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22201  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 24-Apr-10, 08:03:43 AM
OK, so he's 4 minutes late. 5:34

yeah, but WHAT is he? Yikes.

he's........not himself   
22202  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Beleef de Lente online on: 24-Apr-10, 06:43:01 AM
2nd egg for the owl and 2 hatch for the Storks
22203  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Canada Falcons: All but Rhea Mae & Tiago, (they have their own thread) on: 24-Apr-10, 06:22:52 AM
!!! Nebesney looking good in Michigan USA
April 23, 2010 - Burlington - Lift Bridge
CPF Postmaster Reports:

With a huge thank you to Barb, we have a much newer photo of Nebesny that was taken April 21st and forwarded along to us from her new home territory in Michigan USA. A great shot indeed, and many thanks to Barb and all of the gang from your Canadian Friends to the north.
22204  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 24-Apr-10, 05:56:29 AM
OK, so he's 4 minutes late. 5:34
Hmmm and where was he last night that he came home with a case of the whirly's. Good way to turn the eggs I guess.
The shakes have stopped.
22205  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Few flock anymore to view Ivory billed Woodpecker on: 23-Apr-10, 10:40:36 PM
A research and tourism frenzy sparked by reports that one of the rarest birds in North America - the ivory-billed woodpecker - had been rediscovered has all but evaporated a half-dozen years after the initial sighting.

With no hard evidence confirming the bird’s existence, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, which lent its prestige to the effort and organized systematic searches of the thousands of acres of swampland near the Cacheand White rivers, has concluded it has neither the personnel nor the resources to continue similarly elaborate searches.

“The preliminary conclusion from the search efforts suggest that there aren’t recoverable populations in the places we have systematically searched,” said Ron Rohrbaugh, director of the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker Research Project at the ornithology ...

22206  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Nest watchers look out for Arizona Bald Eagles AZ. on: 23-Apr-10, 10:36:03 PM


Ernie O’Toole looks into the camouflaged spotting scope intently, pointing to a tall green cottonwood tree about a mile away.

A mama desert nesting eagle pops up every now and then, feeding at least one of her young nestlings, while the dad eagle flies nearby off the Lower Salt River Recreation area in the Goldfield Breeding Area.

“It’s something to see with the feeding,” said O’Toole, a nest watcher from Colorado who has degrees in biology and ecology. “You see the (mama) bird bite off very gently and reach down to feed (the nestling). It’s really a kick to watch. I love just the kick you get out of seeing these magnificent birds.”

O’Toole is one of 20 nest watchers with the Arizona Game and Fish Department’s Arizona Bald Eagle Nestwatch program. The nest watchers work in teams of two to monitor, protect and educate the public about this symbolic species.

The watchers are independent contractors who travel from across the country to spend more than 40 hours a week watching, waiting and writing down the birds’ every activity during the nesting season. The nest watchers collect data on where the eagles forage for food, their response to humans, including the tubers along the Salt River, and their behavior.

“The eagles are a symbol of our country,” said O’Toole, 68, a retired aerospace engineer. “For them to come back the way they have is great. They (their population) was really dwindling.”

The bald eagle population has grown more than 600 percent in Arizona over the past 30 years, thanks in part to the Bald Eagle Nestwatch Program, according to the Arizona Game and Fish Department spokeswoman.

Arizona has 61 breeding areas, 51 breeding adults and 102 bald eagles, said Kenneth “Tuk” Jacobson, a bald eagle management coordinator with the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

The nest watchers work 10 days on and four days off, and monitor one breeding area from about February to July, or whenever the young eagles fly from the nest. The nest watchers live in tents or RVs on site.

The goal is to protect the eagles during their most vulnerable time, when the birds are having their chicks and preparing the little ones for their lives away from the nest.

This particular eagle family off the Lower Salt River was breeding later than usual. Although it’s unknown why, the nest watchers said it could be because the female bird took longer to get to know her new mate.

The female eagle’s mate took off last year and was never found, and she had to raise her chick alone, which is uncommon and had never been documented before, said Jean Spilker, a nest watcher with O’Toole. The nestling did survive, she added.

This year, the mama eagle’s nestling hatched April 14, and the new dad is sticking around to help, Spilker said. O’Toole has named him Stealth because he comes and goes in a blink of an eye.

As if on cue, the male eagle flies down to the river, hangs out for a little bit, and then flies back to the tree, hanging out on a branch near the nest.

“He spends a lot of time on that branch,” said Spilker, 39, from Oregon. “He’s an attentive father.”

Seasonal closures of nest areas keep people from disturbing the eagles.

The nest watchers work eight hour days throughout the week, and work from dawn to dusk on the weekends watching the eagles and their nest.

“I’m passionate and committed to trying to save the bald eagles,” said Spilker, who has an anthropology degree and enjoys working with raptors, birds that hunt and kill other animals.

The desert nesting eagle’s protection status has been called into question throughout the past couple of years.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service took the bald eagles off the Endangered Species Act protection list in 2007, but the Center for Biological Diversity and Maricopa Audobon Society sued. The federal court ordered that the state’s desert nesting bald eagle population be put back on the protected list, Jacobson said.

After a review that took two years, the findings released in February said the desert nesting eagles still didn’t qualify to be on the endangered species list as a distinct population segment. Currently, the eagles are still protected, and it’s unsure when that injunction will be lifted, Jacobson said.

However, the injunction is being contested by the Center for Biological Diversity as the group continues to try to protect the desert nesting eagles, which nest in Arizona, he said.

