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FW: Birding Community E-bulletin - October 2009

From:

Norm Saunders

Reply-To:

Norm Saunders

Date:

Tue, 6 Oct 2009 18:37:39 -0400

 

 

From: Paul J. Baicich [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Tuesday, October 06, 2009 5:24 PM
To: Paul J. Baicich
Cc: Wayne Petersen
Subject: Birding Community E-bulletin - October 2009

 


THE BIRDING COMMUNITY E-BULLETIN
            October 2009
 
 
This Birding Community E-bulletin is being distributed 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):
www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
 
 
RARITY FOCUS
 
There were some fabulous candidates for our Rarity Focus this month.
 
One was a sand-plover found near Staunton, Virginia by Allen Larner and Ed
and Nancy Lawler on 6 September. The bird remained until at least the
afternoon of 8 September and was seen by a number of delighted observers.
The specific identity of the bird - Greater Sand-Plover or Lesser
Sand-Plover - remains a question. Photos by several photographers and other
details may be found here:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/wendeldh/3895576088/
 
Another Rarity Focus candidate species was a European Golden-Plover found by
Andy Urquhart on 14 September, near Bombay Hook NWR in Delaware. ,. It was
also observed by a few other birders the next morning who watched it for
about 30 minutes before it flew off, never to be relocated. To get details
check: 
http://jeffreyagordon.com/2009/09/european-golden-plover-near-smyrna-de-phot
o-by-anthony-gonzon/ 
 
A third rarity contender last month was a Black-tailed Gull at Port Burwell
Provincial Park in Ontario on the edge of Lake Erie. The gull was found on
28 September by Brandon Holden, and seen, again, but only by a few birders,
the next day. Photos of the bird can be found here:
http://www.peregrineprints.com/ind__WhatsNew.htm
 
Despite the three excellent rarity candidates above, our number one choice
this month was a Western Spindalis story from Florida. 
 
In early September, it was announced that a pair of Western Spindalis had
successfully fledged three young in Everglades National Park at Long Pine
Key. The park did not want the nest location made public until the birds
fledged, and the last young bird fledged on 1 September. 
 
This represents the first fully confirmed U.S. nesting record of Western
Spindalis. Curiously, there actually seemed to be six birds involved: one
adult male, two adult females, and the three young. Even more remarkable,
the species has been reported at this location in previous years, suggesting
that nesting attempts may have occurred in the Long Pine Key vicinity
before.
 
The Western Spindalis, called Stripe-headed Tanager until 2000, is normally
a vagrant from the West Indies, and it is a species we have previously
reported under our Rarity Focus. For readers unfamiliar with the bird, see
National Geographic, p 402-403, the "big" Sibley, page 460, or Kaufman page
320-321. The first-ever observation of the species in Florida was in 1957,
but there have since been over 50 records in the state, mostly of the
black-backed race from the Bahamas.
 
Here are the full details and photos of the Long Pine Key birds taken by
Larry Manfredi:
http://www.southfloridabirding.com/html/Western%20Spindalis%20nesting.htm 
 
 
A SEARCH FOR EXTREME RARITIES
 
In late August, BirdLife International announced the launch of a remarkable
campaign to find 47 rare birds thought to be possibly extinct. This is a
global bid to try to confirm the continued existence of 47 species of bird
whose existence has not be verified for decades, with at least one species
unobserved for 184 years.
 
The campaign was announced at the 21st British Birdwatching Fair, which this
year had as its symbol the rare and endangered Cebu Flowerpecker of the
Philippines. The Cebu Flowerpecker, a species feared extinct by the early
20th Century, was rediscovered in 1992, just before the last remnants of its
forest home were to be destroyed.
 
"The mention of species such as Ivory-billed Woodpecker, Jamaican Petrel,
Hooded Seedeater, Himalayan Quail and Pink-headed Duck will set scientists'
pulses racing. Some of these species haven't been seen by any living person,
but birdwatchers around the world still dream of rediscovering these
long-lost ghosts," said Marco Lambertini, BirdLife International's chief
executive.
 
The end goal of the project is, of course, the conservation of bird species.
Should these birds be rediscovered, serious conservation efforts to keep
them in existence will have to be launched.
 
