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19081  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / California Condors Released on: 26-Sep-10, 08:57:30 AM
Four new California condors are flying in Arizona skies today, according to the San Jose Mercury News. The birds were released today at the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument near the Grand Canyon, a popular site for the release of captive-bred birds because of its suitable thermals and wild condor population.

California condors are the largest birds in North America, but their numbers were devastated largely because of DDT in the 1970s and 1980s, with only 22 birds remaining in 1982. They still face numerous threats, including lead poisoning and habitat destruction, but populations are gradually growing with the help of captive breeding programs. Today there are more than 180 condors flying free.

To learn more about the California Condor Recovery Program and birds released in Arizona, visit the Arizona Game and Fish Department.



About.com
Birding / Wild Birds

19082  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Workers install nest box to boost falcon numbers (IA) on: 26-Sep-10, 08:54:46 AM

CLINTON, Iowa — The third time was a charm.

After two failed attempts on Friday to install nest boxes on cliffs overlooking the Mississippi River to attract peregrine falcons, Bob Anderson finally succeeded in getting a box installed in Eagle Point Park.

To put up the boxes, Anderson rappels over the side of a cliff while colleagues at the top stand ready to lower materials he will need — tools, hardware and the box itself (a hefty 3 feet wide, 22 inches tall and 22 inches deep), plus the pea gravel that lines it.

As Friday’s efforts proved, the operation doesn’t always go as planned. In the first location on private land near Sabula, the cliff overhang proved to be too far out, and the rappellers couldn’t get close enough to the cliff.

It wasn’t for lack of trying.

“They went over 15 times,” Rhoni Hartsock, of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service at the Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife Refuge in Savanna, Ill., said.

A second location about three miles away didn’t work, because once the rappellers got on the cliff face they found too many trees — there wasn’t enough open area and “the falcons wouldn’t be attracted to it,” Hartsock said.

So, they tried the third location in Eagle Point and that worked — the latest step in a nearly 20-year effort to reintroduce the once-endangered peregrine falcon into Iowa and Illinois and throughout the nation, an effort that is lauded as an environmental success story.

To date, Iowa has gone from having no peregrine falcons at all to 14 known nesting pairs — largely in the Quad-City region — that fledged 21 young birds this past season, said Pat Schlarbaum of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

There are 22 known nesting pairs in Illinois.

To celebrate the success, there will be a program at 11 a.m. today in the north shelter in Eagle Point Park.

Historically, peregrine falcons nested in cliff areas throughout Iowa and Illinois. But in the mid-1900s, their populations were decimated by the use of the pesticide DDT, which caused egg shell thinning, according to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.

The recovery effort in Iowa began in the early 1990s when young falcons, raised in captivity, were placed into boxes at the MCI building in Cedar Rapids, the Elsie Mason Manor building in Des Moines and atop the Stanley building in Muscatine.

Eventually, there were sufficient numbers that wildlife workers began putting nesting boxes on tall structures, such as power plant smokestacks with the expectation that falcons could find them and begin raising their own young, Schlarbaum said.

That is what happened, and now the reintroduction is in another phase in which the nesting boxes are being put in natural areas — the cliffs where they lived originally and the last place they were found before their populations crashed, Schlarbaum said.

The advantage of putting boxes on the cliffs is that they protect the eggs and young birds from raccoons, who are a troublesome predator.

At the third site in Clinton on Friday, Anderson knew right away — the first time over the cliff — that the location would work, Hartsock said. The installation took about two hours. In addition to watching out for loose rock, Anderson has to work his legs so they don’t fall asleep.

The number of nesting pairs in Iowa and Illinois is a vast improvement from 20 years ago, but there is room for improvement, said Ed Britton, manager with the Upper Mississippi National Wildlife Refuge.

Once listed as an endangered species in both states, the peregrine falcon now is listed as “threatened” in Illinois and a “species of special concern” in Iowa.

“We’re getting there,” Britton said. “But 22 pairs in a state that’s 300 miles long — that’s not very many. We’ve got a long ways to go.”

The hope is that once peregrines get used to the cliff environment, they will begin building their own nests in Palisades Park and in the bluffs around Bellevue, Anderson said.

Anderson, now of Decorah, Iowa, is a nationwide leader in the preservation of falcons, eagles, ospreys, hawks and owls. In 1988, he founded the Raptor Resource Project and pioneered the practice of putting up nest boxes at power plants, beginning in 1988 in Minnesota.

“It was a unique marriage,” he said.

Since then, 1,500 young falcons have fledged from power plant nests, he said.

