March/April 2015 FOUR HARBORS AUDUBON SOCIETY Serving Stony Brook, Setauket, Port Jefferson, Mount Sinai, Smithtown and the surrounding areas THE FOUR HARBORS s .. . e su i is In th HERON A Message from the President 2 First Hint of Early Spring Migration 3 Don’t Let Go—Balloon Release, Part 1 5 Natives—Are they Really Necessary 7 Interview with a Young Birder 10 Birds of the Month 13 Trivia 15-16 Rare Bird Reports 17 Upcoming Events 3/14/15: Avalon Gardens Bird Walk, 9 a.m. 4/11/15: Avalon Gardens Bird Walk, 8 a.m. 3/14/15: Frank Melville Memorial Park/Mill Pond Bird Walk, 11 a.m. 4/11/15: Frank Melville Memorial Park/Mill Pond Bird Walk, 11 a.m. 3/20/15-3/22/15: LI Natural History Conference, Brookhaven National Lab 4/25/15: Lily Pond Park & Preserve Bird Walk. 8 a.m. 3/22/14: FHAS Meeting and Presentation of film, 5/9/15: International Migratory Bird Day The Condor’s Shadow. 2 p.m., 5/16/15: Birds and Migration Around the Frank Port Jefferson Library Melville Pond, 11:30 a.m., register Emma Clark 3/24/15—Woodcock walk, Avalon Preserve, Library just before dusk, meet at the Barn 1 March/April 2015 A Message from the President As I write this, it is below zero with the wind chill. Tried to do some bird watching today but my fingers were too cold to focus my binoculars! Please continue to keep those feeders stocked and water available for our avian friends. If you see an animal in distress please bring it to Sweetbriar Nature Center (call first 631-979-6344). You may be aware that Congress will soon be attempting to pass legislation that will be detrimental to wildlife and their habitats. It is imperative that you make your opinions known to your legislators! Letters really do make a difference, and it is easy to do in our computer age. If you would like to get involved, and are not already receiving information about environmental issues, please go to Advocacy & Action. If you have older children/grandchildren, get them involved as well! We all have a voice and need to speak up for the land and creatures that have none. Please join us at our next meeting at Port Jefferson Library on March 22 at 2 p.m.: an amazing documentary, The Shadow of the Condor, will be the highlight, as we learn how these unique raptors were saved from extinction. Hope to see you all there - the same week as the ospreys return from South America ! Advocacy & Action View on www.audubon.org Susan Krause Four Harbors Audubon Society Board Susan Krause, President Luci Betti-Nash, Vice President Sue Beck, Field Trip Director Joyann Cirigliano Atlantic Flyway Projects Coordinator Patrice Domeischel Communications/Newsletter Joe Kelly, Photographer Jim LaRosa, Webmaster Elaine Maas, Education Coordinator Diane Spitz, Treasurer/Conservation Chair 2 March/April 2015 The First Hint of Early Spring Migration Luci Betti-Nash It seems like the winter will never end, but this morning (February 12) I had a very slight hint that Spring might actually happen! After strapping my ‘SnowTrex’ onto my boots, to keep from slipping on the ice, and bundling up (to feel like I did when I was about 6 years old with the old head to toe snowsuits that prevented us from having normal limb movements), I went out to fill my feeders. After I got back inside, I looked out of the window, and saw an unfamiliar shape in the branches of the Black Walnut tree. Ah, that Juvenile Red-tailed Hawk was back again! I don’t think he has his hunting technique perfected just yet. He always seems to go away empty “taloned.” I find it amusing that the birds, though initially frightened away when he flies in, come back fairly quickly even as he sits just a short distance from where they feed, but the squirrels know to stay out of sight. Soon he leaves, and the squirrels come back, and all seems wintery and well. Photo by Joe Kelly The usual suspects were there waiting for me; two Chickadees, a Titmouse - maybe two, lots of Cardinals and White-throated Sparrows, a few Mourning Doves, a Downy Woodpecker, the one little Swamp Sparrow that has been hanging around for several Photo by Joe Kelly It’s time for me to go to work, so out the front door I go (where I cannot see the feeders) and, as I try not to slip on my ice-covered driveway, I am hearing something that is so calming, and warming, and yet, it takes me several minutes to process that I am hearing Grackles… is it Grackles?, or… yes, and Red-winged Blackbirds! Lots of them! They are right on time! My ears are telling me that it is a chilly early Spring day, and even though it is only mid-February, I feel much warmer now knowing that soon, probably when you are reading this, it will be March, and we will be hearing not only Grackles and Red-winged Blackbirds, but it will be Photo by Joe Kelly time to go listening and looking for the Woodcock displaying in Avalon. There will be more birds weeks, and my 3 Rusty Blackbirds who have been singing, and by mid-March we should start seeing faithfully showing up for the past 3 winters around Black-crowned Night Herons, Belted Kingfishers, this time. I said hello to all of them, filled the feed- and maybe an Eastern Phoebe. Next, the Cormoers, cleared the ice off of a spot in my little pond so rants will be back adding to their nests over the Stony Brook Mill Pond, Osprey will start showing they would have some water too, and went back up, and maybe a Yellowlegs. It means that the into the house. Swallows, Chimney Swifts, and Herons, will not be far behind. 