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17596  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Tranquility here: Eagles have landed (WA) on: 01-Jan-11, 09:24:48 AM
January is the time of year bald eagles roost in the trees along the Skagit River during their annual migration. It makes for spectacular viewing, and thanks to the U.S. Forest Service, volunteers will be available to help visitors better appreciate the majestic birds.

There are three viewing stations with off-highway parking along North Cascades Hwy. 20 that provide spotting scopes and binoculars to help people see the birds up close. Volunteers will be available from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays in January.

Eagle-watching stations are located at Howard Miller Steelhead Park in Rockport, the Sutter Creek Rest Area near milepost 100 and the Marblemount Fish Hatchery. Look for the yellow signs. For more information, call 360-856-5700.

Here are some tips from the U.S. Forest Service for eagle viewing:

• Eagles typically can be seen feeding on the river gravel bars during early morning hours.

• Most of the river frontage is privately owned. Use public areas along the river.

• To see eagles up close, use a spotting scope, binoculars or telephoto camera lens. You are more likely to see wildlife if you are patient.

• Keep noise low and movements slow. Eagles tend to spook when there is too much activity.

• For your safety, park your car in pullouts well off the highway. Use caution when crossing roads.

• Never walk in the river or stream or conduct other activity that could disturb spawning salmon or their egg sacs, called redds.

Herald Staff

17597  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Tiger shark bellies found full of migrating birds on: 01-Jan-11, 09:21:24 AM
are Gulf oil and gas rigs to blame?

Feathers of woodland birds found in tiger shark bellies this fall bolster the theory that the Gulf’s offshore oil and gas platforms pose a fatal danger to migrating birds, according to scientists from the Dauphin Island Sea Lab.
“The best way I can describe what we found in the sharks is to think of a hairball like cats cough up,” said Marcus Drymon, a Sea Lab scientist who dissected several of the sharks. “The balls are just solid feathers and about as big around as a grapefruit. We caught these sharks during the fall migration in the general vicinity of the platforms off Alabama.”
Feathers in the mouth of a tiger shark caught south of Dauphin Island belonged to a yellow-bellied sapsucker, a woodpecker that migrates across the Gulf of Mexico each year, Drymon said. The red feathers in another shark’s belly came from a scarlet tanager, and the brown ones belonged to a brown thrasher. Drymon and his fellow scientists said they have found feathers in years past during an ongoing shark survey but didn’t make the connection to migratory birds until they read a November Press-Register article.
It described a 2005 federal study documenting a phenomenon called “nocturnal circulation,” during which birds migrating across the sea on cloudy nights became disoriented by the brightly lit oil platforms. The birds flew around a platform for hours, often until they died of exhaustion and fell into the water.
In some instances, scientists estimated that flocks of 100,000 or more birds were circling a single platform.
The study concluded that more platforms in the waters south of Alabama would “not be benign to migrating birds” as the area lies at the center of the Dauphin Island Trans-Migration Throughway — one of the largest migratory bird corridors in North America.
All manner of birds — including hummingbirds, warblers, herons, cuckoos, doves, egrets, falcons, orioles, sandpipers and osprey — cross the Gulf twice each year and have been documented circling platforms.
Though the 2005 study urged follow-up research, federal officials said they have not conducted any.
“While there are no bird studies under contract in the Gulf at this time, we do anticipate seeing more bird studies funded in the Gulf of Mexico in the near future,” the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement’s Eileen Angelico wrote in response to the Press Register’s story in November.
Angelico said the agency could not comment on the Sea Lab research because the findings had not been published or reviewed by federal scientists.
“A lot of what we think is based on the Press-Register article that suggested the platforms could be the culprit,” Drymon said. “These are not gulls or pelicans. They are migratory birds that you would not typically find in a shark.”
Drymon said tiger sharks are the most likely candidate for eating birds that fall into the sea, as they are famous scavengers. “These are birds that aren’t supposed to be on the surface. They can’t swim, and their feathers can’t get saltwater on them,” said the Sea Lab’s Sean Powers, who is part of the shark survey team. “If these birds end up on the water, they are going to die.”
Powers said it wouldn’t be unusual to find a few migrating birds in sharks off Alabama in the spring because “they would be in the last 20 miles of an 800-mile journey” and might have lacked the energy to complete the trip.
“But in the fall, birds falling into the water in the first 20 miles, those birds wouldn’t have taken off if they hadn’t been able to make it all the way,” Powers said. “These birds died in the first 20 miles. It suggests something interfered with their migration, and it really suggests a link to the platforms.”
Drymon said the scientists planned to publish their findings and seek research money. He said DNA testing on the feathers in the sharks’ stomachs could help identify more species being eaten.
In addition, a relatively new technique that relies on weather radar to track bird migrations could pinpoint platforms where flocks of birds ended up circling.