Bob Anderson, founder of the Raptor Resource Project, rappels down the side of a cliff to install a nest box.
19083  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: anyone seen the 3-D owl movie yet? on: 25-Sep-10, 05:15:44 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_lMihSKkgA&feature=player_embedded here's the trailer

In the world of family-movie fantasies,  can owls swoop in where penguins once ruled?

Zack Snyder, the director of “Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole,” set a crew of more than 500 digital professionals and a multi-million-dollar budget to the task. The result is an epic adventure rather than  a cuddly-cute family outing.

After his remarkable and violent hit “300,” Snyder wanted to make a film his kids could see. He has six children (13-year-old twins, plus ages 10, 12, 15 and 17), and he didn’t allow them to see either “300” or his existential puzzler “Watchmen.”

The success of “300” meant he could make any film he wanted.

Looks cute!
19084  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: anyone seen the 3-D owl movie yet? on: 25-Sep-10, 05:08:37 PM
One article I read said that "It's like 300, except with more owls"

Not that I saw "300," but it's a cute comment.

ohhhhhhhhhh  I saw 300.... no Too much fighting in that movie.
19085  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: OT - Majestic Wings Quilting Fabric on: 25-Sep-10, 05:02:25 PM
For those who are quilters - this fabric is coming out in October from South Seas Industries - check out the panel - there's a peregrine.

http://www.rentedmulequilts.com/cgi-bin/Store/store.cgi?product=majesticwings&productid=73230-427&tracking4=search%2073230-427&pid=1#73230-427

Kay

(yes I have pre-ordered the kit!)

Looks like your making 600 plus quilts!  clap Very nice pattern. I don't quilt, wish I did now. What I do is take 1 simple square 12x12 and frame it!  Like this! So I cheat a bit. Not the best but I like it.

19086  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 25-Sep-10, 09:24:44 AM
Quote

MAKfalcon (MAK): Dana here now. A hasnt moved. I walked both sides of river between Main and Andrews St. No sign of B



Link:
http://twitter.com/MAKfalcon/statuses/25496789756

Yeah cuz she's gorging on GULL!
19087  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Jeff's in Antarctica PT 2 on: 25-Sep-10, 09:19:01 AM
And doncha just love the footprints with the tail mark right down the middle?

Pretty cool the foot/tail prints. I love all Jeff's pics. It's just beginning so much much more to come. I like when the Ice Breaker comes too.
19088  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Jeff's in Antarctica PT 2 The Emperors arrived early on: 25-Sep-10, 09:00:25 AM
Jeff said this one's a Fatty
Close to the work site
Footprints in the snow

Lots of snow so far
WOW!!

19089  Rochester Falcons / Falcon Watches / Re: Twitter on: 25-Sep-10, 07:33:08 AM
Quote

MAKfalcon (MAK): B flew over  towards Cornhill OMG she came back with a gull in her talons and about 1O gulls following



Link:
http://twitter.com/MAKfalcon/statuses/25490301975

Hope not Buddy! That had to be a site. Poor gull!
19090  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Google wants to build facility over Burrowing Owl habitat (LA) on: 25-Sep-10, 07:24:39 AM
This Tuesday the City Council will vote up or down on a 6.5-acre recreation facility that's got nearly every activity a Google employee could want. The rub is that it sits on foraging habitat for the rare burrowing owl.

The proposed Google Athletic and Recreation field, or G.A.R.field for short, is an outdoor buffet of recreation activities, including a soccer field, a basketball court, bocce ball courts, a horseshoe throwing area, a disc golf area and a barbecue area.

The entire facility will be private, which means it is for Google employees and their guests only.

The site is on the northeast corner of Amphitheatre Parkway and Garcia Avenue. Google purchased the property from Alza, a pharmaceutical company that got council approval (now expired) for a 117,000 square foot office building there in 1995. The site is currently used as a soccer field by Google employees.

An environmental report for the city by ESA and Albion Environmental describes the project as having a "potentially significant impact" on the burrowing owls, which numbered just over a dozen last year.

"The loss of foraging habitat and potential nesting habitat at this site would be a significant impact but this impact has already been mitigated through the creation and management of 19.5 acres of burrowing owl habitat north and east of the project site as discussed above. However, the proposed project could have additional indirect impacts on burrowing owls nearby as a result of increased lighting and predation that could result from increased raptor perches on light poles and trees," the report states.

