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15016  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: San Jose Peregrines on: 17-May-11, 09:08:24 PM
There is sad news to report from the top of the San Jose City Hall building.

Unita, the only female falcon to be born earlier this year on the 18th floor ledge of City Hall, has died.

She was 40 days old.


"It takes equal measures of luck, skill and strength to survive out there," said Glenn Stewart, a biologist with the UC Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group, who monitors the peregrine falcons born in the Bay Area. "This was purely bad luck."

Stewart said Unita took her first attempt at flying Sunday, as her mother was returning to the ledge nest box with a pigeon to eat. Unita lunged for her meal, and apparently couldn't handle flying and grabbing for the food at the same time, Stewart said. She slipped and crashed into the Rotunda.

She was pronounced dead a short time later.

"She wanted to be first for the food," Stewart said. "But her feathers weren't fully developed. She probably had another two inches of growth. She should have waited a few days."

Unita is survived by her three brothers: Hermes, Shadow and Ahote, and her parents, Clara and Esteban Colbert.

The falcons are named each year by San Jose schoolchildren.

Members of this beloved falcon family have been living at City Hall since 2007. Their every move is monitored on a webcam and in person by Stewart and his scientific team, along with a group of volunteer falcon lovers, nicknamed the Falconatics.

This is not the first year a young falcon has died. As Stewart explained, learning to fly, or rather land, is challenging for young birds of prey, and they can die both in the wild and in urban settings.

A male falcon chick was found dead in May 2010, and in June 2008, a falcon female named Cielo died after she suffered a clumsy landing and crashed into City Hall. "The fact is, only the strongest and luckiest survive to breed," Stewart said. "That's why these birds lay four eggs each year."

Oh that poor girl, so sorry!  Sad
15017  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Atlanta Peregrine Nest Produces Four High-Flying Falcons on: 17-May-11, 09:05:47 PM
http://www.ammoland.com/2011/05/17/atlanta-peregrine-nest-produces-four-high-flying-falcons/ more

ATLANTA, Ga. --(Ammoland.com)- Four new falcons will soon be eligible for drafting, riding the air currents that swirl around their high-rise home in downtown Atlanta.

Georgia Department of Natural Resources officials recently examined and banded the four young peregrine falcons in a nest outside the offices of McKenna, Long & Aldridge, 51 floors up in the SunTrust Plaza building.
15018  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Why Do Bird Eggs Vary In Shape and Color? on: 17-May-11, 08:01:48 PM

Posted on Tuesday, May 17, 2011 by eNature



Ever wonder why birds lay eggs of different colors and shapes?

There’s a good reason for just about everything we encounter in nature and, as you’d expect, eggs are no exception.

While we tend to not talk much about bird nests at eNature.com because we just don’t want to encourage folks to disturb nesting birds, bird nests and the eggs in them are full of interesting stories.


Why aren’t all bird eggs white?  Birds’ eggs are colored for protective reasons. The parent birds that incubate them are not always on the nest covering them, and at those times, the eggs are exposed to predators. The color, speckles or spots on them are camouflage. That explains why birds that nest in cavities often lay all white eggs. They can’t be seen even when the parent birds are not sitting on them.

Why are birds eggs shaped differently? Again, to protect them. Birds that nest on cliffs, such as many seabirds, tend to have eggs that are smaller at one end than at the other. This is to make them roll in a circle and less likely to fall off the cliff. Birds with round eggs, usually build deep nests that keep them from rolling out.

How do baby birds hatch? They have a so-called “egg tooth” on the top of their upper mandible, which cuts through the egg shell when it is time for them to come out. The egg tooth falls off soon after hatching.

Why do the eggs in a nest often all hatch at about the same time? Because most birds lay an egg a day, but do not begin incubating them until the last egg is laid. One notable exception is the barn owl, which begins incubation with the laying of the first egg. That’s why the youngsters in a brood range in size and age from the oldest to the youngest.



http://enature.com/challenge /BirdCallChallenge.asp Play the bird call challenge. I got 1 out of 5 right!  crying
15019  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Montreal nestbox on: 17-May-11, 02:51:38 PM
Look at the foot!!  gum
15020  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Harrisburg, PA Falcons on: 17-May-11, 02:48:53 PM
Girl or boy Annette?
15021  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 17-May-11, 01:03:15 PM
all intact
15022  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 17-May-11, 07:03:37 AM
just a small peek.

Just heard a loud crash and it startled Archer.

He 's looking
15023  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 17-May-11, 06:47:26 AM
Beauty stopped by real quick, got Archer all riled up!! Smiley
15024  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Wood Duck Family on: 17-May-11, 06:46:32 AM
http://www.flickr.com/photos/21183284@N05/5719117852/#secretff7c9e765din/photostream/ MD
15025  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Second Wave of Mystery Pelican Deaths Hits Topsail Beach, NC on: 17-May-11, 06:42:49 AM
"Looks like a bomb went off in it's wing"

(WASHINGTON D.C.) - A second wave of mysterious pelican injuries and deaths has occurred in the past several weeks at Topsail Island in North Carolina following earlier incidents about six months ago in which about 250 pelicans died as a result of still undetermined causes.


http://www.salem-news.com/articles/may112011/dead-pelicans.php Jeeze
15026  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 17-May-11, 06:29:28 AM
Archer by Main cam
They switched so fast, no look at eggs. On the live stream, all looked intact. Beauty did look at her eggs a few times over night.
15027  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Unity & Archer at KP - Pictures.............. on: 16-May-11, 10:22:59 PM
Wanted to post a couple pictures from the Kodak Park nest site.  The first one is Archer and Unity copulating on one of the stills and the 2nd one is Unity at the scrape.





Doesn't he know your watching......"BUSTED"!!
15028  Resources / Keepers / Re: Request for Quest Pictures on: 16-May-11, 09:48:22 PM
Duh!!  Birdmusic!  I just got it! Your name!  Birds and music!  Your two passions!    You play piano?   And adore birds?

I play clarinet, flute, and saxophone - and a little piano and guitar.  And I adore birds!

Oh my, such talent! Wonderful!
15029  Resources / Keepers / Re: Request for Quest Pictures on: 16-May-11, 09:05:16 PM
Quote
Have no fear-if there are pictures to be had, you can be SURE we'll find them and post them!

Absolutely!  2thumbsup
15030  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 16-May-11, 08:29:26 PM
No pip yet...



I know!
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