Stu Visser park has a lot of animals throughout the park. The park has quit a big food web with all the animals throughout the park. With out the top predators like eagles and coyotes, the smaller animals like rabbits, squirrels and other smaller animals would be over populated. Thats how the whole food web works, its the circle of life and everything has its own way of evening out and keeping the populations under controle.
Fish could also be part of the food web. In Stu Visser trails there is a couple f ponds and a river running through the property. Also the river that runs through the trails is from lake Mac so fish must swim up stream and even up in the park. Fish are great for the ponds and river because they clean the water. Some speaceys of fish eat the algae that keeps the water clean. Also other fish eat the smaller, high populated fish to keep the population under controle.
Its hard to be for surten when happend to this egg but the egg could be cracked from a scavenger like a raccoon and takin the baby robin out of its shell and ate it. This is just a good example of the natural cycle of life. The Robin could of been have been born and became a new born Robin or it could of been eaten by a bigger animal.
As fare as insects go, we saw no sign of the Emerald ash barar in Stu Visser trails. This is a good thing so they are not killing our trees. But im am sure there is trees in this area that are infected with the insect.
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