitobaquito spring on the other side of the border. 'This vital source supplies both humans and animals over an area of more than 1 million hectares,' Federico Godínez Leal, an agronomist from the University of Guadalajara, explains to me. But now this crucial water source is restricted to the US side due to the construction of the border wall, and I have come with him here to understand the consequences. Godínez Leal and his team have been documenting the stark difference between each side: Their poignant photographs show skeletons of wild boar, deer and bighorn sheep lying on Mexican soil."

Read more:
knowablemagazine.org/content/a

Knowable Magazine | Annual ReviewsNature interrupted: Impact of the US-Mexico border wall on wildlifeScientists on both sides of the border are working to understand how the barrier is affecting the area’s biodiversity. Meanwhile, communities try to save animals left without access to water.

One of the focuses of the recent Mexico biodiversity expedition was finding these interesting Ditmars' horned lizards. I found the first one, of only two found on the entire trip. This was not a range extension, per se, but more of an infill between known ranges in the sky island region of northern Sonora.

There is a tradition that you have to kiss the first one you find and then a bottle of tequila is opened for the occasion. Out of four trips, this was the first one I ever found.

They are fascinating little creatures. Their main predators are ravens and small canids like coyotes and foxes, so they are not particularly afraid of large animals like us or cows or deer. They are quite docile and even a wild one will take a grasshopper offered to it without trying to run away.

Alt text (because the site keeps crashing): first photo is a small horned lizard sitting in the palm of my hand. Second photo is me fake-kissing the same lizard while holding it.

Continued thread

Most of the protesters are women, with a few children as well. Rosa tells me this is because the women are the most immediately affected by lack of water. They have to do the cooking and cleaning and childcare.

Her husband was too afraid that he would get arrested or get in trouble so stayed home.

Their current tactic is to block the road for half an hour, move the brush pile, let people through, then close it again for a half an hour. Rosa spoke quite eloquently about the need for people to stand up and make their voices heard.

I asked what they would do if the local government still didn't listen. She said they would come up with a Plan B that might involve more vigorous blockades.

There was one police car there observing, but apparently the military had been called. Rosa noted the irony of the military being called to let traffic through, but not to fix their pump after three weeks of no water.
#Water #Mexico #Protest #Sonora
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Sinoquipe, Sonora, Mexico, about 30 minutes ago. I'm with a group of Mexican and American biologists en route to a remote mountain range as part of a biological survey of the area. We got stopped by this protest.

A few years ago, there was a massive retention pond spill from the giant copper mine near Cananea. It contaminated the water supply so new wells had to be drilled, but this town pump has been out of service for three weeks. Protesters say the President of the municipio (like an American county), does not listen to them and has been unresponsive to their needs.

They have been without water for three weeks now. To get water, they go to a nearby pig farm that has a well and have to pay for it, filling containers that they take home. People have been getting sick because of lack of sanitation.

#Protest #Water #Mexico #Sonora
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#Yaqui Activist Released from Prison after 7 years: Fighting the #GasPipeline in #Sonora, #Mexico

July 17, 2023, via #CensoredNews

"#Indigenous #Yaqui leader #FidencioAldama is free after 7 years in prison and has been found not guilty of homicide! He vows to continue to oppose the gas pipeline from the company #IEnova, a subsidiary of the transnational U.S. company #sempraenergy

"#FidencioAldamaPerez is an #Indigenous Yaqui #LandDefender and #PoliticalPrisoner from the northern Mexican state of Sonora. He was arrested on October 27, 2016, and later sentenced to fifteen years and six months in prison on trumped-up charges related to a death in the community of Loma de Bácum, Sonora."

Read more: fidencioaldama.org/en/news/
La Jornada San Luis reports
Cristina Gómez Lima, correspondent

bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2023/07

It's Going Down · Eight Years Since the Detention of Fidencio AldamaA statement from the Fidencio Aldama Support Group announcing an end to its activities. La versión en español sigue a la versión en inglés This past October 27 marked eight years since the detention of the Yaqui ex-political prisoner Fidencio Aldama. This year we marked the date under a different set of circumstances, delighted by...