Field notes, v1524
Page 233
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
Dear 1982 not fresh but the first over I have seen either here or at Carndon Bonto on this visit. Also some other mouse droppings. Then drove to Cornello for guinea pigs and gas. Weather: The valley is being ravined for bricks. at 1 pm the double enclosure had 1 Abrocoma, and the single enclosure (mullin) had 2 also longis. At 6 pm, I saw also longis in each. At 5 pm put a line of traps along the bottom of the slope parallel to the enclosure, tusks and bunchgrass, much more bunchgrass than farther up the hill. The muleta willow is producing lots of spherical seeds. At 6pm attended the grazed mullin troops across the mullin making 15 in all. Afternoon partly cloudy, windy, but warm. Have seen no hawks, not even DOR. A Sparrow broke on top of the rocky knoll. Have heard no owls, fairly a squawled Picchi between here and Cornello. April 11 Carndon Bonto. Wind died down shortly after dark, very quiet, not cold, no ice. Trap lines are follows; grazed mullin: 1 Eliguo 20m out in pure green grazed grass. Double enclosure: 1 also farther less than 2 m from the fence, hence close to more open habitat. Perhaps it had been eluded by the Abro longi forces that. Single enclosure nothing. 11ms along the lower slopes // to the enclosure 2 Eliguo and 1 tuco. Up the slope 2 titris = 5 Reithros. Broke camp and then ran the girl at Campo amato.