The owls could disappear from the area entirely if their numbers continue to decline as they have in recent years, according to the report

"A recent population viability analysis of the three largest burrowing owl colonies in the south San Francisco Bay Area" at "San Jose International Airport Moffett Airfield and Shoreline Park showed that all three colonies have a high risk of extinction if population trends observed in the last 11 plus years continue," the report says.

Partly in response to pressures from the local Audubon society, the city is asking Google to pay $10,000 towards the city's burrowing owl preservation efforts, a sign that says why dogs won't be allowed in the area, "anti-perch measures" to keep other birds from preying on the owls, an "owl occupancy survey" during construction and limits on construction during owl nesting season.

Shani Kleinhaus of the Audubon Society also requests that the barbecue be removed from the plans because the resulting smell could draw burrowing owl predators to the area. The city disagrees, saying that barbecues at Shoreline Park have not caused problems for the owls there.
19091  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Thousands of migratory birds descend on downtown LA on: 25-Sep-10, 07:21:22 AM
For the next few weeks, a swoop of swifts – thousands of small migratory birds - will descend on a chimney in downtown Los Angeles as they make their way from Canada to Central America for the winter.

Under a bright 7-11 sign as daylight fades, I meet Jeff Chapman. He directs the Audubon Center at Debs Park.

"We are standing at the corner of 5th and Broadway in the heart of downtown Los Angeles. We're here because the birds are here. Vaux's Swifts that are heading south to southern Mexico and Guatemala," Chapman says. "They look like, I dunno – little black spots just covering the whole intersection where we're standing, just swirling around."

http://www.scpr.org/news/2010/09/24/swoop-swifts/ Story, pics and video
19092  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Barn owl at Leslie Science and Nature Center finds new owners who give a hoot on: 25-Sep-10, 07:16:03 AM
How sad is this??  crying

Stolen away from her family as a hatchling to be a personal pet, the barn owl didn’t appear to have a promising future.

The owl was in the possession of a family in Ohio that had apparently illegally stolen the bird from its family, leaving her with no natural instincts. Francie Krawcke, the raptor program director at the Leslie Nature and Science Center in Ann Arbor, said feathers on the owl’s right wing were cut off, and she suspects the owl had been abused.

“The daughter of the home she was at told the folks from the raptor center that her and her boyfriend liked to hear the bird scream, so they made it scream,” Krawcke said. “It paints a pretty horrible picture.”

I say, jail them all. Every day in the news is something horrible that people, (if you can call them that), do to harm animals. Thankfully, the Police intervened.

http://www.annarbor.com/news/barn-owl-at-leslie-science-and-nature-center-finds-new-owners-who-give-a-hoot/ story and pics
19093  Member Activities / Birthdays / Happy Birthday Countrygal on: 25-Sep-10, 07:00:38 AM
COUNTRYGAL
19094  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Cumbria vet saves life of shot peregrine falcon on: 25-Sep-10, 06:48:11 AM
Apparently, some people (if you can call them that), have no problem shooting at Falcons, Eagles and other birds of prey. Oh what I'm thinking.
19095  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Cumbria vet saves life of shot peregrine falcon on: 24-Sep-10, 11:19:57 PM
HE’S got his wing in a sling but Perry the peregrine falcon has every chance of surviving after being shot in a field near Armathwaite.

A cyclist found the bird flapping in a field, bundled him up in a towel and put him in his rucksack before cycling to Carlisle.

Vet Edda Pohlandt, of Falcon Vets on London Road, said: “The man who brought him in was cycling from Penrith to Carlisle for a physio appointment when he came across the bird.

“He brought him straight in and I took a look at him.

“I did an x-ray and saw the pellet and the shattered bones. I put him under anaesthetic and then operated on him.

“It was touch and go as I didn’t know if he would survive.

“His wing was badly damaged and so I pinned it and put it in a sling. Sometimes the bird will peck the sling and try to take it off but he hasn’t touched it or tried to pick at it.”

Luckily for Perry, Edda is one of only a few vets who specialises in the treatment of birds of prey. She said: “Perry is about two to three years old. He likes eating pheasant but isn’t too keen on day-old chicks. He’s quite fussy with his food.

“He had a lot of fat on him which shows that he had been hunting well in the wild.”

Perry must keep his wing in a sling for four weeks before Edda can carry out another x-ray.

She said: “Birds tend to heal faster than humans. I’ll make a decision in a few weeks whether or not to take the pins out and see how he goes.

“I think his pain is beginning to ease. I try not to get attached to the birds when they come in but it’s hard. He’s lovely. (And this is sad), sheesh, another falcon shot at!
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