The saga of Wilmington's peregrine falcon pair may be heading to a sad ending.
The male bird -- a six year veteran of the nest -- is missing.
And there is no sign that the four, molted brown eggs are ready to hatch, said Craig Koppie, a U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service endangered species/raptor biologist.
"I'm almost thinking these aren't going to work out this year," he said. "Unless it happens [by today], I don't give it much hope."
The mother bird still is coming and going from the nest but between hunting and eating, tending to the eggs and warding off any predators, she is so busy the eggs may not have had enough care, he said.
All this in a year when people in Delaware and throughout the world had a chance to watch the birds -- and the progress of the eggs -- thanks to a webcam installed by the Delmarva Ornithological Society with help from DuPont's Clear into the Future program, state and federal officials.
Even without baby chicks, the project has been an amazing success, said William Stewart, the ornithological society's conservation chair.
"It's been fabulous because of the huge audience that has watched and learned so much about the falcons," he said.
Peregrine falcons are one of the fastest birds in the world. The population plummeted from 1950 to 1970 because of exposure to the pesticide DDT. They were delisted as endangered species in 1999 and have been making a comeback along the East Coast, where they were nearly extirpated.
In Delaware, there are other nesting pairs -- including one couple under the Reedy Point Bridge, Stewart said.
But the most noticeable pair are in downtown Wilmington.
The plan is to go live again next January and capture the Wilmington falcons, up close and live, a second year.
The ornithological society is working on a project to install a second webcam at Mispillion Harbor to watch the migration of red knots and other shorebirds, Stewart said. The plan is to have it up and running for next year's migration in May. For Mirta
Oh well...just another bad news day for me!