This migratory bird's body was found in the belly of a tiger shark caught in the Gulf of Mexico. Scientists said the discovery of feathers from various migratory birds in sharks caught during the fall migration suggests that oil and gas platforms in the Gulf present a fatal danger
17598  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 31-Dec-10, 10:27:22 PM






17599  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 31-Dec-10, 09:55:13 PM
Love the PIP on the live stream!
17600  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Lily the Bear on: 31-Dec-10, 09:43:39 PM
First, the Den Cam.  When Jim Stroner and Lynn trekked to the den today, Sue stayed back so Lily would have one less body to keep track of.  As it turned out, snowfall overnight made back roads impassable for driving.  Lynn and Jim weren’t dressed for miles of snowmobiling but had to continue.  Waiting would make things harder with another snowfall in the forecast.  Lynn hunkered down behind Jim on the snowmobile as Jim whizzed along in billowing snow in a beautiful but cold landscape.  Three miles down the road, Jim’s eyelashes iced up so he couldn’t see.  He thawed them out, and they continued.  On an off road trail, branches drooped low under the heavy snow.  Moving the branches slowed travel to a crawl and got the snowmobile stuck.
At the shed, they were doubly glad they came.  Yesterday’s freezing rain and snow had covered the solar panels, making them useless.  An hour of scraping got them going again.     
Eventually, Jim and Lynn arrived at the den to find Lily much calmer than she was yesterday.  She recognized Lynn’s voice and attire.  She came out and sniffed his head for confirmation.  Lynn gave her a handful of grapes so she would ignore him and Jim as Lynn adjusted the Den Cam and Jim attached the Pan-Tilt-Zoom (PTZ) camera to an ash tree 10-15 feet away.   Engineers at PixController in Pennsylvania tried manipulating the PTZ camera remotely and realized a wire loosened during transport and needs to be re-attached before the camera can be controlled.  Meanwhile, they will be building a low-power amplifier to supply “Phantom Power” to the microphone for louder sound.  We hope the sound is full strength before the anticipated birth in a couple weeks.
Jim and Lynn said their usual thank you to Lily and left.  Lily went back in her den and snuggled down by Hope.  Back at the Research Center, we all could see the Den Cam needs further adjustment.  Now that we can see how far back in the den the bears sleep, we can move it closer and slightly left during our next visit to the den.
Lynn Rogers and Sue Mansfield

Lily peeks out


 

17601  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: Happy New Year Rfalconcam Fans Around the World - 2011!! on: 31-Dec-10, 09:27:45 PM
next door to the other house
17602  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: Happy New Year Rfalconcam Fans Around the World - 2011!! on: 31-Dec-10, 09:26:56 PM
Here's a house by me, they go all out every year! I love to go by and gaze, as do thousands of others!
17603  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Carolina Raptor Center on: 31-Dec-10, 08:37:22 PM
Carolina Raptor Center
CRC volunteers and friends released 4 rehabilitated raptors today. Three Red-tailed Hawks and one Eastern Screech Owl. Fly and be free!
17604  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: Tracking MAK on: 31-Dec-10, 08:24:54 PM
Happy New Year, MAK and Sue!

Happy New Year RONI, Q and ME (MAK's sister)! Have a great night, watch them Bulls!
17605  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: Happy New Year Rfalconcam Fans Around the World - 2011!! on: 31-Dec-10, 08:20:29 PM
newyearbd
Happy New Year for all of you!!
I just made my first walk in this new year through lots of firework to wish the neighbors a Happy New Year.
 martini greetings Aafke

 

Happy New Year my friend! Enjoy!
17606  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: Happy New Year Rfalconcam Fans Around the World - 2011!! on: 31-Dec-10, 05:14:31 PM


Ring out the old...Ring in the new. Have a great New year everyone!


17607  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 31-Dec-10, 04:16:09 PM
Beauty back at 3:31
17608  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: The Bittern is back on: 31-Dec-10, 04:12:31 PM
Yes a real cool video, thanks Donna.
Good news Bobbi that the Bittern is coming back in Ireland, I hope it's not only for the cold weather. Things are strange with this weather. Yesterday My son saw a Bittern in Amsterdam. He said it was very cool to see him but I think the Bittern will have a difficult time.
I'm doing the best I can with feeding the birds.
greetings Aafke


Yay for you and Kerwin, such a pretty bird......reminds me of the Night Heron.
17609  Rochester Falcons / Rfalconcam Now / Beauty and new guy were at nest @ 3:02 Anyone see? on: 31-Dec-10, 04:10:43 PM
 Shocked
17610  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 31-Dec-10, 04:06:54 PM
Both there again 3:02pm
Hello, my name is ....
Beauty on Main Cam
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