For more details, see
http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2009/08/lost_and_found.html
 
 
FIJI PETREL PHOTOGRAPHED
 
Also in the category of rarities, the very first Fiji Petrel specimen ever
collected was taken in 1855 on the island of Gau, in the Fiji Island group;
a second was not taken until 1984. Since then, there have only been a
handful of reports, mostly of birds colliding with houses on Gau. Until this
year nobody had ever positively identified the species at sea.
 
At long last a live Fiji Petrel was photographed at sea this spring, and the
news and photo were announced and published last month. For more
information, see here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/sep/11/fiji-petrel-first-photogra
phs 
 
 
GALAPAGOS ISLAND: GOAT FREE
 
Island birds are notably vulnerable, given their potential exposure to
invasive rodents, plant-eaters, and disease. Earlier this year, the island
of Santiago, the fourth largest island (226 square miles) in the Galapagos
Archipelago, was declared goat-free. Goats had been released on the island
in the 1920s, and by the 1990s the expanded offspring of these goats had
destroyed much of the shrub and tree vegetation in the sensitive highlands
of the island.
 
Santiago is home to nine species of Darwin's finches, including the unique
tool-using Woodpecker Finch, and also to threatened species such as the
Galapagos Rail and Galapagos Petrel. 
 
This extensive goat-eradication project, led by the Galapagos National Park
Service and Charles Darwin Foundation, makes this the largest eradication of
invasive mammals from an island ever achieved. With no goats on the island,
it is expected that vegetation recovery will be rapid, hopefully resulting
in substantially increased bird populations.
 
For more information, see:
http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/galapagos-goats-finch
es-47082704#ixzz0Plx43qSm 
 
 
IBA NEWS: MBCC SECURES MORE LAND FOR THE REFUGE SYSTEM
 
The Migratory Bird Conservation Commission (MBCC) meets about three or four
times a year. The Commission is authorized to oversee the expenditure of
Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp funds and several smaller,
funding sources for the purchase and lease of migratory bird habitat for the
Refuge System. The meeting in early September was particularly significant.
 
The Commission approved the expenditure of nearly $8 million in Stamp funds
to add more than 4,000 acres to seven units of the Refuge System. Six of the
seven were part of, or adjacent to, recognized Important Bird Areas (IBAs).
The six IBA-related acquisitions were:
    Tulare Basin Wildlife Management Area, Kern and Tulare Counties,
California, with an acquisition of 1,042 acres of easements to protect
wetlands and uplands in order to stop the gradual erosion of habitat that
supports migrating waterfowl, 
    Blackwater NWR, Dorchester County, Maryland, with an acquisition of 823
acres to preserve marsh, shoreline, wooded swamp, and forested upland
habitat, 
    Bombay Hook MWR , Kent County, Delaware, with an acquisition of 273
acres to promote and enhance habitat for a diversity of species,
particularly American Black Ducks, 
    Silvio O. Conte NWR , Pondicherry and Mohawk River Divisions, Coos
County, New Hampshire, with an acquisition of 761 acres to preserve and
protect important waterfowl feeding, nesting, and resting habitat, 
    Bear River NWR , Box Elder County, Utah, with an acquisition of 700
acres to allow for more efficient use of water resources on adjacent refuge
lands that are critical for managing wetland bird habitat, and 
    Lake Umbagog NWR , Coos County, New Hampshire and Oxford County, Maine,
with an acquisition of 438 acres of emergent and forested freshwater
wetlands that provide nesting and waterfowl brood-rearing habitat.
 
The MBCC which has been in operation since the late 1920s is a model of
thoughtful and bipartisan bird conservation that operates virtually under
the radar, and is largely underappreciated or simply misunderstood. 
 
For additional information about worldwide IBA programs, and those across
the U.S., check the National Audubon Society's Important Bird Area program
web site at: 
www.audubon.org/bird/iba/ 
 
 
NEW RULES ON EAGLES
 
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) released a final rule last month
that will allow limited incidental "take" or disturbance of eagles through
public safety activities or other development projects. The permits will
only be granted if they will not impact the goal of maintaining or
increasing eagle populations.
 
The Bald Eagle was removed from the Endangered Species Act in 2007, and
incidental take permits had been allowed under the ESA. However, there were
no similar provisions under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act once
the eagle was delisted. 
 
