From Kate's Blog
![](http://shakymon.com/cgi-bin/iserv.pl?load=name[a],url[http://www.wqed.org/birdblog/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/PEFA_2012_Hilliard_Rd_Bridge_smolder5_rsz_csaladin.jpg]&scale=geometry[128x128]&send)
To put things into perspective… yesterday’s news about Blue’s death was sad but not unusual.
Juvenile peregrine falcon mortality is high. Nearly two thirds don’t live to be one year old. Their often quoted mortality rate is 62.5%.
Scientific research bears this out. Marcel Gabhauer published his doctoral thesis on peregrine falcons in 2008 having studied urban and rural, wild-born and hacked birds in Ontario since 1995. His findings showed that nest survival from hatching to fledging is high (95.8%) but first year survival is dramatically lower. Of the chicks he was able to track for a year, only 36.5% of the wild-born birds and 31.6% of the hacked birds survived to their first birthday. Only one out of three makes it.
My experience with the Cathedral of Learning peregrines is similar though I’m unable to track them for a year. Each summer since 2008 at least one juvenile Pitt peregrine has died in Pittsburgh. Interestingly, I didn’t begin to hear of the Pitt peregrines’ deaths until 2008 when my blog made me known as The Peregrine Lady.
Monitoring juvenile peregrines is a roller coaster experience. Dorothy and E2 know this much better than I do. Yesterday evening I found them where I expected them to be – on the Cathedral of Learning on the side facing the scene of Blue’s accident. E2 was gazing in that direction. Dorothy was in her mourning nook, a place she only uses just after one of her youngsters has died.
This dip in our roller coaster won’t last long. The demands of the remaining juveniles will perk up Dorothy and E2. The Pitt peregrines’ success stories will keep us going with Dorothy’s “kids” across the eastern U.S:
Louie (2002) in Downtown Pittsburgh
Stammy (2003) in Youngstown, Ohio
Hathor (2003) in Mt. Clemens, Michigan
Belle (2003) at the Univ. of Toledo bell tower
Maddy (2004) at the I-480 bridge near Cleveland
Beauty (2007) in Rochester, New York Rufus(2007) in Warren, Ohio
Unnamed male (2008) at the Tarentum Bridge in 2010. (Not confirmed in 2012.)
Unnamed female (2009) in Wrightsville, Ohio.
And Henry — who hit a window on Henry Street last year — is thriving in Ohio!