Kamloops Naturalist Club Juniper Ridge Outing on Saturday June 7th, 2025 Field Trip Report by Tom Dickinson On Saturday June 10th about twenty people, including 11 non-cub members, met at the junction of Rosehill Road and Scott Road for an …Continue reading →
We have two spots available for the BC Nature Wells Gray camp, July 11 to 14. Here is the registration Link: https://bcnature.org/bc-nature-camp-2024-land-of-fire-and-ice-wells-gray-provincial-park/
From time to time we will feature outings from some of our members as they go out to experience nature quietly, bringing only walking shoes and a camera. On a mid-May morning, I went out to Lac du Bois, paddled …Continue reading →
People! I took Hank to Buse Lake, and it got seriously weird . . . set the Quality to “High” in Youtube (1080p) for this freaky video! And volume up!
Yep, that is a video of so many gross flies. But these flies don’t bite humans or land on us at all. Plus, they make a really cool noise when they retreat – in a wave – away as you approach them. So maybe they are not (just) gross?
My understanding is that these are brine flies. The brine flies flying around in this video are adults who actually spend most of their lives underwater. Eggs are laid on water. When they hatch, larvae feed on purple bacteria on the bottom of Buse Lake. These purple bacteria, incidentally, sometimes cause this lake to turn magenta.
Anyway back to the brine flies. The fly larvae feed on purple bacteria (and other stuff) underwater in this extreme, salty salty lake. Actually, the fly larvae have special organs that remove salt from their bodies so they can survive down there in the brine! Ultimately, the larvae pupate in a larval casing underwater.
Eventually, the larvae emerge from their pupal casing, metamorphose into adults, and float up and out of the water to mate. Their pupal casings wash up on shore and are upsettingly gross (see above). The adults mate and die in a few days, as far as I have read. Pretty simple.
There were creepy rafts of flies around the entire perimeter of the lake, within a few metres of the shoreline. The amount of flies was truly epic. As we were leaving, a bunch of them took off and flew away too. Not sure where they went, or why.
Okay, okay, so now we know about brine flies. But what about all the pink stuff in between the gross pupal cases pictured earlier in the article? Well, they just might be the eggs of . . .
Brine shrimp! Yes, there are cool tiny red shrimp in this salty lake! Did you notice these little cuties in the first video? Their eggs were all over the east side of lake (probably blown their by prevailing winds, along with all the pupal casings). Below are pics of what are presumably brine shrimp eggs by the shoreline.
How are brine flies and brine shrimp connected? I don’t know! Do you?? Please share with me if you do!
Also we saw: popped bubbles in clay depressions, bear tracks, and ghosts.
Here are articles I used to put this together (also used some books from my library). Thanks Rick Howie for the article about pink Buse Lake! And Tom Dickinson for mentioning the pink lake phenomenon to me a couple years ago, which got me out there in the first place. Hope to see a pink lake someday.
Report submitted by Margaret Graham and photos by Adele Stapleton
On Saturday, five brave souls ignored the forecast for rain showers and headed out to Roderick Haig-Brown Park to view the salmon in the Adams River.We chose the September 22nd date to avoid the crowds of people who will be converging on the park during the Salute to the Sockeye Festival Sept. 28 to Oct. 21.Unfortunately, we didn’t see any fish in the park, although we enjoyed the stroll along the wooded path and read the signage about the salmon and the Secwepemc people.
Hoping to see some fish, we drove to Scotch Creek where we ate our lunch and managed to see three red sockeye salmon as well as a few dead ones. Our next destination was the Flume Trail parking lot on Holding Road.We followed the Lower Flume Trail which crossed Bear Creek on sturdy bridges and eventually made our way down to the Adams River.We saw another three salmon on our hike, making a total of only six fish for our day’s efforts.
Our journey through the forest was very pleasant, surrounded by towering Douglas-Fir and Cedar trees. The flora is completely different from the Kamloops area due to the greater amount of rainfall that the Shuswap receives. The forest floor was carpeted with a variety of mosses and fallen trees which nourished an interesting assortment of different fungi.The rain held off until we started back along the loop to the parking lot, but we had come prepared for the weather.Hopefully, those elusive salmon will make an appearance during the festival for the thousands of visitors who are expected to arrive along with the fish.
Note – Some of the gallery photos were lost in the website changes. The post was restored to its basic form – 10/25/DAS
Submitted by Margaret Graham. Photos by Adele Stapleton More than 20 people showed up for our field trip to Greenstone Mountain on Sunday, July 8. This trip has been taken during the Sunday closest to July 1 for about 25 …Continue reading →