There are now two new permit types that will be allowed. One would be
permitted when the disturbance is associated with, but not the purpose of,
an activity (e.g., during real estate development). The second would allow
the removal of nests under limited circumstances, particularly if they
create safety concerns (e.g., near airports). Deliberate killing of eagles
is still outlawed. In order to manage these population impacts, each FWS
region will have a limit of no more than five percent of the estimated
annual regional eagle productivity. 
 
Interestingly, Bald Eagles and Golden Eagles represent two very different
management challenges. "The Bald Eagle population has rebounded in the past
decades, and its recovery poses the challenge of managing a healthy
population still protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.
But unlike the Bald Eagle, the Golden Eagle population is not expanding, and
may be in decline," said Paul Schmidt, the USFWS Assistant Director for
Migratory Birds. The USFWS has stricter limits for authorizing take on
Golden Eagles, with permits issued only for safety emergencies.
 
The new rules will go into effect next month.
 
For more details, see:
http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2009/09/11/11greenwire-interior-releases-new-ru
les-for-disturbances-to-892.html 
 
 
BOOK NOTES: ANOTHER NEW SHOREBIRD GUIDE (CHANDLER REVISITED)
 
Shorebird aficionados should be pleased to learn of another new and well
produced shorebird photo guide by well-known British shorebird expert and
photographer, Richard Chandler.

Despite the use of a slightly different terminology for describing shorebird
molt than many American birders currently use, the many high quality
photographs and succinct plumage and identification descriptions more than
compensate for this. Easy to read maps and useful introductory material on
shorebirds and their identification make this a fine supplement to an of the
more general bird field guides.
 
At $35, Princeton University Press has produced Chandler's new SHOREBIRDS OF
THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE with its 134 species accounts, represents yet
another quality, if not somewhat hefty, specialty bird publication from
Princeton University Press (2009).
 
If you like shorebirds and you enjoy fine photographs, you'll want this
book.
 
 
TIP OF THE MONTH: USE THOSE CALLING CARDS
 
A year ago in March we hinted that at some point we would describe the use
of "birder calling cards" left behind at business establishments as one of
our tips of the month. Well, the time has come.
 
Your two E-bulletin editors recently returned from the Midwest Birding
Symposium in northwestern Ohio where over 800 participants were each given a
small supply of such "leave behind" cards which indicated that "A bird
watcher has patronized your business. Please support wildlife and habitat
preservation." Undoubtedly, many business establishments were flooded with
these cards during the symposium weekend.
 
These cards work. They raise an awareness of birder tourist dollars
circulating among businesses in communities. We have heard of a number of
positive results from all sorts of locations, - results that increase birder
visibility and aid support for bird conservation.
 
In case you haven't seen sample cards, have a look at these (all good for
adoption, editing, or further local development):
http://www.bsbobird.org/birding/pdf/BSBO's_Birders_Calling_card.pdf 
http://www.bluebirdnut.com/Birding_Calling_Cards.htm
http://www.ncbirdingtrail.org/Documents/NCBT_CallingCards.pdf
http://www.floridabirdingtrail.com/callingcard.html
 
 
INITIAL CHESAPEAKE BAY REPORTS RELEASED
 
In June, it was reported that President Obama signed an Executive Order
establishing the Chesapeake Bay as a "National Treasure," and mandated that
various federal agencies carry out specific draft plans for the survival of
a healthy Chesapeake:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/junSBC09.html#TOC02
 
Last month, federal agencies released the seven draft reports. They contain
a range of proposed strategies for accelerating cleanup of the nation's
largest estuary and its vast watershed, all of which are vital to birdlife.
The draft reports collectively call for increased accountability and
improved performance from pollution control, habitat protection, and land
conservation programs at all levels of government. The draft reports could
become the first step in a new approach aimed at restoring and protecting
the Chesapeake Bay and its waterways in the region, as defined by executive
order. The reports are available at:
http://executiveorder.chesapeakebay.net
 
 
MANX SHEARWATER PAIR PRODUCE VIABLE YOUNG IN MAINE
 
Manx Shearwaters nest throughout the eastern North Atlantic, especially in
Iceland and Great Britain. Although they have visited potential western
North Atlantic nesting locations for decades, their first North American
breeding was not confirmed until 1973 when a pair produced a chick on
Penikese Island in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. In 1977 another breeding
pair was confirmed on an island in Newfoundland; however, since then there
have only been hints that the species might be nesting in the U.S.
 