3 March/April 2015 The First Hint of Early Spring Migration (cont.) As May approaches we’ll hear more familiar songs like the Eastern Towhee, Great-crested Flycatcher, Northern Oriole, Wood Thrush, ..... oh the Wood Thrush song! Won’t that be heaven to hear? But for now, we must get through the rest of winter; a bit more snow today, a possible blizzard this weekend, more snow next week, and temperatures around 0º F with wind chills well below 0º. Yes, it’s still very much winter in February, but the thought of hearing those early spring sounds And then come the Warblers! Some will be the warms me. I will keep those songs of the early familiar songs that we will hear all summer like Spring Grackle and Red-winged Blackbird in my the Yellow, Blue-winged, and Yellowthroat minds ear, while I continue to feed my winter Warblers, and the American Redstart, and some birds so that they can be fit enough to migrate will be those beauties that are just passing through, teasing us with a glimpse of their brilliant back to their breeding grounds. And as I watch the colors and a confusion of buzzy songs; the Black- snow fall, I can be warmed in the knowledge that Spring is really not that far away. The birds hint at throated Blue, Black-throated Green, Chestnutthat now and then. sided, Blackburnian and Canada Warblers, to name only a few! Oh I feel warmer already. Some of the birds that should be returning to your backyard in March and April are: Eastern Phoebe Brown Thrasher Blue-headed Vireo Palm Warbler House Wren Pine Warbler Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Yellow-rumped Warbler Golden-crowned Kinglet Black and White Warbler Ruby-crowned Kinglet Yellow Warbler Eastern Bluebird Prairie Warbler American Robin Eastern Towhee Yellow Warbler, Photo by Joe Kelly 4 Don't Let Go : Balloon Release, Part I March/April 2015 Elaine Maas It was a warm day in early August of last year. We had spent most of the afternoon at Smith Point County Park. Around 5pm, we collected our belongings, stuffed the towels into our bags, and repacked empty food containers in our cooler. With one last look at the ocean crashing behind us, we turned and made our way slowly through the sand towards the parking lot. We were just past the concession stand when I saw a group of 25, maybe 30 people, off to the side, holding hands in a circle. One woman stood apart from the group, reading to the others from a small notebook. I stopped for a moment, not wanting to intrude on this intimate ceremony. Instead, I waited. Obviously a memorial to someone dear to them all, I said to myself, as they respectively and intermittently made comments aloud within the circle. A voice behind me pardoned herself, "...excuse me, thank you, let me through, thanks ...excuse me." The young woman walked past us, and towards the group carrying a fistful of ribbons, all of which were attached to 2 dozen or more inflated red balloons. The balloons fought each other in the breeze, as the girl handed them out one by one to each person in the circle. No!, I thought. Oh, no! Please don't do this - PLEASE don't release them!!! string or ribbon will come back down to the earth. Some of it will wash ashore. Some will remain out in the oceans, contributing to the growing swirl of trash in our seas. Balloons, even the so-called 'biodegradable' ones, last from months to years in the environment. What are the consequences of these balloons remaining in our oceans? Whole balloons and their pieces are ingested by a wide variety of marine animals including seabirds, shorebirds, fish, sea turtles, manatees, and whales. Ingested balloons cause starvation in several ways. For one, they can obstruct the digestive tract, preventing real nutritional food from passing through, causing painful blockage, and eventual starvation. In other instances, balloons will partially fill the stomach area, but not pass through, giving the animal a false sense of fullness. This is known as dietary dilution, and can lead to starvation from a lack of proper food intake. Ribbons, like other filamentous marine debris such as fishing line and nets, entangle beaks, legs, flippers, and fins, oftentimes with fatal consequences. Plastic inserts, sometimes used to help inflate the balloons, get swallowed by animals, causing blockage or starvation. Colorful mylar balloons slowly fade into translucent sacks in But of course, they did. They let go. the sea, appearing ever so much like edible jellyfish Each balloon gently drifted up into the sky towards to marine life, such as leatherback sea turtles whose the east. As the balloons made their way over the primary food of choice happens to be translucent ocean and faded from sight, this group of twenty-five jellyfish. people waved. And then, they gathered up their belongings, and walked towards to parking lot, and From the years 2001 - 2006, the US Environmental