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14836  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Rare falcons move into Sudbury mine sites (Canada) on: 27-May-11, 06:41:35 AM
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2011/05/24/environment-peregrine-falcons-sudbury.html Story and pics

Peregrine falcons are nesting in open pit mines and an abandoned ore plant near Sudbury, Ont.

Maybe a Rochester offspring! Ya never know!
14837  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Offspring / Re: Rhea Mae and Tiago's Webcam - Toronto - Canadian Peregrine Foundation on: 27-May-11, 06:36:34 AM
IN the news!! RM & T's banding day

http://www.torontosun.com/2011/05/24/peregrine-falcon-chicks-banded Story & Video

If you’re walking downtown in the next two weeks, you might want to look out for falling Peregrine falcons from the sky.
14838  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Predatory tenants fly to Tower Building (Chicago) on: 27-May-11, 06:31:50 AM
ELGIN — For Gordon Garcia of Bartlett, the recent Friday the 13th was a lucky one. You could also say the day was for the birds.

Garcia — a retiree, amateur nature photographer and birder — was on his way to Central Barber Shop in downtown Elgin that day when he heard unusual animal noises.

“I got my binoculars out of the car, took a look” toward the Elgin Tower Building “and was at that point almost certain what they were,” Garcia said. “I went back with my camera to take some photos on May 14. I posted a photo on IBET” — Illinois Birders Exchanging Thoughts — “and got verification that it was a peregrine falcon.”

Garcia headed back downtown the following Monday and shot more pictures. Suspecting the birds were nesting and not just passing through the area, he emailed Mary Hennen, an ornithologist with the Field Museum in Chicago, who heads the Chicago Peregrine Project.

“One falcon had leg bands, while the other did not appear to have bands,” Garcia said. “I got a little better photo of the leg bands and sent them to Mary to see if she could identify the bird.” He also put his photos online for the whole world to see at www.pbase.com/gordg3/eagles_hawks_osprey_and_falcons.

Hennen intends to come out to Elgin soon to see for herself. She said the Elgin pair is among the 23 duos duly noted on the Chicago Peregrine Project website (fieldmuseum.org/explore/illinois-peregrines) as having habitats in Illinois.

“Illinois’ peregrine population has gone from extirpation in the state by 1951, to one pair in 1988 to a current level (2011) of 23 territories,” the Field site states.

There are about 400 to 500 pairs nesting east of the Mississippi River, Hennen said. That’s actually a historically high number. This type of falcon prefers the West because it typically lives along cliffs.

According to the Peregrine Watch website (falconcam.travelers.com), because of the widespread use of the pesticide DDT, “the population disappeared east of the Mississippi by 1965. Success of the Eastern Peregrine Recovery Plan in recent years has helped restore populations of the peregrine falcon.”

Food, habitat here

What drew the falcons to Elgin was the ledges and architecture of the tallest building in town, at Chicago Street and North Grove Avenue, and its location close to the food source that is the Fox River, Hennen said.

Because of what they like to eat, “Peregrine falcons have also been called duck hawks,” Hennen said.

The peregrines nab their prey in flight, so their diet consists of other birds and an occasional bat. They also are the fastest known animal, moving at a 200 mph clip when they dive-bomb on prey.

Hennen said peregrine falcons can live about 20 years in captivity and 14 to 16 years in the wild. Youngsters usually stay in the nest for four to six weeks before they take their first flight. Fledglings are dependent on their parents for food for about a month more before they hunt for themselves. And 60 percent of peregrines don’t make it to their first birthday, Hennen said.

Hennen mentioned that peregrines are messy eaters, a fact that led Tower Building maintenance supervisor Chris Mains to them.

Mains said falcons actually have been seen along the building for about six years. He first noticed them back then while working on an unoccupied office on the 14th floor.

“I looked out the window, and thought it was snow. It turned out those were feathers falling,” Mains said.

Messy birds

Over the years, Mains had debates with late downtown merchant Pat Keeney, who thought the birds were hawks. About three years ago, Mains took up photography, snapped a few shots and did some online research, which led him to surmising the birds were peregrines — and maybe the same pair, because such birds usually mate for life.

Mains said Tower tenants occasionally complain as the falcons leave heads, wings, guts and other fowl parts strewn about the exterior of the building. The crow-sized falcons also screech and have been known to swoop within a few feet of a person when they feel their territory is being threatened.

“I was up not too far from where they are last Wednesday, and it was nerve-wracking,” Mains said. That might be because there is a nest on the higher reaches of the building. Mains said it had three eggs, but one had broken.

Mains speculated that downtown developments over the last couple of years might be why more people have noticed the peregrines. Those include workers more frequently needing access to the roof to complete cellphone tower network upgrades, and more tenants in the Tower Building.

“The paver bricks the city put in as sidewalks also make it more easy to see bird poop,” Mains said.

Resurgence of nature

The falcons are among several formerly out-of-the-ordinary species noticed locally in recent years, giving clue that nature is at the very least adaptive and resilient, if not making a comeback in the area.

Hawks, including the red-tail, have been spotted, as have turkey vultures, which enjoy eating road kill.

More and more eagles have been seen the past few winters, most notably this year near Gail Borden Public Library in Elgin and in trees near the Fox River in Carpentersville and East Dundee. Big flathead catfish are more and more common in the river, too.

In January, out in the Providence subdivision on the city’s far west side, “My wife snapped a picture, and EPD Animal Control had it verified by the DNR,” said Elgin Community Development Director Marc Mylott. “Bigger and thicker than a coyote, we were told it probably was a wolf.”

