affordwatches

!!! Escaped Peregrine Near Liftbridge?

January 30, 2011 - Burlington - Lift Bridge

Frank Butson Reports:

On Sunday I recieved a photo of a Peregrine Falcon that was taken at the liftbridge. Clearly not one of the resident pair,it appears to have tethers or a leash on. Local CPF volunteers have been notified and the word is out to Burlington/Hamilton birders to keep their eyes open for this bird. Please contact CPF with sightings of this bird. There is a good chance it is able to hunt on its own and a chance it could free itself from the gear,but also a chance that it could get tangled. Any further news will be reported.


Peregrine Falcon With Gear

!!! Fallon,Nevada 4 Golden Eagles Shot

January 30, 2011 - International, National and Local News

Frank Butson Reports:

Fish and Wildlife Investigating Deaths of Golden Eagles Near Fallon
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is investigating the deaths of four golden eagles found in the area between Fallon and Lahontan Reservoir. A preliminary investigation indicated the eagles had been shot.
Shooting an eagle is a violation of the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act as well as the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Penalties for violating the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act can include up to two years confinement and $250,000 fine. Penalties for violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act include up to six months confinement and $15,000 fine per bird.
     Golden eagles are frequent visitors to the Carson and Lahontan valleys this time of year, and can often be seen near rivers, ponds, lakes and agricultural fields. Their preferred prey is small mammals like rabbits, ground squirrels, mice and sometimes small birds. Golden eagles are most often seen scavenging animal carcasses, especially during winter months when their normal prey is not readily available.

Anyone with information about the eagle deaths should contact the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office of Law Enforcement at 775-861-6360.

UK:Barn Owls Perish From Winter Weather

January 24, 2011 - International, National and Local News

Frank Butson Reports:

From The BBC Humberside

Wildlife artist’s crusade to save Wolds barn owls

Nest box with owl inside

Robert Fuller and his wife, Victoria, setup a conservation group to protect owl numbers

The enchanting flight of the barn owl was once a common sight in East Yorkshire. But now their frequency could be a thing of the past if the extreme weather returns, warns a wildlife artist.

Robert Fuller does more than just paint birds.

A barn owl conservationist, the artist set up the Wolds Barn Owl Group in 2006 to conserve birds and installed 137 nest boxes on farmland across East and North Yorkshire.

However, the heavy snowfall during November and December last year, which was the worst for over 100 years, has caused their numbers to drop.

Mr Fuller said the owls had struggled to survive without their natural food supply and he had found more than 20 dead birds on the Yorkshire Wolds.

Dead barn owls

Twenty four barn owls were found dead by the artist

“After this terrible weather we’ve had, we could’ve lost up to 90% of our barn owls on the Wolds and I’m certainly not going to let the last few die out.

“So I’m going to help them through; build their body weight up because if we get another really bad spell of weather, that’s going to really affect them.”

Barn owls weigh an average of just 12oz and can survive a maximum of two weeks without food.

They hunt grasslands to feed on mice, voles or shrews. However, heavy snowfall makes it difficult for owls to find food, leaving them to starve.

“The snow lasted for so long that birds continue to hunt but they just became ever weaker and ever more emaciated and just couldn’t sustain themselves, so it’s impacting on their population really heavily,” explained Ian Kendall from the RSPB.

“Normally when the snow retreats you tend to see barn owls then hunting successfully again over the grassland and that’s just not happening. We’re not seeing barn owls now back at sites where you’d expect to see them.”

Robert Fuller

Mr Fuller said his conservation project had been a success until this winter

As part of his voluntary conservation work, the artist regularly attends to some of the nest boxes, especially those situated in the five-mile radius of his home in Thixendale, filling them with dead mice and day-old chicks, which are a by-product from the poultry industry.

“Mice are actually more nutritious for them. But these [day-old chicks] are the next best thing for them to get through this bad spell of weather we’ve had. I put eight of them in the box and that’ll certainly keep them going for the next three or four days,” explained Mr Fuller.

