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25186  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Sea Turtle Nest in Florida Keys on: 28-Aug-09, 07:56:37 AM
I didn't see it but either they hatched or something has been digging in the nest. frog

Donna
25187  Member Activities / Pets / Re: Falcon Watcher's Pets on: 28-Aug-09, 07:34:18 AM




Hi Anne, the pictures are great, how  do you sent them? The pets are great too. The pigeons are fluffy!
I like the turtle, we had one for 40 years at my parents house, he lived in the garden. During the winter we put lots of leaves and other things in his little wooden house, to keep him warm during his hibernation. He digs himself into the ground. One year we digged him out during a very cold winter, probably 1963?  When my parents moved to a flat, I took him, but my garden is very open and cold and he was sick all the time. At least we took him to the reptile zoo. They were very happy with him and said: wow thats a great female Moorish turtle, we like to have her, she can lay eggs!   
greetings Aafke


Great story Aafke....wow....40 yrs??? Nice you took HER with you when you moved. good news

 thanx  Donna
25188  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Yup, 1st egg for Sheila & Havoc on: 28-Aug-09, 07:17:35 AM

Friday August 28, 2009
After spending several days perfecting the scrape, Sheila has laid her first egg.

Thank you to everyone watching who informed us that the webcam image had frozen earlier in the week.  We apologise for the interruption to the webcast. Will be fun when they hatch.

Donna
25189  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Smileys on: 28-Aug-09, 07:14:47 AM
Yes, let someone else have a chance!  2funny

Oh OK...I'll settle down. Embarrassed

No no  Keep going Donna!  Ready?  Smileys beat poo movies any day of the week hysterical  (couldn't help myself)  2funny

  Hmm, no one else has smileys to add? Here's a few more .
25190  Other Nature Related Information / Falcon Web Cams / Re: Alcoa Anglesea, Australia on: 27-Aug-09, 09:48:57 PM
I think Sheila & Havoc may have laid an egg!  Looks like one peeking up at the front of the box...



Sure looks like it Ei. She was just laying and then got up. WOW...NICE sparrow
25191  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / A&B at nest 4:43 pm 8-27-09 on: 27-Aug-09, 07:11:40 PM
 falcon<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090827/MainCamera_HighRes_20090827-1643.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090827/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090827-1643.jpg?" >[/url] Archer ready and waiting for.....<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_HighRes/20090827/MainCamera_HighRes_20090827-1646.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/MainCamera_Thumbnail/20090827/MainCamera_Thumbnail_20090827-1646.jpg?" >[/url]...Beauty, right on cue<a href="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1/20090827/Camera1_20090827-1645.jpg?" target=_blank><img src="http://shakymon.com/thruway/archive/Camera1_Thumbnail/20090827/Camera1_Thumbnail_20090827-1645.jpg?" >[/url] falcon
25192  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Eagles attack Heron nest as viewers watch (canada) on: 27-Aug-09, 06:07:04 AM
Surviving heron to be released in wild
NewS.33.20090824115318.IMG_1522HeronAug22_09_20090826.jpg
THE MALE heron has grown significantly since last seen on the project’s blog website. This photo of the heron was taken last Saturday at the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab Shelter. The heron is planned to be released back into the wild this Friday Aug. 28.
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

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By Molly McNulty - Terrace Standard

Published: August 25, 2009 11:00 PM

AFTER A deadly attack on their nest, one of the two surviving baby Blue Herons will be released into the wild this week.

Only two out of an original five baby Blue Herons are alive, with an attack on their nest playing out live via webcam for thousands of viewers.

The Great Blue Heron project involved a webcam aimed directly at a heron nest and was launched earlier this year by the Applied Coastal Ecology (ACE) program of the Prince Rupert campus of Northwest Community College (NWCC).

The goal was to collect information on the local herons as data is currently only available from herons in the south.

On June 2, out of those five eggs only four hatched, as viewers watched and bonded with the young birds in their first moments of life.

From there a huge online following began with people tuning in daily.

Professor of environmental biology and geography at the Rupert campus Pouyan Mahboubi says that he wasn’t expecting such a large following.

To his surprise, they had 35,000 viewers in a month and a half.

“I was really surprised, I thought we’d probably have maybe 100 or so,” says Mahboubi, adding that people were tuning in from as far as Texas and Eastern Canada.

But after four weeks or so, things took a turn for the worst.

About a month after hatching, it became apparent to viewers that the adult herons had been absent for three days.

During that period, one chick died due to starvation and the public began to demand human intervention.

“There was no way to get to the nest without disturbing [the area],” says Mahboubi, adding that there were other nests farther up the tree, which they did not want to disturb.

It was on July 1 that the adult herons returned, when only minutes later, the nest was attacked by a pair of eagles, who first ate the chick who died of starvation.

In an attempt to save themselves, the remaining three chicks jumped from the nest.

Two chicks landed on twigs farther down the tree, while the third fell the ground and was quickly retrieved and brought to a rehab facility on Salt Spring Island.

