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23956  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Green Pigeons in Irondequoit (Slideshow) on: 16-Jan-10, 07:48:42 AM
http://ny.existingstations.com/pigeons/Green_Pigeons_-_Irondequoit,_NY/Green_Pigeons.html 

Wow nice colors!
23957  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Wildlife Center: A busy 2009 (VA) on: 15-Jan-10, 08:12:07 PM

Staff Report
News tips: freepress2@ntelos.net

The Wildlife Center of Virginia admitted a total of 2,534 animals for treatment during 2009 – injured, ailing, and orphaned wildlife from all across Virginia.

The 2009 caseload was the highest number of patients treated at theinternationally acclaimed teaching and research hospital for wildlife and conservation medicine located in Waynesboro since 2004.

As expected, the 2009 total included many common species – 280 Eastern Cottontail Rabbits; 252 Virginia Opossums; 210 Eastern Gray Squirrels; and 107 American Robins.

Also admitted for treatment were a number of threatened species, or species designated by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries as species of special concern. Leading that list were the 40 Bald Eagles admitted during 2009 – a single-year record during the Center’s 27-year history.

Among these 40 eagle patients were three birds from West Virginia and 37 from Virginia, including a bird that had become trapped in asphalt tar at the King and Queen County landfill, an eagle struck by a truck on I-95, and an eagle chased into the Rappahannock River by an Osprey.

Among the other “notable” cases of 2009 were:
· Several Black Bear cubs, orphaned when their mothers were struck and killed by cars;
· Four Great Horned Owl babies that were given “foster care” and training by Mama G’Ho, a resident owl that serves as a surrogate mother;
· A Pied-Bill Grebe that literally had swallowed hook, line, and sinker [actually, two sinkers]. Center veterinarians operated and carefully removed this fishing gear from the grebe’s stomach. The grebe recovered and was released;
· Nineteen patients that had been shot, including two American Crows, two Bald Eagles, a Canada Goose, a Raccoon, two Red Foxes, four Red-tailed Hawks, a Tufted Titmouse, and six vultures [two Black and four Turkey];
· Two Peregrine Falcons. The peregrine is regarded as the fastest animal on earth; the speed of a diving peregrine has been measured at 217 miles per hour. By the early 1960s, the falcon was believed to be extinct as a breeding species in Virginia and all areas east of the Mississippi River. A program of peregrine reintroduction began in Virginia in 1978; there are now about 20 known breeding pairs of peregrines in the Commonwealth.
On Dec. 22, Wildlife Center President Ed Clark released a Peregrine at the Grandview Nature Preserve in Hampton.
· A Gray Treefrog, admitted just after Christmas. This frog was discovered when some outdoor plants in which it had sought shelter were brought indoors, out of the wintry weather. The frog will be over-wintering at the Center.

During 2009, patients were admitted from 92 counties and municipalities from all over the Commonwealth [a complete list of 2009 patients by city/county is attached]. Most animals are brought to the Center by concerned citizens; others are brought in by animal control officers, other federal, state, and local officials, from humane societies, etc.

Animals are admitted to the Wildlife Center for a variety of reasons, including animals that are struck by cars and trucks [127 cases], birds that crash into windows [80 cases], and animals with infectious diseases or parasites [71 cases].

During 2009, 222 animals were brought to the Center after they were attacked by free-roaming cats. Birds and other animals that survive an initial cat attack are still in danger; unless treated, infections from the toxic bacteria found in a cat’s mouth kill a significant number of animals.

During 2009, 324 animals – or one in eight cases – were patients classified as a “kidnap” victim – a young animal brought to the Center in need of no “help” from humans. These are animals still receiving care from their parents, or young animals ready to live on their own. “Despite our natural inclinations, the BEST chance of survival for a young uninjured animal is often to leave it in its parents’ care,” Clark said.

Center staff works with citizens who find young animals to assess whether these animals really do need human intervention. [The Center’s website – www.wildlifecenter.org – includes a special "I need rescue advice" section to help citizens assess the health-care needs of animals.] “The Center encourages those who care about wildlife to ask questions FIRST about the most appropriate course of action,” Clark added. The

Center’s front desk is staffed seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; one of the Center’s veterinarians is on call 24 hours a day.

The busiest months during 2009 at the Center were May [472 new patients] and June [524 new patients]. The busiest single day was June 4, when the Center admitted 48 new patients.