“We don’t want to stop these birds from hunting but with it being so few of them left, I feel it’s very important to get the remaining ones through the winter because we need some breeding nucleus for the spring.”

The heavy snowfall during the cold snap has made it difficult for Mr Fuller to reach the nest boxes and of the 30 sites he visited, has only seen four owls alive.

“It’s worse than anyone can imagine really, I’ve got 24 dead barn owls and have only found four live owls… it’s basically crisis point that I’ve got to not let these remaining owls die.”

!!! Red-shouldered comes to visit. Who is watching who??

January 10, 2011 - International, National and Local News

CPF Postmaster Reports:

Big thank you to Ann Willis for sending in her photos of a red-shouldered hawk that came to visit her in early January 2011. After we help identify her special visitor, we asked for her permission to post some of her shots, as we don’t get to see allot of Red-shouldered hawks in our neck of the woods and rarely do we ever get such great close up shots!! We will also be posting them in the Raptor ID sections of the CPF web site so others can benefit from these great views of the red-shouldered hawk. The photos were taken Jan. 10, 2011. The hawk has been on my front porch and then on my deck yesterday. I believe that he was seeing his reflection in my sliding doors. He tried a couple of times to fly into the glass, flew off, then returned and sat first on the table, then on the deck right next to the door looking into the house. He stayed around most of the morning. I am the photographer and you have my permission to post the photos. I will include a bunch more.
Sent from: Ann Willis
Primrose Creek
Heber Springs, AR
USA


!!! KINGSTON:Peregrine With Potentially Dangerous Gear

January 23, 2011 - All Reports

Frank Butson Reports:

Recently on a birding trip to Amherst Island near Kingston,Ontario, Canada Ann Brokelman a CPF volunteer,photographed a Peregrine Falcon flying past her very quickly. She got a few quick shots of the juvenile plummaged Peregrine as it flew by,which shows some kind of entanglement. The location was west of the ferry docks on Amherst Island.

   People in the area should be on the watch for this bird.

Mark Nash CPF Co-VP and C0-founder writes:This is something that the bird has got caught up in, as this is not any telemetry or any typical falconry equipment.  While it could be a leash of sorts, it is NOT in any proper position that would benefit the bird at all. This is kind of tragic, if this stays on this bird, as there is a terrible,potential risk to the bird’s well being with such an attachment.  Fingers crossed that what ever it is, comes off!!

An email will be sent to the Kingston Field Naturalists and other avid birders in the Kingston area.  CPF volunteer Frank Butson will be in the field at Amherst Island next week and will keep eyes open for this bird.

!!! Bye Bye Blackbird: USDA acknowledges a hand in one mass bird death

- All Reports

Frank Butson Reports:

From The Christian Science Monitor:

One in a series of mysterious mass bird deaths in the past month was the product of a USDA avicide program, which began as operation Bye Bye Blackbird in the 1960s.

A worker with US Environmental Services, a private contractor, picks up a dead bird in Beebe, Ark. on Jan. 1. The USDA said it killed hundreds of starlings in South Dakota this week.Warren Watkins/The Daily Citizen/AP/File

By Patrik Jonsson, Staff writer / January 20, 2011

Atlanta

It’s not the “aflockalyptic” fallout from a secret US weapon lab as some have theorized. But the government acknowledged Thursday that it had a hand in one of a string of mysterious mass bird deaths that have spooked residents in Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, South Dakota, and Kentucky in the last month.

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) took responsibility for hundreds of dead starlings that were found on the ground and frozen in trees in a Yankton, S.D., park on Monday.

The USDA’s Wildlife Services Program, which contracts with farmers for bird control, said it used an avicide poison called DRC-1339 to cull a roost of 5,000 birds that were defecating on a farmer’s cattle feed across the state line in Nebraska. But officials said the agency had nothing to do with large and dense recent bird kills in Arkansas and Louisiana.

