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FW: Birding Community E-bulletin - December 2008

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Norm Saunders

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Wed, 3 Dec 2008 15:56:30 -0500

 

 

From: Paul J. Baicich [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2008 2:19 PM
To: Paul J. Baicich
Cc: Wayne Petersen
Subject: Birding Community E-bulletin - December 2008

 


THE BIRDING COMMUNITY E-BULLETIN
            December 2008
 
 
This Birding Community E-bulletin is being distributed through the generous
support of Steiner Binoculars as a service to active and concerned birders,
those dedicated to the joys of birding and the protection of birds and their
habitats. You can access an archive of past E-bulletins on the website of
the National Wildlife Refuge Association (NWRA):
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
  and on the birding pages for Steiner Binoculars
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin.html
                        
 
RARITY FOCUS 
 

On November 13, at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico,
Sally King observed and photographed what turned out to be a female Sungrebe
(Heliornis fulica), a species that normally only ranges from northeast
Mexico to Ecuador and southeast Brazil. Furthermore, it is ordinarily a
sedentary bird that inhabits slow-moving rivers, streams, and lakes, most
often in humid forests.
 
While the identity of this bird is not in question, its origins certainly
are.
 
The birding world has been abuzz with the question of whether the Bosque del
Apache NWR bird was a wild, naturally-occurring Sungrebe, or an escape from
captivity. A naturally-occurring Sungrebe would be amazing given the
distance that such an individual would have to have traveled to arrive at
Bosque del Apache. On the other hand, an escapee from captivity seems
equally unlikely.
 
Indeed, the zoo community was also abuzz over this bird. Sungrebe is not a
species that is typically - if ever - held in zoo collections. No one on any
of the zoo listservs knew of any institutions having Sungrebes, much less
having lost such a bird. At this point, indications are that the Bosque del
Apache Sungrebe probably was a wild bird that lost its way.
 
If deemed to be a naturally-occurring Sungrebe, this bird would constitute a
first North American record. The bird, originally found on the popular Marsh
Loop auto route south of the Marsh Deck on the refuge, was relocated on the
morning of 18 November by Audio Stop #8 on the eastern side of the same
Marsh Loop.
 
Birders failed to find the Sungrebe on 19 November, and it was not
encountered during any of the following days which included the "Festival of
the Cranes" centered at Bosque del Apache NWR. 
 
You can find a photo and more details about the Sungrebe here:
http://adventurebirding.blogspot.com/2008/11/bosque-del-apache-nm-sungrebe.h
tml 
 and here:
http://sites.google.com/site/oldenettelspage/Home/sungrebe---notes
 
 
RUSTY BLACKBIRD BLITZ
 
We have previously discussed the plight of Rusty Blackbirds at:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/julSBC06.html#TOC03
and
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin/july06.html
 
Rusty Blackbird has been a species in serious decline over the past four
decades. Some estimates put the drop at over 80 percent during this period,
but the precise figure is not known. Neither are the causes for decline
known, although winter habitat loss and degradation are likely candidates.
These blackbirds are becoming scarce and patchy in their winter
distribution, making it difficult to focus the research and management
efforts needed to save them.
 
Volunteers are being sought to help locate wintering concentrations of Rusty
Blackbirds in order to hopefully get more accurate population numbers. The
intent is to have an all out "blitz" to locate Rusty Blackbirds and in order
to create a map of wintering Rusty Blackbird "hot spots" that will help
focus future research, monitoring, and conservation attention.
 
During a nine-day period in February, volunteers are being asked to search
in any locations and habitats deemed as potentially suitable for wintering
Rusty Blackbirds, particularly for sizable flocks or concentrations of birds
(i.e., dozens or even hundreds of birds). 
 
Areas of note will be revisited in the future to determine if they are
indeed Rusty Blackbird hot spots. Search efforts will be concentrated in the
east-central United States, from eastern Nebraska to eastern Texas, and from
southern New Jersey to Florida.
 
The dates for these searches are to be February 7 -15 -, the period when
Rusty Blackbirds are expected to be easiest to find (i.e., males are
singing) and the population is relatively sedentary.
 