Since its founding in 1982, the nonprofit Wildlife Center has cared for more than 54,000 wild animals, representing 200 species of birds, mammals, reptiles, and amphibians.

The goal of the Center is to “treat to release” – to restore patients to health and return as many as possible to the wild. The Center provides state-of-the-art medical care for the sick and injured, and sustained, quality foster care so that animals may be returned to the wild with the ability to survive, and thrive, in their native habitats.

The Center trains veterinary and conservation professionals from all over the world, and wildlife rehabilitators across Virginia, and is actively involved in comprehensive wildlife health studies and the surveillance of emerging diseases.

Additional information about the Wildlife Center is available at www.wildlifecenter.org.
23958  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Feeding the birds on: 15-Jan-10, 04:13:26 PM


Very good info Aafke....thanks....gee, you can use bread sometimes....nice.  thumbsup
23959  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: The Story Behind the New Main Cam Install on: 15-Jan-10, 01:20:57 PM
WOW!  You are the best!!  The pictures from the camera are INCREDIABLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 bow thumbsup 2thumbsup

Hey Lynne!!!! Where ya been? ???  Glad your here.   clap
23960  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Canada Falcons: All but Rhea Mae & Tiago, (they have their own thread) on: 15-Jan-10, 12:59:29 PM
!!! Diana is still on territory despite the bitter cold temps.
January 12, 2010 - Ottawa - Crowne Plaza
CPF Postmaster Reports:

Yesterday afternoon, around 4pm, I saw Diana on the south face of the Coats Building. She was pretty fluffed up but was looking around, not for hunting. I have no idea where Connor was, as I then passed around the Crowne but he wasn’t there.

Eve Ticknor


!!! Overlooking her domain
December 04, 2009 - Scarborough - Yellow Pages  (Posted today)
CPF Postmaster Reports:

With much thanks to Lev for his quick action, he was able to snap these two photos of the resident adult female roosting on the Telus building the first week of December. The photos clearly show that at least the resident adult female is still on territory and did not migrate south for the winter, and that food is still abundant given the size of her filled crop. Thanks Lev and Kyle for bringing these photos to our attention.
Posted on January 14, 2010 1:24 pm
Observation for Scarborough - Yellow Pages
23961  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 15-Jan-10, 10:29:42 AM
Wonderful picture from the new cam! wow

Thanks for making it happen!

Shari..   congrats on your first post!
23962  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 15-Jan-10, 10:28:00 AM
(movie)  Well Beauty must be above as the "Pooh" comes down! Yes Janet, I did it again.
23963  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 15-Jan-10, 08:21:44 AM


Getting warmer, snow is melting. Beautiful clear pic.
23964  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / new bird discovered in Borneo: Spectacled Flowerpecker on: 15-Jan-10, 07:38:12 AM
http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0114-hance_birddanum.html
23965  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Hummingbird feeders: Not a good thing on: 15-Jan-10, 07:32:45 AM
http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100114/MEDIA0302/100119859   

WOW!!!
23966  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Chihuahua Escapes Hungry Hawk on: 15-Jan-10, 07:22:48 AM
Updated 1:45 PM EST, Wed, Jan 13, 2010


You wouldn't think you would have to worry about your dog being attacked from above, but that's exactly what happened to Tony and Janette Buonaito's pet Chihuahua on Sunday.

While the dog was in the Buonaiuto's backyard, a red-tailed hawk swooped down and tried to grab the 3.5-pound dog for lunch, the Danbury News Times reported.

Janette Buonaiuto says she saw the whole thing happen and ran to her dog's rescue.

"I scared it. The dog was yelping and it didn't get a good grip,'' she told the paper.
The hawk flew away, but Buonoaiuto says her Chihuahua was scratched by the bird's big talons.

Hawks don't normally go after dogs, but Laura Simon, field director of urban wildlife for the Humane Society, says Connecticut's cold weather might have played a part in the attack.

The cold, and the amount of snow on the ground might have forced the hawk's normal fare, such as squirrels and mice, underground, she told the News Times.

"Hawks and owls are extra hungry right now. This might have been a very hungry bird,'' Simon told the paper.