Nevertheless, the USDA’s role in the South Dakota bird deaths puts a focus on a little-known government bird-control program that began in the 1960s under the name of Bye Bye Blackbird, which eventually became part of the USDA and was housed in the late ’60s at a NASA facility. In 2009, USDA agents euthanized more than 4 million red-winged blackbirds, starlings, cowbirds, and grackles, primarily using pesticides that the government says are not harmful to pets or humans.

In addition to the USDA program, a so-called depredation order from the US Fish and Wildlife Service allows blackbirds, grackles, and starlings to be killed by anyone who says they pose health risks or cause economic damage. Though a permit is needed in some instances, the order is largely intended to cut through red tape for farmers, who often employ private contractors to kill the birds and do not need to report their bird culls to any authority. “Every winter, there’s massive and purposeful kills of these blackbirds,” says Greg Butcher, the bird conservation director at the National Audubon Society. “These guys are professionals, and they don’t want to advertise their work. They like to work fast, efficiently, and out of sight.”

Bird kills turning too zealous?

The depredation order, however, is under review for its impact on the rare rusty blackbird, which roosts with more common species. Ornithologists also suspect that the mass killings may be a factor in declining populations of those species in the US.

While the USDA keeps tabs on the number of birds the program euthanizes, the total death toll isn’t known because private contractors operating under the depredation order aren’t required to keep count in the case of blackbirds, cowbirds, grackles, and starlings.”My biggest concern is we don’t know how many birds are being killed, and we don’t have a sense of how at risk the rusty blackbird is because of depredation events in their range,” says Mr. Butcher.Yankton animal control officer Lisa Brasel told KTIV-TV that she first believed a cold snap had killed some 200 European starlings that were found dead in Riverside Park, reminding some residents of the final scenes of Alfred Hitchcock’s thriller, “The Birds.”

But then she said she received a call from a USDA official who said the agency had poisoned a roost of starlings 10 miles south of Yankton. Usually such poisonings result in flocks falling directly out of their tree roosts. But in this case, the birds traveled a fair distance before falling. “They were surprised they came to Yankton like they did and died in our park,” said Brasel, according to KTIV-TV.
How birds plague farmers Carol Bannerman, a Wildlife Services spokeswoman, said such kills are carried out at the request of farmers who can prove the birds are a nuisance. The farmers also help pay the cost, according to the agency.  One example of nuisance birds are European starlings, a non-native species, at US dairies, where a flock of 5,000 can eat 200 pounds of feed a day while soiling equipment and dairy cows.”It’s not that we have anything against starlings, but our charge is to help protect agriculture … and protect property and human health or safety,” she says. “And the fact is, in a lot of rural settings, people say, ‘It’s just birds, what’s the problem?’ “

Ms. Bannerman added, however, that the agency takes care to notify local public-health and law-enforcement agencies before a scheduled kill, and noted “what went on in Louisiana and Arkansas, that was totally outside of what we’re doing. We’re quite concerned that people not connect those.”

Two mass bird deaths in north Alabama this week are being investigated, with specimens being tested for toxicity. Two other mass bird deaths in Gilbertville and Murray, Ky., earlier this month were not linked to poison, but could have been caused by unseasonably cold weather. The most widely reported recent mass bird deaths – in Louisiana and Arkansas – have been tied to birds en masse flying into buildings and power lines.

Rogue fireworks in Arkansas

In Arkansas, state ornithologist Karen Rowe has reviewed ground radar records that show a 20,000-plus bird roost taking flight at approximately 10:15 p.m. on New Year’s Eve, 15 minutes after a series of large booms shook the windows of houses in a nearby subdivision.

This has caused state wildlife officials to pin the blame on a resident who may have gotten a hold of professional-grade fireworks. The dead birds were likely animals that were trying to land in the dark and hit some kind of object after being drawn to toward the artificial light of the neighborhood.

