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22036  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Inter-species swan romance near Calgary on: 29-Apr-10, 09:36:54 PM
Birds of a different feather are getting together on a lake outside Calgary. The pairing of two species of swans — one a trumpeter, the other a mute — at Cochrane Lake west of the city is a rare occurrence, experts say.

"This one here becomes a first, if the two actually stay together," said bird watcher Len Hills.

"They're distinctly different species. The trumpeter is a North American species. The mute is a European species. It was brought over for parks, etc., and they were supposed to have their wings clipped so they couldn't escape — but some have escaped."

The two species look almost the same, except the trumpeter has a black beak while the mute's is orange.

Trumpeter swans travel through Alberta every year as they migrate to and from the Pacific coast, up to Alaska and as far south as Colorado.

Hills has been following them for years as they pass through the province, he said. This year, however, he heard a mute swan had been spotted on Calgary's Glenmore Reservoir.

Then it met up with a trumpeter at Cochrane Lake. Now it appears they are preparing to mate, according to Hills.

"They feed together side by side, they tip up, they physically touch one another. When they come up they'll often face one another and sort of curve their necks and look directly at one another."

Canadian Wilds curator Bob Peel of the Calgary Zoo agreed that the apparent pairing is noteworthy.

"What could be happening is this mute swan — probably would be a male — is pursuing a female trumpeter swan. So it's not unheard of, it's just not a normal occurrence."

Birders will be watching to see whether the swans leave together for a nesting site farther north, and if they return in the fall with offspring, Hills said.






22037  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / GA: RED-FACED WARBLER SPOTTED IN GEORGIA on: 29-Apr-10, 09:32:19 PM


On April 27, 2010, while birding at Dowdell’s Knob on the Pine Mountain ridge in northeastern Harris County, I found this Red-faced Warbler(Cardellina rubifrons) as it was singing on an oak branch 10 feet above the road. The song was not typical, with 3-4 slurred American Redstart-type notes that were sometimes followed with a quick ‘ti-ti-ti’. I was able to go back and get the camera and rattle off a few shots as I watched the bird is disbelief for about 2 minutes. The bird slowly worked its way away from the road and eventually out of sight and hearing distance. Unfortunately, the bird was not relocated by others.

This is a distinctive species, as no other songbird in North America has a red and black head. You can see in the photos the all gray body and the head with a red face and black patch over the crown and cheek. This would be a first state record and possibly the first record east of the Mississippi River if accepted by the Records Committee.

  POSSIBLY THE FIRST RECORD EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI
22038  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Oil stirs troubled waters on: 29-Apr-10, 09:29:13 PM
US oil leak far worse than first thought

An oil leak in the Gulf Of Mexico threatening the coast of Louisiana, Texas and the Mississippi estuary is five times worse than previously thought.

The oil is spewing from a rig that exploded and sank last week.

It is now estimated that 5,000 barrels a day are spilling into the ocean rather than the 1,000 the US Coast Guard previously announced.

On Wednesday (local time) clean-up crews conducted a controlled burn of some parts of the slick to stop it reaching environmentally sensitive wetlands.

But authorities have not been able to plug the leak which began when the explosion sank the Deepwater Horizon oil rig leased by BP.

The woman leading the response is Rear Admiral Mary Landry of the US Coast Guard.

"Initially we agreed the estimate was 1,000 barrels per day; working with NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) daily with overflights, applying disbursements, looking at the trajectories, where the oil going," she said.

"Factoring in the weather, there's a lot of variables in this; this is not an exact science when you estimate the amount of oil.

"However, NOAA is telling me now they prefer we use 5,000 barrels a day as an estimate for what's actually leaked from this well and will continue to leak until BP secures the source."

Complicating matters for BP and the clean-up crews is that previously it was thought there were two leaks - now there are reports of a third.

Authorities are desperate to stop oil polluting the Louisiana coast which is just 37 kilometres away.

Environmental impact

Burning the oil is one way to do it, but that is not enough says Jacqueline Savitz from Oceana, an ocean conservation group.

"This oil spill is a no-win proposition. It's pumping oil into the ocean. We don't know when it will stop," she said.

"The alternatives that have been proposed, such as burning the oil off, may or may not work. They're experimental but they may be the lesser of two evils.

"It will take some of the oil out of the picture, but there'll still be some oil remaining in the ocean and washing up on the beach."

Director of the Oiled Wildlife Care Network in Los Angeles, Michael Ziccardi, says a small group of whales has travelled through the slick, but so far no other animals have been affected.

"If the oil does reach the shore, it's likely animals will be. If it remains offshore, or if the disbursement and the in-situ burning are successful to dissipate the oil, really the highest-risk animals at this point would be the sea turtles because they do feed at the water's surface out there," he said.

Mr Ziccardi says it is vital to keep the oil offshore to stop large-scale environmental damage.

He is going to Louisiana to help plan the emergency response if animals are affected by oil.

"The impact could be extremely large. The marshlands there are very sensitive, very difficult to clean up once it enters that area," he said.

"Certain barrier islands in that area have thousands of breeding pairs of brown pelicans for example, lots of shore birds, lots of other wading birds in the area.

"So, in addition to that you've got impacts on reptiles, amphibians, all the different animals in the ecosystem, so the impact could be very large."

The Gulf of Mexico spill is drawing comparisons to last year's leak from a rig off the coast of Australia that could not be plugged for 10 weeks.

An inquiry has just wrapped up into that incident and the findings are expected to be handed down at the end of the month.

The explosion on the rig in the Gulf of Mexico is the subject of an investigation, but for now that will have to wait.

