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18406  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Through the Lens: White-tailed Ptarmigan on: 07-Nov-10, 02:38:17 PM
Beautiful slideshow, thanks. I just love these birds, partially because they have the right amount of toe feathers (i.e., a lot of toe feathers).

Kinda reminds me of a Snowy!
18407  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: From MAK: Pics from Morning Watches on: 07-Nov-10, 01:02:20 PM
NOTE - Title of topic revised so pictures can be updated periodically from different days. Just add date to subject or in text.

Mak - Thanks for giving us pictures from your perspective. ~Joyce

Thanks Joyce! That date was annoying!  devil
18408  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Fury as islander calls for sea eagle cull (UK) on: 07-Nov-10, 10:26:32 AM
Why can't people leave nature alone? Sheesh!  gum

Cuz they don't want the Eagles snatching their children, I guess. (MYTH) anyway.
18409  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: A tricycle for Lexie on: 07-Nov-10, 09:34:34 AM
Grace Leanen for a bike for a child with cerebral palsy    
   61% (3871) votes

Let's keep it going! Doing great so far!  clap

3rd one down, click it and scroll down to place your vote!

http://www.tvfcubatavia.com/updates/pif_video.htm
18410  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 07-Nov-10, 08:44:39 AM
Quote

MAKfalcon (MAK): We have a falcon on Kodak office east side at base of rocket. Not sure if its B



Link:
http://twitter.com/MAKfalcon/statuses/1260103944634368

Tis the season!
18411  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Memories... on: 07-Nov-10, 08:43:45 AM
From April 6th. I love this pic with the fog.
18412  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Reversing the Trend: Saving Burrowing Owls on: 07-Nov-10, 07:26:51 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z92FIFxO4cE&feature=player_embedded Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society fights to save the few remaining Western Burrowing Owls in Santa Clara County in the Bay Area of California
18413  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Owl migration NJ outdoors on: 07-Nov-10, 07:20:01 AM
While the height of raptor migration may already be behind us for this year, some birds are still moving through The Garden State on the way to their wintering grounds. Earlier this week, Northern Saw-whet Owls and Long-Eared Owls began passing through New Jersey.

On Monday night, six owls were banded at Sandy Hook. Another nine were banded in Cape May, most being Northern Saw-whet Owls. In addition to the banded birds, other owls were being spotted throughout the day, including a pair of Long-Eared Owls.

Some of these birds (particularly the ones in Cape May) are planning on continuing their journeys south for the winter. Others, however, will make New Jersey their home for the colder months. Barn Owls have been seen hunting throughout the state over the past few weeks, and in past years the rare Snowy Owl has made an appearance in NJ. Short-Eared Owls are also regular winter visitors, although depending on the year their numbers may vary dramatically. The species that breed in NJ can often still be found here during the colder months – birds like Eastern Screech Owls and the ubiquitous Great Horned Owls.

It may not be quite as comfortable birding in December and January as it is birding in the spring or early autumn, but it is a great time to find and respectfully observe these elusive and endlessly interesting nocturnal raptors.
18414  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Fury as islander calls for sea eagle cull (UK) on: 07-Nov-10, 07:15:52 AM
A SCOTS airfield boss has provoked outrage after demanding a cull of Scotland's sea eagles.

David Howitt spoke out after it was revealed that numbers of white-tailed sea eagles have hit a new high since they were reintroduced 35 years ago.

But Howitt, who manages Isle of Mull airfield, said: "I believe it is only a matter of time before one of these large powerful birds with their giant wingspan picks up an unattended baby or toddler and carries it off. "What an outcry there will be then. They are dangerous beasts."

But The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds Scotland have dismissed his fears as "fantasy".

Howitt, 70, a former hotelier and author who has lived in Aros, Mull, for 50 years, said: "It will sound like heresy to these woolly-jumpered bird-huggers who regard the sea eagles as sacred.

"But our forefathers, in the shape of landowners, gamekeepers, farmers and crofters, weren't daft.

"They knew what they were doing when they shot or poisoned our native sea eagle population to extinction.

"They can carry off lambs, goat kids, young pigs, chickens and other small farm livestock.

"Fish farmers have to install expensive netting to protect their salmon from them.

"Since they arrived on Mull seven or eight years ago I have not seen a single hare on the island.

"They pick up prey like hares, rabbits or lambs in their sharp talons and carry them almost 100ft into the air before dropping them to the ground to kill the animals.

"They are then carried off to the nests and devoured."

The eagles' benefit to Mull tourism has been calculated at ÂŁ2million a year and the birds featured on the BBC's Autumnwatch last week.

Viewers learned that 46 young birds fledged last year, 10 more than the previous year, and there are now 52 breeding pairs in Scotland.

RSPB officer Dave Sexton said: "Sea eagles carrying off children is all part of the bird's myth and folklore.

"People who don't like sea eagles tend to exaggerate their strength and energy."

And RSPB Scotland's James Reynolds added: "A very small minority seems intent on destroying this iconic bird of prey's reputation by confusing fact with fiction.