She urges pet owners to keep a close eye on them while outside.
23967  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Thousands of birds to be killed after airport scare (PA) on: 15-Jan-10, 07:11:33 AM
 BENNER TOWNSHIP — More than three years after an airliner taking off from University Park Airport struck a flock of European starlings, federal officials plan to poison perhaps 15,000 of the birds in the State College area in the days ahead to reduce the threat.
011410STARLING

Theresa LeMire/Courtesy Cornell Lab of Ornithology

University Park Airport Director Bryan Rodgers said the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s plan to use a pesticide on the starlings results from an Aug. 19, 2006, incident when a commercial airliner ran into a flock after takeoff.

“They did sustain engine damage and the aircraft did return back to University Park Airport,” Rodgers said. “It was those starlings back in ’06 that are an issue here today.”

The Federal Aviation Administration’s wildlife strike database reports that the Air Wisconsin-owned Canadair jetliner, flying for US Airways, sustained “substantial” damage.

Substantial damage is the third most severe of four FAA levels. The fourth level is “destroyed.”

Rodgers said the damage was to one of the two jet engines on the airliner, which has about 50 seats. He said no one was injured.
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“I don’t believe the pilot declared an emergency or anything of that nature so it wouldn’t have been a newsworthy item,” Rodgers said.

But as a result, Rodgers said, the FAA “mandated that we conduct a wildlife hazard assessment” through the USDA.

USDA spokeswoman Carol Bannerman said a starling flock found in the area contains 15,000 to 20,000 birds.

She called that a “significant” roost and the USDA expects to kill about 90 percent of them.

“This certainly is big enough to cause serious concerns,” she said. “There’s a large roost near the airport that poses a safety hazard.”

The USDA’s “Notice of Pesticide Application” came in identical letters from USDA district supervisor Craig Swope in Bolivar, Pa., to municipal officials in Ferguson, College, Patton and Benner townships.

Officials in State College and Harris and Halfmoon townships said they did not receive the notification. Swope couldn’t be reached for comment Wednesday.

The Jan. 7 letters say a “catastrophic bird strike” could result “if management action is not taken to reduce this roost.”

The letter also says that if residents find dead starlings in their backyard, children or pets should not be allowed to play with or be around them.

Property owners should instead call the USDA wildlife service state office at 717-236-9451, the letter says.

The USDA letter identified the pesticide to be used as DRC-1339 (EPA Registration No. 56228-30 or 56228- 10), which is classified as a “restricted use pesticide” only for USDA personnel trained in bird control. It’s a slow-acting avicide that kills blackbirds, cowbirds, grackles and starlings in one to three days.

Bannerman said the pesticide has been used for 25 years. She said it will not kill anything else.

She said a cat would have to eat nothing for 100 straight days except starlings killed by the pesticide before it would get sick. She said residents may use plastic bags to dispose of the dead birds.

Bannerman said the municipalities that got the notification were chosen because starlings don’t feed at the same place where they roost.

After they’re poisoned, she said, they will feel bad and go in various directions to roost.

The bird poisoning will take place one day within the next two weeks at a single location at a farm in one of the municipalities. Bannerman said federal law forbids her from identifying the farm.

European starlings like to eat agricultural seeds, and the location will be “pre-baited” to draw the birds there until the day — the weather must be cold — when the USDA will poison the bait.

The USDA prefers to poison starlings in winter. They are prone to get together in big flocks in winter because food sources are limited, they find warmth in numbers and they’re naturally social animals.

“They like to be in these beautiful big flocks,” she said.

A year ago this month, reported from Franklin, N.J.: “The black carcasses of dead starlings still pepper the snowy roads and lawns of central New Jersey’s rural Griggstown community three days after federal officials used a pesticide to kill as many as 5,000 of the birds.”

“It was raining birds,” Franklin Township Mayor Brian Levine told the AP. “It got people a little anxious.”

After that experience, Bannerman said, the USDA has altered its notification process.

“In New Jersey, we told people but they didn’t read their e-mail,” she said. “So now we do it in advance and in a wider area.”

Ferguson Township Manager Mark Kunkle, who alerted the Centre Daily Times to USDA’s plan, said Wednesday that he was finding it difficult to get more information from the federal agency.

“They really have to be a little more forthcoming with some of their stuff,” he said. “Residents have a right to know what’s occurring.”

QUICK FACTS

• Starlings are chunky and blackbird-sized. In flight, according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, their short, pointed wings make them look somewhat like four-pointed stars, giving them their name.