While the above all have been verified, a handful of people also are convinced that a few years ago, a panther was lurking somewhere off Plank Road west of Elgin. But found fur in the area turned out to be from a black house cat, and there have been no recent claims of a big feline on the prowl.



CourierNews
14839  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Great River Energy Falcon cam on: 27-May-11, 06:26:11 AM
http://www.greatriverenergy.com/aboutus/environmental/birdcam.html

Update:

Our new female falcon laid four eggs the week of May 11. This new batch of eggs is expected hatch around June 18 and the eyasses may be banded the week of July 4.
May 2011

Great River Energy’s Elk River Energy Recovery Station peregrine falcons experienced a sad and unfortunate beginning to the 2011 nesting season. The male and female falcons that have been with us for the past few years returned to the nesting box in early March. The pair successfully produced four eggs in mid-April.

On April 22 the female falcon disappeared from the nesting box. The male falcon attempted to incubate the eggs in the female’s absence but he too eventually left the box.

We are now happy to report that the same male falcon has returned to the nesting box and is courting another female falcon. Great River Energy staff have determined that this is a banded falcon named Dot. She hatched and was banded in June 2007 at Xcel Energy’s Blackdog Power Plant located in Burnsville, Minn.
14840  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Wilmington DE Falcons on: 27-May-11, 06:20:12 AM
WILMINGTON, Del. — Two biologists are expected to try again to collect data on Thursday about the five baby peregrine falcons that were born last month in Wilmington.

The falcons nest at the Brandywine Building downtown and have become the attraction of the Wilmington Peregrine Falcon webcam. The scientists went to band the young birds on Wednesday, but noticed through the webcam that the falcons weren't in their nest. The birds were later found sitting on a window ledge.

William Stewart, the conservation chair for Delmarva Ornithological Society, tells The News Journal of Wilmington that the revised plan is to band the birds early in the morning. He says the entrance to the nest can be blocked with a shield.
14841  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Mount Clemens' peregrine falcon chicks named after inspirational women on: 27-May-11, 06:17:52 AM
Mount Clemens— Three female peregrine falcon chicks were dubbed Diana, Edna and Rosie today by Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel.

He named the birds after Diana Kolakowski, Macomb County's first female to serve as chairwoman of its Board of Commissioners, Edna Miller, the county's first female clerk and register of deeds, and World War II icon Rosie the Riveter.

"All of these women predated the idea of women taking on traditional male roles," Hackel said.

Kolakowski became the county Board of Commissioners' first chairwoman in 1996 and served nearly 25 years as a commissioner, representing a district in Sterling Heights. She died after knee surgery in 2009 at the age of 65.

Miller became the county's first woman clerk in 1964 and served in the post for 28 years. She died in 1996 at the age of 73. Miller was also the wife of the City of Warren's first mayor, Art Miller.

Rose Leigh Monroe, associated as a "Rosie the Riveter," was a widowed mother of two in the 1940s who moved from Kentucky to Ypsilanti to work as a riveter building military planes at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory.

She starred in a promotional film about the war effort because of her name and she fit the image of the widely distributed poster that featured a woman in a bandanna and overalls.

Hackel said he chose the name because many women such as Monroe took jobs during the war in military factories in Macomb County, including his grandmother.

Hackel gave the trio of birds their names after officials with the state's Department of Natural Resources and the Detroit Zoological Society tagged them with identification bands and gave them a quick physical this morning.

The fledglings live with their parents, Nick and Hathor, in a nest on an 11th floor ledge of the Macomb County Building, 10 N. Main at Cass in downtown Mount Clemens.

The birds of prey have made the ledge their home for the last seven years and have produced offspring there.

The birds were on the brink of extinction worldwide by the 1950s because of the use of pesticides with DDT. However, efforts to restore their numbers got them off the endangered species list in 1999.

Peregrines are the size of crows and prey on small birds. They can also fly up to 180 miles per hour, according to the state DNR.



(Their cam has been deactivated)


14842  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 27-May-11, 06:03:19 AM
No ball of fluff Rita but the egg is changing shape now. I'm sure Beauty will remove that one also. Archer on his way in.
The egg must be pretty soft to do that.
Archer
14843  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: For something fun... on: 26-May-11, 11:22:47 PM
Looks like me every day!  clap
14844  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 26-May-11, 11:21:33 PM
Poor egg! Feel bad for them.
14845  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: RTH cam in NY on: 26-May-11, 11:08:33 PM

Still sad to look at!
14846  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Montreal nestbox on: 26-May-11, 11:04:03 PM
Yay Montreal!! Congrats! I like the names.
14847  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Harrisburg, PA Falcons on: 26-May-11, 04:32:21 PM
5/26/2011  ::   Nestling Update
The eyas has been really active at the nest ledge. He's exhibiting behavior that suggests he may fledge prematurely. Watch and rescue crews are watching him closely in case he does fly and would have to be rescued from the street. The camera views, although not very appealing, provide the best view of the edges of the ledge where the eyas would take flight from. Our first priority is to have this view on streaming video so we can react if and when he does fledge.

Stay put little boy!
14848  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 26-May-11, 04:00:44 PM
frustrated Can't blame her!
14849  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 26-May-11, 03:56:40 PM
(movie) She's all over!
14850  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Bornheim Storks on: 26-May-11, 03:34:24 PM
Oh how sad for them...(now we know)!  Sad  Ropes, fishing line, plastic bags are all killers to birds and other animals. 3 babies suffered from the hands of man. Good grief. Thanks Janet.

Just to add to  your list, Donna.  I'm sure everyone knows, but those plastic six pack holders that hold cans or bottles of soda?  They kill birds, especially shore birds.   Cut those plastic holders into tiny pieces before disposing them.

It's what I do!
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