The search effort is being led by the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center
along with assistance from the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology and the
National Audubon Society, all of which will be using eBird as the vehicle
for data collection. 
 
Instructions and information on the identification, habitat preferences,
range map, and general protocols for the Rusty Blackbird count can be found
here:
http://nationalzoo.si.edu/ConservationAndScience/MigratoryBirds/Research/Rus
ty_Blackbird/ 
and 
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/news/bird-watchers-urgently-needed-to-track-r
usty 
 
 
SAGE GROUSE BLM MANAGEMENT GUIDELINES CHANGE IN WYOMING
 
In August, we drew attention to a case calling for the alteration of Bureau
of Land Management (BLM) standards on oil and gas development in the West in
order to protect the Greater Sage-Grouse: 
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/augSBC08.html#TOC12
and
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin/aug08.html
 
A recent decision by the Buffalo, Wyoming, office of the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) will expand protection around Greater Sage-Grouse leks
(mating areas), extending protection to three miles from drilling/mining
activities. The Buffalo Field Office manages 780,291 acres of public lands
and 4,731,140 acres of mineral estate within Campbell, Johnson, and Sheridan
counties in north-central Wyoming.
 
This decision should significantly contribute to the conservation of this
species - a species currently being considered for listing under the
Endangered Species Act. 
 
The BLM regional decision was challenged by energy companies claiming that
the protections are unwarranted and not based on science. Recent studies,
however, have indicated that buffers from human activities within two miles
of leks are inadequate to protect sage-grouse and other prairie grouse
species.
 
The North American Prairie Grouse (NAPG) Executive Director, Ralph Rogers,
commented that "although these new guidelines apply only to lands
administered by the Buffalo office [of the BLM], the... ruling has broader
applicability to all grouse habitat. We hope that all BLM and Forest Service
offices will adopt better protective actions for grouse species found on our
federal public lands."
 
For more details, see this joint release from NAGP and the Theodore
Roosevelt Conservation Partnership:
http://www.trcp.org/newsroom/pressreleases/17-pressreleases/287-pr2008-11-03
.html 
 
 
NEW TEXAS PARK: LATEST LINK IN WORLD BIRDING CENTER CHAIN
 
The newest state park in Texas, and the eighth link in the World Birding
Center chain along the breadth of the Rio Grande Valley, will have its
opening in Brownsville on 6 December. ,.
 
The Rasaca de la Palma State Park, with its 1,200 acres, is the largest of
the nine sites that currently comprise the World Birding Center. South Padre
Island Birding and Nature Center, the final wing of the WBC, is under
construction and slated to open in spring of 2009. The other World Birding
Center sites are: Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park (WBC headquarters),
Edinburg Scenic Wetlands, Estero Llano Grande State Park (Weslaco),
Harlingen's Arroyo Colorado, Old Hidalgo Pump House, Quinta Mazatlan
(McAllen), and Roma Bluffs.
 
Not a state park in the traditional sense, Resaca de la Palma will
specifically cater to bird watchers, butterfly enthusiasts, and other nature
lovers who seek up-close views of wildlife in a natural setting that
includes a restored resaca (an old river oxbow), marshes, dense thorn-scrub,
and mature palm and ebony forests. Resaca de la Palma's most significant
habitat is a six-mile resaca that winds through the park.
 
The opening of the new state park results in part from increased funding
provided by the Texas Legislature in 2007. For 2008, the state's newest wing
of the WBC received an $82,000 budget increase. Rio Grande Valley Bird
"specialties" at the park include Black-bellied Whistling-Duck, Least Grebe,
Groove-billed Ani, Green Jay, Olive Sparrow, and Altamira Oriole. 
 
For more information on the new Park, see:
http://www.worldbirdingcenter.org/sites/brownsville/
 
For more on all the World Birding Center sites, see:
http://www.worldbirdingcenter.org/
 
 
INTERNATIONAL AGREEMENT ON MIGRATING WATERBIRDS
 
An international resolution pledging to protect migratory waterbirds was
agreed upon at the "Tenth Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting
Parties to the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar)." The wetlands meeting, held
in Korea at the end of October and early November, was attended by 2,000
people from 165 nations.
 