• The European starling is an invasive species that reportedly first came to the United States in 1890 and 1891, when Shakespeare enthusiasts decided that America should have all the birds mentioned in the bard’s works.

• Shakespeare mentions the variable-voiced starling only once, in “Henry IV (Part 1),” when Hotspur complains that the king won’t let him mention Mortimer: “But I will find him when he lies asleep, and in his ear I’ll holla ‘Mortimer!’ Nay, I’ll have a starling shall be taught to speak nothing but ‘Mortimer,’ and give it him to keep his anger still in motion.”
23968  Member Activities / Birthdays / Re: Happy Birthday Mirta on: 15-Jan-10, 06:57:08 AM


Mirta, hope you have a wonderful day today.
23969  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Montana's FWP meeting on: 14-Jan-10, 09:50:24 PM

FWP Commission to meet today

Posted: Thursday, January 14, 2010 12:00 am

Montana’s Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission will meet today at the FWP Helena Headquarters in Helena at 1 p.m.

The FWP Commission will make final decisions on a variety of issues, including acquiring bighorn sheep habitat near Anaconda and a right-of-way for a fishing access site 24 miles west of Bozeman on the Madison River.

The commission will also discuss Montana’s bighorn sheep conservation strategy and waterfowl hunting on Mitchell Slough near Missoula.

The commission will also consider proposals on the FWP budget and legislative priorities, the peregrine falcon take for falconry in 2010, antler-shed hunting on wildlife management areas, two conservation easements for upland game birds, and clarification of the no-wake zone rule on Echo and Swan lakes.

Commissioners will also discuss bison management in Montana.

Call 444-3186. The full agenda and additional information can be found on the FWP Web site at fwp.mt.gov
23970  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Winterfest in Mendon Ponds Park celebrates nature and more on: 14-Jan-10, 09:46:13 PM
Winterfest in Mendon Ponds Park celebrates nature and more
Leo Roth
Features (Recreation) – January 14, 2010 - 5:00am
SHAWN DOWD staff photographer
Volunteer Pat Rose of Henrietta takes a peregrine falcon out for its walk at Wild Wings in Mendon.

Terry Kozakiewicz shakes her head whenever she hears people utter the tired expression “There’s nothing to do in Rochester.”

As director of Wild Wings birds of prey facility at Mendon Ponds Park, Kozakiewicz is very familiar with the park’s trails, wetlands and myriad wildlife. It’s a four-season haven for nature lovers that despite what some may think, brims with life and takes on a magical quality on a cold winter’s day.

“There are many seasons in Rochester, and there is a lot to do,” says Kozakiewicz, 45, who enjoys numerous outdoor activities with her family.

“In wintertime here, you can ski and snowshoe, you can feed the chickadees, see the deer, and we’re open. We ask for a donation but for all intents and purposes, Wild Wings is free,” she says. “So come see the birds and hike the trails. With the leaves down, there are more animals to see and it’s quiet. Just dress the kids up, get them warm and get them out.”

There won’t be a better time to get out than from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday when the 15th annual Winterfest takes place at seven locations around Mendon Ponds Park. The annual rite of winter celebrates all things snowy and cold — and a lot of things that aren’t.

While people can learn about cross-country skiing, snowshoeing and dog sledding, kids arts and crafts, face painting, a dulcimer music demonstration and educational displays by various outdoor sports and conservation organizations can be enjoyed in the park’s many heated lodges.

Chief organizer Ken Hann is quick to note that Winterfest takes place with or without snow.

“The idea is get people excited about winter activities that are educational and fun,” Hann said.

No place is more educational and fun than Wild Wings, where 24 raptors — eagles, hawks, falcons and owls — are cared for. The non-releasable birds have suffered various injuries and couldn’t survive in the wild. Here they receive expert care and are used in educational programs.

Wild Wings will be raffling a quilt and refreshments will be for sale in the quaint 1920s cottage that serves as the facility’s entranceway. Winterfest is an important day for Wild Wings to raise money and awareness for its mission.

“It’s a huge day for us,” Kozakiewicz says. “We’ll average 800 to 1,000 visitors through the facility and we will have volunteers at every enclosure so people can see the birds that day up close.”

Her advice for those feeling blue on a white winter’s day?

“It’s Rochester,” Kozakiewicz says. “Get outside and enjoy.”

Caption: Volunteer Pat Rose of Henrietta takes a peregrine falcon out for its walk at Wild Wings in Mendon.
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