presumably went back to their lives. Protection Agency funded a comprehensive study to I had to wonder. itemize pieces of debris found along the coastlines in Why do some people think that, for one moment of the U.S. This study was the first scientific analysis of time, for any reason at all, it's okay to release litter marine debris in our coastal states, and was followed by additional analysis by the EPA in 2010. The study into the air? delineates the amounts and types of marine debris in each of the coastal states. Certain facts stand out: (1) Let's be clear. approximately 50% of all coastline debris washing up on shore is definitively land-based, that is, it originalBalloon releasing is littering. Moreover, it is the type of littering that has disastrous consequences on ly came from a source on land; (2) there are 5 main types of land-based debris: plastic straws, plastic botthe wildlife in our environment. Every piece of the tles, plastic bags, metal beverage cans, and balloons. released balloon - the latex or mylar, as well as the 5 Don’t Let Go…(cont.) Marine debris contaminates every ocean on earth, floating from north pole to south pole, and through the seas at the equator. It is found on the ocean floor as well, and only some of it washes up on shore. Efforts here in the United States by the EPA in just one year alone, 2008, removed almost 4 million pounds of debris from our coast line, and nearby underwater sites. Given these facts, I ask again: why is it okay to litter into the air? Earlier during the same week that I had viewed the memorial service, I had walked the shoreline of Smith Point, west of the concession stand, where the County Park becomes the Fire Island National Seashore. As I randomly looked for shells, I noticed a purple ribbon first and, on a hunch, tugged at it, pulling a faded silver mylar balloon out of the sand. I spotted an orange ribbon next, another mylar. Then a few pieces of latex balloons, with ribbons entangled, attached to seaweed, driftwood, and plastic debris. I stopped looking for shells, and started looking for ribbons. In all I found 27 balloons that morning, in the course of two hours, about the same number as those released by the group later that same week, in the course of two minutes. March/April 2015 too. Let's start this by calling "balloon releasing" what it is: LITTERING. Simply put: if you are thinking about it: DON"T. If someone you know is thinking about it, educate them. Do you want to launch a special event? Memorialize a loved one ? Celebrate one of life's milestones? Do find another way. Help others find a different way too. Sometimes, people just don't know. And by the time they inflate the balloons and bring them to the beach or the park, it will probably be too late to convince them otherwise. Here are some environmentally-friendly alternatives to releasing balloons that may be used for festive occasions or to memorialize a friend or family member: Environmentally-Friendly Alternatives The fact is, every time I go to one of our ocean |Balloons Blow… Don't Let Them Go! beaches, I bring a few plastic bags to cart trash back. And every time, I find balloons, sometimes a dozen, sometimes more, depending on the amount of time I've spent, and/or how many I can carry back. Most of the time, the balloons strings are entangled around seaweed, but every once in a while, they've been wrapped around the remains of an animal. Twice in my experience I have (photo courtesy of Marine Conservation Society) found them entangled around the body of a gull. We can do our share to prevent this. Let's start off 2015 with a personal goal not to release balloons into the environment. And let's commit ourselves to educating others about this See our next newsletter for Don't Let GO: Part II : we'll discuss more about balloon release: history, legislation, and moving forward. 6 Natives: Are They Really Necessary? March/April 2015 Joyann Cirigliano I’m not a native plant snob. Far from it. I have this really gorgeous Japanese Fiber Banana growing in my backyard. It shoots up 16 to 20 feet every season, then dies back to the ground in winter, and pops up again the following spring. It’s an awesome specimen plant and anyone who sees it usually exclaims, “What IS it?”, “I didn’t know you could grow bananas around here!”, “Holy Cow, those leaves are HUGE!” or some other gratifying comment. I really love that plant. Sadly, I’m the only one in my local ecosystem who does. None of the critters who call my yard home show any interest in it at all. There are no holes in the leaves from insects eating it, no holes in the dirt from small mammals nibbling on the roots and the birds rarely even land on it because there are no built-in perches. Don’t get me wrong. My banana has been used for food. Sort of. I have a few Hispanic friends who occasionally ask if I could bring them a leaf or two, to make tamales. Another friend has expressed an interest in feeding some of it to the tropical South American caterpillars he sporadically raises... yes, I have some odd friends... but the point is, the plant is from Japan and nothing around here eats it. And that’s a problem. At