The participants agreed that different countries must co-operate to protect
migratory waterbirds and their habitats. The "Ramsar Resolution on Flyways,"
as the new agreement was named, called for the protection of habitats such
as tidal flats where birds come to winter or spend the summer, and for
efforts to monitor the state of different populations.
 
The resolution acknowledges that conserving the world's waterbirds is an
international challenge and that only by working together along flyways can
migratory birds be saved. "No country can act alone to protect migratory
waterbirds. If we don't collaborate internationally we will push more and
more migratory waterbirds to the brink of extinction," said Alison
Russell-French, president of Birds Australia.
 
Click here for the full text of the resolution:
http://www.ramsar.org/cop10/cop10_dr22_e.htm
 
 
IBA NEWS: ALMOST HALF OF CARIBBEAN IBAs LACK PROTECTION               
 
There are now 283 internationally designated Important Bird Areas (IBAs) in
the Caribbean - sites that are key for the conservation of birds and
biodiversity, and that are the building blocks for conservation planning. 
 
This Caribbean network of key sites faces a large number of threats,
however. Most disturbingly, 43 percent of these IBAs are wholly outside
formally protected areas. "Not only do almost half the sites lack any kind
of protection, but a number of areas described as parks have no proper
infrastructure or staff, and many lack management plans", said David Wege,
BirdLife International's Caribbean Program Manager.
 
Ideally, the IBA network can be used as a tool to review existing national
protected areas systems, identify gaps in coverage, and identify candidate
sites for expansion or designation of protected areas to address these gaps.
 
The number of IBAs in the Caribbean identified per territory varies from one
each in Bermuda, Navassa, and Saba, to 39 in the Bahamas. They range in size
from Bayfield Pond and East Point Pond in Barbados - both one hectare - to
the 530,695 hectare Ciénaga de Zapata in Cuba.
 
Fifty-one of the Caribbean's threatened species (11 Critically Endangered,
18 Endangered and 22 Vulnerable) are represented within the Caribbean IBA
network. Ten threatened species (all national endemics) are each thought to
occur in just a single IBA.
 
Under the best of circumstances, the network should assist national
governments and donors to meet their commitments under international
agreements (including the new Ramsar agreement outlined in the previous news
item), a fact that is particularly important for the 43 percent of IBAs in
the Caribbean which lack protection.
 
Information on Caribbean IBAs can be accessed from this page, where you can
select a location from the island/country list:
http://www.birdlife.org/regional/caribbean/factsheet.html
 
You can find more information about IBAs in the U.S. through the National
Audubon Society's Important Bird Area website:
http://www.audubon.org/bird/iba/
 
 
BOOK NOTES: BIRD ART, BIRD SCIENCE
 
The adjectives "beautiful, unique, and thoughtful" probably best describe
HUMANS, NATURE, AND BIRDS by Darryl Wheye and Donald Kennedy (Yale Univ.
Press 2008). This book is beautiful because it presents spectacular bird art
in an elegant fashion; it is unique because it introduces the reader into a
virtual "gallery" contained in two separate "floors," each containing
thematic presentations for individual "rooms"; and it is thoughtful because
it is "science art," telling the reader something about the natural world,
how it works, and how we humans fit in.
 
The artwork is mindboggling in variety, ranging from cave paintings to
French rococo, and from Audubon to Norman Rockwell and American minimal
realism. For those interested in a chronology of bird art, technology, and
bird study, a 23 page appendix more than suffices - it also delights.
 
For anyone looking for a "different" kind of book for that special birder,
artist, or conservationist this holiday season, you need not look any
further.
 
 
TIP OF THE MONTH: CBC ENJOYMENT
 
'Tis the season! It's almost time to participate in a Christmas Bird Count
(CBC), an annual seasonal event that's been running since 1900. Not only
does the CBC contribute to the role played by "citizen scientists" through
the collection of long-term winter bird population data, but it is also a
great way to have fun by participating in a community birding event. The CBC
period extends from 14 December 2008 to 4 January 2009. For more details on
the 109th Christmas Bird Count - including how to get involved - see:
http://www.audubon.org/Bird/cbc/
 
 
MINNESOTA MONEY FOR WILDLIFE AND WILD PLACES
 
While the country was watching votes for the fate of Presidential tickets
and Congressional seats, birds and wildlife was winning big in the state of
Minnesota.
 