“So far, no one has confessed to letting off the fireworks, but the question remains if anyone would admit to it,” says Ms. Rowe. They needn’t fear retribution. Despite the number of birds that died, no laws were broken.

Some 5 billion birds die every year across the US, most largely unnoticed. Mass deaths are not uncommon. The US Geological Service’s website listed about 90 mass deaths of birds and other wildlife in the last six months of 2010.

“Whether people are noticing it more and pointing it out more this year than in the past, is something that I’d be thinking about,” says Bannerman at the USDA.

CPF’s NOTE: I also found this:More likely, says Ed Clark, president of the Wildlife Center of Virginia, is that the Arkansas birds were targeted by a farmer fed up with them feeding on his cattle grain. No licenses are needed to kill blackbirds and starlings, and poisoning is a common method of controlling large, noisy flocks.“This was a deliberate act of avicide, legal or illegal,” writes Mr. Clark in a comment on the Huffington Post. (Surface tests on the birds turned up no evidence of poison, but it’s not yet clear whether the birds ate something poisonous.)

CPF’s concern is that this type of mass poisoning has the possibility for secondary host poisoning,especially to raptors that feed on smaller birds. Falcons,hawks,owls and a host of other avian and land based predators would be in danger.

!!! Quest photographed in Kingston Ontario - Jan 4th 2011

January 04, 2011 - International, National and Local News

CPF Postmaster Reports:

A big thank you to Rachel from Kingston Ontario for sending in some of her photographs of a peregrine that dropped in for a visit long enough to be photographed. rachel writes: These pictures were taken January 4, 2011 around 11:00 am. The peregrine perched on our balcony railing in the Kingston Harbour for over one hour. I took these pics through the window with a telephoto lens. He came again yesterday (Sunday the 16th) and stayed for about 15 minutes.


Photos by Rachel McRae Quest - Jan 4th 2011 Quest Jan 4th - 2011 Quest Jan 4th - 2011

Nice Red-shouldered shots from Ivoryton CT USA

January 18, 2011 - International, National and Local News

CPF Postmaster Reports:

Photos taken in Ivoryton CT by Daniel Mesdeiros with a Canon 1 D mark 4 Lens was a Sigma 500mm 4.5 photos while at a friends house in the morning of January 18th / 2011


Red-shouldered shots by Dan Mesdeiros

More Of Cirrus

January 16, 2011 - Burlington - Lift Bridge

Frank Butson Reports:

Vince Filteau, Sue’s husband sent these along. These were taken at the Burlington Lift Bridge on January 16th around 1:30 pm.

Cirrus is seen here eating.

Its great to know that the pair is being seen consistantly around the Liftbridge,as there has been and continues to be alot of work being done on the bridge and alot of activity around the property. Disturbances can drive birds off territory,so its great to get reports of this pair on site. Of course we especially enjoy seeing such sharp beautiful photos. Thanks Vincent!

I will be contacting the folks in Ohio,where Cirrus was hatched and banded. They will be thrilled to know she continues to thrive. People all over the world follow Peregrine Falcons in their travels,so many people will get not only valuable data from such sightings but great pleasure too.

A very full cropped Cirrus has a look around.

Cirrus Snacking At The Liftbridge

January 16, 2011 - Burlington - Lift Bridge

Frank Butson Reports:

On January 16th,Sue Adorjan and her husband were lucky enough to find a Peregrine Falcon having a meal on the hydro tower,just west of the Liftbridge. From this great photo,we can confirm it is the resident female Cirrus,hatched in 2006 in Dayton Ohio.

Here Sue captured Cirrus eating.

Finished her meal,Cirrus does something called “feeking”. She is cleaning off her beak by wiping it off. She also cleaned her talons.

Observations like Sue’s are very important as it helps with the ongoing monitoring of Peregrine Falcons. Peregrine Falcons are still considered threatened. Reports from the public help greatly to  be sure Peregrine Falcons continue to recover.Thanks Sue!