It is feared changes in the currents and winds could see oil reach land by the weekend.

22039  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Stafford hosts eagles along its riverfront (VA) on: 29-Apr-10, 09:24:49 PM
EVERYONE knows that Florida is a major destination for tourists from all over. Most people would be surprised that Stafford County is a big draw for visitors from the Northeast and Southeast. Visitors with large wingspans, that is.

Stafford's waterfront areas host migrating eagles from as far north as Canada in the winter and the Gulf of Mexico in the summer. Plus, there are Virginia eagles that live here all the time.

Jeff Cooper, a wild-avian biologist for the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, is one of the people who oversee the state's eagle population.

A survey performed in midsummer last year found the eagle population to be four birds shy of 600 eagles, he said.

"That's tremendous abundance for a bird of prey," he said.

Stafford County has 16 nests, according to the Center for Conservation Biology's Virginia Eagle website. All are along the Potomac River or its tributaries.

Eagles are enjoying a resurgence in numbers after plummeting before the banning of the pesticide DDT.

"All those birds crashed because of eggshell thinning," Cooper said, "They lost their productive potential."

Cooper said the recognition that compounds like DDT had an impact on the environment is a major reason the birds have rebounded.

"It was banned in late the '60s or early '70s. Initially there was a gradual recovery up to the mid-'90s, and then the growth just skyrocketed," he said, adding that the populations should eventually level off.

The federal government has taken bald eagles off the endangered species list. They are still protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.

Virginia, however, has kept eagles on its threatened and endangered species lists.

Cooper said it's because of the number of eagles in the Chesapeake Bay area and the threats to their shoreline habitats.

"We feel like we have not only a responsibility in Virginia for managing the populations, but the eastern coast," he said.

 In other words, the future of the entire eastern United States population of eagles will be affected by how well Virginia and other states around the Chesapeake Bay manage and protect the eagles' shoreline habitats.

Cooper said that some areas of the Potomac already can't support eagles because of overdevelopment.

He and his colleagues at the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service monitor eagles by both aircraft and boat. They trap eagles in the winter and put transmitters on them to monitor their range.

"We have one bird that was hanging out on the Potomac and basically flew up the I-95 corridor to just south of Baltimore, skirted it to the east and then went north to the Conowingo Dam on the Susquehanna River," said Cooper, "then went to Assateague Island. Then it came back east to Crisfield" in Maryland.

The Center for Conservation Biology is currently tracking 63 eagles. The information gained will help researchers understand how eagles use shoreline habitat, help determine the location of communal roosts so they can be protected, and record the number of surviving offspring.

The public can help the Center for Conservation Biology by reporting nests that are not already listed on the group's website, ccb-wm .org.
22040  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Buddy from 2008 Norfolk on: 29-Apr-10, 09:21:57 PM
Eagle from Norfolk with damaged beak to stay at wildlife center

A bald eagle that hatched at Norfolk Botanical Garden and developed avian pox that damaged its beak has a new name and a permanent home at the Wildlife Center of Virginia.

The eagle formerly known as patient No. 08-0887 is now called Buddy.

The wildlife center said Tuesday that Buddy is being trained to sit calmly on a handler's gloved hand. The goal is to take Buddy to presentations and programs outside the center.

Buddy was hatched in April 2008 at Norfolk Botanical Garden. The eagle was brought to the wildlife center in Waynesboro for treatment of a mass on the left side of its beak.

The mass was surgically removed, but it caused the beak to grow unevenly. The wildlife center says Buddy can't be released into the wild.

22041  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 29-Apr-10, 07:46:53 PM
eggs look solid  heart
22042  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 29-Apr-10, 07:46:00 PM
Archer took over at 7:34
22043  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Beleef de Lente online on: 29-Apr-10, 07:44:14 PM
Maybe the Owls won....they were just in Pigeon nest...picking at it.

I think so too.I saw the owl leave and the pigeon left too.,the pigeon is not a night-bird and I don't think she will be back this night ,but maybe tomorrow.I don't know if the owl damaged the eggs but she was picking aggressive more than once.It's sad for the pigeons,but they will find an new place to breed.Greetings Carla

I agree....not in an Owls nest. I feel bad for the pigeon eggs..hope they weren't developed yet.  Sad
22044  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Beleef de Lente online on: 29-Apr-10, 06:59:33 PM
Maybe the Owls won....they were just in Pigeon nest...picking at it.
22045  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Harrisburg, PA Falcons on: 29-Apr-10, 06:34:54 PM
  The first eyas has hatched.  wub2


 thumbsup 2thumbsup clap Thanks Annette!
22046  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 29-Apr-10, 02:34:56 PM
Archer @ 2:16
Beauty @ 2:17
Eggs@ 2:27
Archer again @ 2:29  Beauty had a whole 10 minutes on eggs.  Shocked
22047  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Webcam from a nuthatch on: 29-Apr-10, 01:40:42 PM
http://www.beleefdelente.nl/kerkuil

and the 1st video here, the dad Barn Owl brought in a LIVE mouse or mole and it's running around the nest!  hurt
22048  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Webcam from a nuthatch on: 29-Apr-10, 01:12:39 PM
Oh and the owl cam...poor mama is trying to get out but bad pigeon keeps hitting with her wing...
22049  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Webcam from a nuthatch on: 29-Apr-10, 01:10:08 PM
Very cool Aafke but the ants are crawling all over them.....poor babies. Ants find their way to anything.  Sad

Little vultures!
22050  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 29-Apr-10, 12:59:05 PM
He sees something
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