walking through the seasons is the book i have written about local wildlife in the droitwich spa area.The book takes you through the seasons starting with winter and tells you about animals and plants.There are also eight local walks and eight recipes in the book.The final chapter tells you how to encourage wildlife into your garden.After every season there is a photo opportunity and things to see during every month.The book has been proof read and i hope to have it in various book shops soon.
Conservation for the future.
Welcome to my blog walking through the seasons,over the coming months i will be blogging about many different aspects of wildlife, so i hope you all enjoy looking at my blog.
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Sunday, 8 July 2012
Why snakes and lizards bask in the sun.
Although reptiles such as snakes and lizards are usually described as cold-blooded,they spend much of their lives with their bodies nearly as warm as in a warm-blooded animal. What they lack is a means of producing and maintaining their own body heat. To reach a body temperature at which muscles, senses and digestion are fully active (about 77-90f and 25-32c), they have to rely on outside heat-either conducted from their surroundings or, more often, direct from the sun`s rays. In Britain, reptiles are dormant in winter because they cannot reach their working temperatures. In spring they emerge on sunny days, but the sunshine is so weak they need to bask almost all of the time. As the sun gets stronger, basking time is shorter-mainly early and late in the day- and there is time for hunting and breeding. By midsummer basking is hardly necessary, but as autumn comes the need increases, and finally the animals are forced into hibernation. Reptile species that bear live young can usually survive in cooler climates than those that lay eggs, by basking during pregnancy, they can get enough heat to ensure faster development of the young but warmth cannot ensured for the eggs. This is one reason why the adder and the common lizard, which bear live young, can live further north than the grass snake and sand lizard, which lay eggs.
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