Jacobson stressed whatever is decided won’t change the Arizona Game and Fish’s nest watchers program, and the desert nesting eagles will still be protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act enacted in 1940.
22207  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 23-Apr-10, 10:17:04 PM
Potty break? 9:43
9:44
9:46
9:48
22208  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Grand Forks Falcons on: 23-Apr-10, 09:13:36 PM
|Two falcons return to campus on the UND water tower near the Hyslop.

Published: Friday, April 23, 2010

Updated: Friday, April 23, 2010

They are the fastest creatures on the planet, reaching speeds of 200 miles per hour, and two of them are right here on campus. This year two Peregrine Falcons are nesting on the UND water tower for the first time in this university’s history.
They had previously been nesting on the “Smiley” water tower, but as we all know, it has been taken down. So, last fall their nest was moved to its new location, with hope that the birds would find it, and thankfully, they did. It was moved with the efforts of avid bird watcher Tim Driscoll.
 

The two resident falcons are named Roosevelt, a male, and Terminator, a female. They lived on smiley in 2009 as well, but before winter came, they fled. Driscoll moved their nest, and Smiley came down.
This has been the third year that Grand Forks has hosted perigrine falcons, and Roosevelt has not always been the dominating male. In 2008 Terminator had an other mate named Bear.
 

In 2008 while living on the smiley water tower, Bear and Terminator gave birth to a baby falcon named Ozzie. He was named Ozzie after the man who painted the smiley face on the old water tower, James W. “Ozzie” Osmundson.
Sadly, Ozzie the falcon passed away not too long after he was born. He struck an electric wire, which caused his death in July of 2008. He was the only offspring of Bear and Terminator.
 

Unfortunately, it is presumed Bear has died because he has not returned to accompany Terminator for another summer.
But a girl’s got to do what a girl’s got to do, so, in 2009, Roosevelt and Terminator mated and have been together ever since. Last year they hatched three new baby falcons, and they should hatch another three this year in May.
 

The reason these falcons are held so dear to so many enthusiastic hearts is because they were once on the endangered species list. They were put there mainly due to the use of DDT in the years following World War Two. DDT is a chemical pesticide, and it has alarming and terrible effects on bird eggs. It makes the shells weak and difficult for the birds to survive hatching.
 

But since the ban on DDT in the 70’s, there has been a spike in population for the peregrine falcons and other birds alike. So, here they are, on our home UND water tower and off that dreaded list.
It’s fitting that the first yeear they’re here is the same year UND forfeited the old mascot, the Fighting Sioux name. This makes me wonder, maybe we have another mascot just watching over us on the water tower.
 

These birds are birds of prey, and they typically eat smaller and medium sized birds in the area. They rarely feed on small rodents like mice, voles, and squirrels; however, I wonder if this would make an exception for the gopher?
This week we’ve been honoring Earth, and it could only be made more incredible if we honored our new guest on the water tower, the peregrine falcon, as well.
22209  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Gulf Tower on: 23-Apr-10, 08:50:25 PM
Peregrine Falcon Chicks!
Dr. Todd Katzner, the National Aviary's Director of Conservation and Field Research, was lucky enough to be watching live video as the second and third eggs hatched yesterday within minutes. A fifth may hatch at any time.

He says both parents are feeding the chicks, which look like little fluff balls with beaks and droopy wings now but will grow quickly and resemble the adults in just 28 days. At that point, they will get bands and health checkups. They will stay near the nest even after they start flying and remain in the area until early fall. The adults stay year-round and defend their nest territory.


There are five eggs in a nest at the Gulf Tower. The female who laid the first two disappeared. Another female laid three of her own and is incubating all five. Katzner says it's possible, but would be surprising, if the first two hatch.

Live video of both nests is available, and highlights of the nesting season will be archived at aviary.org/falcon.
22210  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Rare Falcon Slowly Recovering from Gunshot on: 23-Apr-10, 08:48:02 PM
http://kohd.com/page/171243  Story and video.

Here we go again: I can't believe how stupid some humans are, to shoot a Peregrine and leave it to die. At least he's being well taken care of at Wild Wings in Oregon.  thumbsup Look at his face looking at the man talking on the video..OMG....like he's saying Thank you for rescuing me.  crying
22211  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 23-Apr-10, 08:27:51 PM


Coming & Going
Like 2 ships passing in the night
22212  Support / Help! / Shaky: Diana R needs your help on: 23-Apr-10, 07:56:47 PM
Apparently my attempts to get rid of unnecessary stuff on my computer lost some
necessary stuff as well, including a cookie for the forum. It no longer
recognizes me, and I have not the faintest idea what my ID and password were.
Apparently I did not keep them in the index card file where most of such
information is stored.

Is there someone out there - possibly Shaky - who can clue me in, please?

DianaR
22213  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 23-Apr-10, 07:53:42 PM
3rd times a charm....his persistence paid off:

Beauty leaves
He wastes no time getting on them eggs.  2thumbsup
22214  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 23-Apr-10, 07:46:04 PM
(movie) Archer comes back again...I'm sure Beauty told him to come back @ 5:30am.
22215  Other Nature Related Information / Raptor Web Cams / Re: Blackwater Eagles are back (Osprey update) on: 23-Apr-10, 07:33:56 PM

Nest Update

04/23/10:
Egg Alert!

We had an Earth Day egg laid at the nest Thursday evening.

Incubation can be on-and-off for the first egg, so no worries if the parent is off the egg. We hope to get another egg in a couple days.

   2thumbsup
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