For at least a decade, wildlife supporters in that state had been talking
about getting a portion of the state's sales tax used to support wildlife.
This year, after the blending of a very broad coalition of conservation,
environmental, and arts groups, a state constitutional amendment was offered
to the voters of Minnesota. The proposed clean water, land, and legacy
constitutional amendment would hike the state's sales tax by 3/8 of 1
percent for 25 years, distributing an estimated $240 million to $300 million
a year among four areas: clean water, wildlife habitat, arts and culture,
and parks and trails.
 
Despite opposition from a number of groups, including the state's Chamber of
Commerce, the Minnesota Farm Bureau, and the National Taxpayers Union, 56
percent of Minnesota voters backed the clean water, land and legacy
amendment.
 
Each of four separate funds will likely use a governance model that calls
for a council of citizens, state employees, and elected officials with
demonstrated expertise to choose between proposed projects for funding. The
Minnesota legislature will make final funding decisions on the proposed
projects.
 
In addition, the funds are to be divided four ways: 33 percent to clean
water, 33 percent to wildlife habitat, 19.75 percent to cultural heritage
and 14.25 percent to parks and trails.
 
Minnesota now joins a small group of states - e.g., Missouri and Arkansas -
where a portion of the state sales tax will go to wildlife. What's best
about the Minnesota model is that because the measure was on the ballot and
is now an amendment to the Minnesota Constitution, the state legislature
cannot overturn it. (The current state sales tax in Minnesota is 6.5
percent, to which an additional 3/8 percent will now be added.).
 
Bird and wildlife supporters hail the amendment as a way to meet critical
needs after years of chronic underfunding.
 
 
EVERGLADES DEAL BEING READJUSTED
 
In July, we described an impending deal where the U.S. Sugar Corporation,
the nation's largest producer of cane sugar, would sell to the state of
Florida 187,000 acres of property (or about 300 square miles) in the
northern Everglades for $1.75 billion:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/julSBC08.html#TOC02
 and
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin/july07.html
 
Last month it was announced that the company has slimmed down the deal,
intending to sell 181,000 acres of farmland to the state, now for $1.34
billion. U.S. Sugar would retain its mill, citrus processing facilities, and
other physical assets. Despite this cutback, this deal would still help
restore an enormous part of the northern Everglades, while allowing the
company to stay in business.
 
U.S. Sugar would lease its former land from the state for the next seven
crop cycles, paying a total of about $60 million. 
 
The revised agreement would grant the South Florida Water Management
District, the state's overseer of the purchase, the right to take large
chunks of the property over that time, with most of the company's land
continuing to be farmed until the state needed it to reconnect Lake
Okeechobee to the Everglades National Park and Florida Bay.
 
Needless to say, this restoration is vital for Florida's waterbirds.
 
The next big step will be to raise the $1.34 billion, primarily with bonds,
amid a financial crisis. Upon approval from the district's governing board
at its meeting this month - the final hurdle to state approval - the real
planning process will begin. A two-year planning period to determine what's
best for the Everglades is now anticipated.
 
- - - - - - - - -
You can access past E-bulletins on the National Wildlife Refuge Association
(NWRA) website:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
 and on the birding pages for Steiner Binoculars
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin.html
                                    
If you wish to distribute all or parts of any of the monthly Birding
Community E-bulletins, we simply request that you mention the source of any
material used. (Include a URL for the E-bulletin archives, if possible.) 
 
If you have any friends or co-workers who want to get onto the monthly
E-bulletin mailing list, have them contact either:
            
            Wayne R. Petersen, Director
            Massachusetts Important Bird Areas (IBA) Program
            Mass Audubon
            718/259-2178
             
                        or
            Paul J. Baicich            
            410/992-9736
             
                                                            
We never lend or sell our E-bulletin recipient list.