In 1997a Manx Shearwater was seen on the 22-acre Matinicus Rock off
mid-coast Maine, and a nesting burrow was found the following year.
(Matinicus Rock is part of the Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife
Refuge.) An egg was also found in this burrow in 2005, but it never hatched.
In 2006 and 2007, up to 19 Manx Shearwaters were seen around the island, and
eggless burrows were found in 2008. 
 
Finally, last month, researchers from the USFWS and Audubon's Seabird
Restoration Program discovered a young Manx Shearwater in a relatively
shallow burrow at the site - the first time in the United States the species
is known to have reached an age old enough to fly.. The burrow was one of
six found on the island. 
 
"This is what we all work and hope for;" said Stephen Kress, director of
Audubon's Seabird Restoration Program. 
 
 
 JOINT VENTURE BILL IN CONGESS
 
Migratory Bird Joint Ventures - regional partnerships administered by the
USFWS along with state, local, and private partners to protect bird habitat
- have proven to be one of the most effective bird conservation approaches
in practice today. Currently there are almost two dozen joint ventures at
work across the continent, ranging from long-established JVs to those in
various stages of development. 
 
JVs have effectively created models for prioritizing and solving
conservation problems and restoring habitats critical to conserving
declining and potentially declining bird species.
 
H.R. 2188, the Joint Ventures for Bird Habitat Conservation Act of 2009,
would formalize the status of the JV approach, further requiring the
Secretary of the Interior to develop an official framework for approving,
establishing, and supporting JVs in the future. 
 
Specifically, the legislation would:
    Encourage the USFWS and other federal land management, natural resource,
and agriculture agencies to engage and participate on JV management boards,
facilitating interagency collaboration on important bird conservation
issues,
    Strengthen the USFWS in order to approve JV implementation plans and
provide funds and technical assistance to JV management boards and partners,
and
    Facilitate the use of grants, cooperative agreements, contracts, and
other mechanisms to move funds between partners to accomplish the JV
mission.
 
The Joint Ventures for Bird Habitat Conservation Act has already passed the
House of Representatives. It awaits action in the Senate, with Senator Ben
Cardin (D-MD) indicating a major willingness to bring the bill before the
Senate Water and Wildlife subcommittee that he chairs.
 
 
CORRECTION: PHILADELPHIA URBAN BIRD TREATY
 
Last month we described supportive activity in Philadelphia under the Urban
Conservation Treaty for Migratory Birds program held at the Philadelphia Zoo
that coincided with a meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union. We
inadvertently stated that Philadelphia was a new participant in the Urban
Conservation Treaty for Migratory Birds program, when in fact it was already
an established participant. The ceremony actually acknowledged deepening
activity in the treaty program. Details can be found here:
http://www.fws.gov/news/NewsReleases/showNews.cfm?newsId=190C5617-E54D-B422-
631F3B767CCCFC66 
 
 
NEWS OF SHAMELESS SELF-PROMOTION 
 
Since the Birding Community E-bulletin is in its sixth year of publication
and distribution, we are sharing remarks from some of our readers. As
previously noted, we will include a comment or two each month this year.
These will be placed at the very end of each E-bulletin so you can simply
stop reading at this point if you'd like! 
 
 
"This is The New York Times of birding electronic newsletters. I've been
getting newsletters, news items, and press releases about birds and birding
for more than 20 years. But the Birding Community E-Bulletin puts all others
in the shade. It's always meaty, informative, and insightful. Each item in
every issue seems more interesting than the last. It's refreshing to have
someone distill the most important bird-related information from all the
clutter. I read every single issue."
             - Bill Thompson, III, Editor, BIRD WATCHER'S DIGEST
 
 
"Like others, I am flooded with e-mail, including a dozen or more periodic
bulletins and alerts from bird-oriented groups. One stands out and always
gets priority - the Birding Community E-bulletin. I read it thoroughly and
usually save them for future reference. It is just the right mix of serious
conservation news - and unlike most, it brings us those rare nuggets of good
news, too! - along with fun birding news. And I always know that the reports
are researched carefully and are accurate and free of exaggeration or bias."
            - Ellen Paul, Executive Director, Ornithological Council
 
- - - - - - - - -
You can access past E-bulletins on the National Wildlife Refuge Association
(NWRA) website:
www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.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.