"Stories of eagles snatching children and babies are quite simply fantasy.

"This species has been hugely beneficial to large parts of the country, acting as a tourist magnet pulling in visitors from across the globe."

Sea eagles - whose wingspan is up to 8ft - were reintroduced to Rum in 1975 and there are now 10 pairs on Mull.

Dave Sexton added: "Autumn and winter is a great time to see sea eagles on Mull. They are out and about looking for food - usually lots of carrion and fish.

"This year was a landmark for sea eagles in the west of Scotland. Mull and Skye are critically important because the sea eagles there populate other parts of Scotland."

Birdwatchers can now see them soaring over areas as far apart as the Outer Hebrides, Shetland Isles and Dumfries & Galloway.

Daily Record: (UK)Nov 7 2010 Alan Dow, Sunday Mail
18415  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / 3 month old Osprey flies 2,700 miles Cornell L of O on: 07-Nov-10, 07:09:42 AM
From Martha's Vineyard to French Guiana in 13 days.

On a clear morning in early September 2008, a three-month-old female Osprey named Penelope pushed off from Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, and flew, alone, 2,700 miles to French Guiana in 13 days.

She touched down in coastal Maryland and North Carolina for three days, lazed along the Bahamas for four, then blew through the Dominican Republic in 29 hours. At dusk she launched out over the Caribbean, flying all night and the next day to a tiny island off the coast of Venezuela. A week later she was exploring rainforest rivers in French Guiana, her home for the next 18 months.

Twenty years ago we couldn’t imagine the extraordinary trips that these fish-eating raptors—our summer neighbors on their big stick nests—take routinely. We occasionally glimpsed them at hawk watches, or very rarely recovered their leg bands when they died en route. Now researchers can strap a 0.75-ounce, solar-powered satellite transmitter onto the back of an Osprey and know the bird’s location, within a few hundred yards, for the next two to three years.

A few dozen Ospreys each year wear these tiny backpacks. With the help of Google Earth, we can see ecological details about the places Ospreys winter by visiting http://bit.ly/ospreytrack.

After 10 years and more than 150 tracked Ospreys, this project—the brainchild of Mark Martell at Minnesota Audubon and Rob Bierregaard at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte—is providing much-needed data revealing migrational differences among Ospreys and helping pin down where threats to Ospreys lie.

For example, like many adolescents, juvenile Ospreys wander, loiter, and even get lost, crossing open ocean when they don’t have to. Adults fly faster and more direct routes, more sure of where they’re headed.

Cuba and Hispaniola are key migration hubs for eastern Ospreys hopscotching across the Caribbean. In fall these migrants funnel down the Florida peninsula, hop to Cuba, then move east across Haiti and the Dominican Republic. From there they clear the rest of the Caribbean to wind up in South America. Western Ospreys don’t migrate as far, and spend less time crossing ocean. They winter in Central America.

Sadly, we’ve also learned that Ospreys are still shot during migration and on their wintering grounds. Fish ponds are often a lethal magnet: Ospreys find what must seem like a great food resource, and fish-farmers retaliate. Efforts are now under way to work with farmers to curb these losses.

Male Ospreys forage for their mates and young on the breeding grounds. By tagging males in the Massachusetts nesting colony I study, we are learning where they forage and what fish they target, information that helps protect fish and their spawning grounds.

Ospreys wear their satellite backpacks easily and the units are designed to drop off in 2–3 years. The burden is light, and the information gained helps focus conservation efforts where they are most needed. Tens of thousands of North American Ospreys migrate to the tropics each fall; we want to make sure that they return to continue their journeys in the years ahead.

18416  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Through the Lens: White-tailed Ptarmigan on: 07-Nov-10, 07:04:22 AM
http://www.youtube.com/user/LabofOrnithology Very Beautiful birds.

from Cornell
18417  Anything Else / Totally OT / Don't forget: Turn your clocks back on: 06-Nov-10, 11:03:59 PM
18418  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Atlanta Zoo cub update on: 06-Nov-10, 11:01:26 PM
From Dr. Sam Rivera: Lun Lun continues doing a phenomenal job caring for her new cub. Lun Lun is drinking water and eating a small amount of her favorite treats, which is very encouraging as this indicates she is comfortable diverting a small amount of her attention from the cub to eat and drink. The cub is starting to develop dark skin coloration around the eyes and is nursing well. Stay tuned for more updates and milestones!


 heart panda



What a great pic...thanks!
18419  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Juvenile Bald Eagle Flies Again! on: 06-Nov-10, 11:00:29 PM
Me too MAK, he's a cool dancer! Gee, if all your tweets counted, you'd be up there with me!!  harhar
I wouldn't even be close Donna!  lol     gum
Embarrassed devil
18420  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Jeff's in Antarctica PT 2 on: 06-Nov-10, 10:55:07 PM
It's been a while but Jeff said it's been boring and crazy weather but he came through.

Random shots

Momma seal giving birth. Jeff waited a long time but no baby. He's  going back to check tomorrow.

She looks thrilled.

Push

Ice rovers



Jeff



Pretty colors in the ice

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