The other two remained on the lower branches. One chick hung on for a day or two but fell and died.

The last chick hung on for three days before falling, where it was swiftly rescued and brought to the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab Shelter.

Mahboubi explains that during that time the public wanted a swift rescue of the chicks, but adds that it could only be done once they fell to the ground, in order to not disturb the natural habitat.

One question the viewers could not understand was why the eagles attacked right after the parents returned.

Mahboubi doesn’t have any definite answers, but thinks that perhaps the parents stayed away for that long length of time because they knew the eagles were trying to follow them to their nest.

Therefore after the three days away, they had to return, which led the eagles straight to the chicks.

After the massacre, the camera was moved farther up the tree to an occupied heron nest.

“It has been very dramatic, there’s people that really bond with animals, it’s an interesting dynamic,” says Mahboubi.

Death is very much the natural course for these young chicks, being that their historical survival rate has been one in four and moved to one in eight in 2008.

And for Mahboubi, this was his prediction before the eggs even hatched.

“I said I expect to see an eagle come in, it’s statistically what we think will probably happen,” says Mahboubi, and adds that with people logging on every day, it became more than watching a wildlife show.

“[People] developed a relationship with the prey,” says Mahboubi.

The two surviving herons are alive and well at the moment, with the one male located in Rupert being released this Friday.

Nancy Golinia, who operates the shelter with her husband Gunther, says that they will release the heron in an area where wild heron are located.

The predictions are that he will imitate the wild heron and make the adjustment from captivity.

Nancy says that he’s been one of the nicest herons that they’ve raised.

She also said that he will be a great asset to the wild, as he would be a first choice candidate if there was a heron breeding program. The chick on Salt Spring Island is also doing well, says Nancy, and she can’t talk highly enough of the work they do there.
25193  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Sea Turtle Nest in Florida Keys on: 27-Aug-09, 05:42:47 AM



It's very possible that the nest was raided by predators (not just 4-legged but also 2 legged and winged), not an unusual occurance.  Keeping my fingers crossed for nest #2!

 wave

     


Environmental enthusiasts should be able to observe infant loggerhead sea turtles hatching and emerging from their nest, via this live streaming “turtle webcam” installed on a private beach on Big Pine Key in the Lower Florida Keys. The camera, funded by the Florida Keys Tourist Development Council, is currently focused on a second nest with eggs projected to hatch during the nighttime hours sometime between now and Sept. 3. The camera was previously trained on a nest that was expected to hatch between Aug. 17 and Aug. 25, yet no hatchlings emerged. Researchers plan to excavate the nest to determine what factors affected the predicted hatch.
25194  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Ohio peregrine Stats 2009 on: 26-Aug-09, 10:10:16 PM
 falcon
Good year for Ohio peregrine falcons

63 chicks leave nests, two short of the record

By Bob Downing
Beacon Journal staff writer

Published on Wednesday, Aug 26, 2009

Ohio's peregrine falcons had a very good year, but not a record one for producing chicks.

It appears that 63 young falcons fledged, or left the nest on their own, from 19 nests in 2009, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources estimates.

That included three chicks in downtown Akron, three in downtown Canton and four on the Ohio Turnpike bridge over the Cuyahoga Valley in Boston Township.

That marks the first successful mating by Rocky and Lara, the adult birds on the bridge in northern Summit County.

They failed to produce eggs in 2008.

Their nest produced two males that got banded while on the ground learning to fly and two unbanded females that died after being hit by vehicles on the bridge, said David Scott of the Ohio Division of Wildlife.

The Akron birds (Bandit and Chesapeake) and the Canton birds (Maverick and Priscilla) are old pros at the mating game.

Biologists were able to band 59 young falcons from 18 successful nests in 2009. Difficult access to some nests prevented banding all of the young.

About 75 percent of eggs hatch and 90 percent of the chicks fledge, but only 50 percent of the fledglings make it to 1 year old, Scott said.

State officials monitored 28 territorial pairs of peregrine falcons in 2009 in Ohio. Eggs were produced at a minimum of 24 sites.

The 19 successful nests included five in the Cleveland area, two in Toledo and single nests in Aberdeen, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Eastlake, Ironton, Lima, Oregon and Youngstown.

The failed nests were in Cleveland, Cleves, Lakewood, Shaker Heights and Wrightsville.

Two new pairs of adult birds were monitored, although they did not nest at the Ohio State football stadium and on a water tower in Warren.

In 2008, a record 65 peregrine falcon chicks fledged from 21 nests in Ohio.

The falcon, a crow-size bird that can dive as fast as 200 mph, was a federally endangered species until 1999. Last year, Ohio changed its status from endangered to threatened to reflect its improving numbers.
Bob Downing can be reached at 330-996-3745 or bdowning@thebeaconjournal.com.

Ohio's peregrine falcons had a very good year, but not a record one for producing chicks.

It appears that 63 young falcons fledged, or left the nest on their own, from 19 nests in 2009, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources estimates.

That included three chicks in downtown Akron, three in downtown Canton and four on the Ohio Turnpike bridge over the Cuyahoga Valley in Boston Township.

That marks the first successful mating by Rocky and Lara, the adult birds on the bridge in northern Summit County.

They failed to produce eggs in 2008.

Their nest produced two males that got banded while on the ground learning to fly and two unbanded females that died after being hit by vehicles on the bridge, said David Scott of the Ohio Division of Wildlife.

The Akron birds (Bandit and Chesapeake) and the Canton birds (Maverick and Priscilla) are old pros at the mating game.

Biologists were able to band 59 young falcons from 18 successful nests in 2009. Difficult access to some nests prevented banding all of the young.

About 75 percent of eggs hatch and 90 percent of the chicks fledge, but only 50 percent of the fledglings make it to 1 year old, Scott said.

State officials monitored 28 territorial pairs of peregrine falcons in 2009 in Ohio. Eggs were produced at a minimum of 24 sites.

The 19 successful nests included five in the Cleveland area, two in Toledo and single nests in Aberdeen, Cincinnati, Columbus, Dayton, Eastlake, Ironton, Lima, Oregon and Youngstown.

The failed nests were in Cleveland, Cleves, Lakewood, Shaker Heights and Wrightsville.

Two new pairs of adult birds were monitored, although they did not nest at the Ohio State football stadium and on a water tower in Warren.

In 2008, a record 65 peregrine falcon chicks fledged from 21 nests in Ohio.

The falcon, a crow-size bird that can dive as fast as 200 mph, was a federally endangered species until 1999. Last year, Ohio changed its status from endangered to threatened to reflect its improving numbers. falcon2
25195  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Sharp Shinned Hawk on: 26-Aug-09, 09:10:37 PM



Beautiful bird Lou....great shots. Not to change the subject and get everyone confused but where's your Wood ducks? None this year?

Donna

Donna,

We were late changing the nesting material (wood shavings) this year and because of the camera holes that were cut into the wood duck boxes last year, the insides of the boxes were wet. We had wood ducks show up early this year, but they didn't take to the boxes and nested elsewhere before we took care of the problem. We saw them frequently, feeding on the cracked corn that we put out, but no luck from a wood duck box perspective. Hopefully, they'll be back next year.

Thanks for asking!

Lou

Bummer but OK, at least you know they are still around. I really liked that cam. I'll be waiting til next year also. Thanks Lou.

Donna
25196  Other Nature Related Information / Other Nature Web Cams / Re: Sea Turtle Nest in Florida Keys on: 26-Aug-09, 09:05:08 PM
I saw the guy moving something this morning....

Nest 1   crying   Failed to hatch by Aug. 25  Oh well so much for nest #1, now were watching nest #2. Hmmm.   hyper Hopefully this one is better.

Approximate dates loggerhead turtles are
expected to hatch::
Nest 1    Failed to hatch by Aug. 25
Nest 2    Nighttime hours between Aug. 27 and Sept. 3
Nest 3    Nighttime hours between Sept. 1 and Sept. 9
25197  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Sharp Shinned Hawk on: 26-Aug-09, 08:08:55 PM

I saw this handsome Sharpie in our backyard earlier this evening. I was doing the dishes and happened to look up to see it sitting on our bird feeder. I snapped off a few pictures and wanted to share.

http://tinyurl.com/layunm

Lou

Beautiful bird Lou....great shots. Not to change the subject and get everyone confused but where's your Wood ducks? None this year?

Donna
25198  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcons News / Re: Main Camera captures Archer and Beauty at Times Square building nest box on: 26-Aug-09, 08:05:18 PM
I think this particular thread has stayed very much on topic. Most of its replies include pictures of Archer and Beauty captured by the Main Camera at the Times Square nest box. If that's not on topic, what is? And the topic really didn't start until August 1st when the forum opened. The initial post was there to demonstrate how the forum was laid out.
I applaud our early posters for following our lead. bravo

The topic can be split or closed when appropriate. Right now it's fine the way it is.



I have no problem with this thread. Sometimes, I try to change the subject to Archer at nest on 8-26-09 or a time.

25199  Resources / Links / Stokes Birding Blog on: 26-Aug-09, 06:57:18 PM
http://stokesbirdingblog.blogspot.com/

Love the Whales
25200  Member Activities / Events / Re: Chat sessions on: 26-Aug-09, 06:42:31 PM
Chat-sessions sound like a great idea! How about starting a list of suggested topics so that each official session is about something specific?

Cheers
Baerbel

Well, we can definitely have an OT night.. ???..speak about anything in general and of course, Mariah, pfalcon A&B, Pet Night, dogwag cat maybe have SURPRISE "GUEST" Shocked night, let us ask questions and see who guesses who the "GUEST" is, kinda like "What's my Line, Holiday night.. chrispup..etc. IDK, just thinking.  stupid

That's it.

Donna
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