this point you may be thinking, “Wait, what? Why is this a problem? I’d give my left arm for a plant that the insects don’t bother!” And that’s where you’d be wrong. We need those insects. They are relied upon as food for insect-eating mammals and birds. If you don’t have plants that the insects can eat, there won’t be enough insects to feed everyone else. In addition, my banana doesn’t make edible fruit. And even if it did, none of the wildlife up here in NY would know what to do with it....unless someone’s parrot got loose. Plus if it actually made edible fall fruit, like the invasive Japanese Porcelain berry I keep trying to eradicate from my front yard, that fruit would probably be out-of synch with the type of berry that migrating birds need in fall...high protein, low sugar. Come to think of it, none of the insects eat the Porcelain berry’s leaves, either. And that IS a problem, because the birds DO eat Porcelain berries and then poop the seeds all over hither and yon, where they sprout to plague other peoples’ landscapes and Parklands and waste fields... and the terror spreads, like ‘The Blob!’ Plus the birds may be eating sugary berries, when they should be eating berries high in protein and fat, to give them enough energy to migrate. If you don’t think that’s a problem, try eating a giant bowl of ice cream, some cotton candy, and a dozen chocolate bars and see if YOU feel like running a Marathon... So, here’s this 20 foot tall, 8 foot wide plant taking up space in my yard, sucking up the sunshine, selfishly making food for only itself and giving nothing back. Basically, it’s an environmental version of a black hole, light and energy go in but nothing comes back out. If every plant in my yard was like that and all my neighbors had the same thing going on in their yards, the entire local ecosystem would come crashing down. The sun’s energy would come to screeching, grinding halt. Everything would starve. Environmental mayhem would ensue... It would be anarchy! Porcelain Berry Vine 7 Natives... (cont.) Okay, perhaps not anarchy. But holes would begin to form in the local food web. It’s sort of like the nails that hold your home together. You can lose a few without too much of a problem. Lose a couple, no one notices. Lose a decent amount and things start to sag, fall or break off. Lose too many and Ka-Blam! No more house. Not good. It works the same way with ecosystems. No matter what we think, we need plants and animals for the environmental services they provide, like making good soil, cleaning our water, and feeding the rest of the food chain. Especially insects, since it takes so many of them to feed everyone else. You see, they’re the bottom of the food chain, after plants. It takes tons of them to keep the food chain balanced without having other animal numbers drop. And our local insects need native plants. Native insects co-evolved with native plants. That’s just a fancy way of saying that ten thousand, or a hundred thousand, or a million years ago, insects started to eat plants. Of course, the plants didn’t like that and tried to kill the insects by poisoning them. Unbeknownst to most people, plants are exceptional chemists.. So, it was basically prehistoric chemical warfare. A certain type of plant developed a certain chemical toxin and killed off a whole heap of insects, except for certain insects which developed a tolerance to the toxin and kept munching. It took eons to develop this and it’s still going on to this day. Many plants have specialized toxins. Many insect species have developed tolerance to at least one toxin and exploit just that specific plant, which basically means that specific species can no longer eat other plants. Uh-oh. Can you see the ending to this particular train of thought? That’s why monarch caterpillars can eat milkweed and most other insects can’t. It’s also why monarch caterpillars taste disgusting to most birds...except for the birds and other animals that developed a tolerance for monarch caterpillars... and butterflies. Which is how the whole thing stays in balance. If we yank out all the milkweed to have nice grassy lawns, then we lose every single monarch butterfly, unless they can find some somewhere else. This is becoming March/April 2015 harder and harder to do as we build more homes and have less open space. Once the milkweed numbers dwindle too low to support the butterflies, no more monarchs. And there it is. Extinction. Or at least extirpation, which means extinction for a local population. Milkweed & Monarch Caterpillar Photo Joe Kelly Now picture this on a minuscule level. Even our soil has complex relationships. Microbes, bacteria, and fungi can go extinct when they no longer have the relationship they need with the plants they coevolved with. You’re probably thinking, “Big deal, so they go extinct. They cause all sorts of problems!” The scary thing is, even though some of them are harmful, there are many more that are good, and some of those are part of what keeps our soil healthy. It’s happening in our yards and farmlands. It’s also what’s happening now in many of the tropical rainforests, which is where a lot of our summer birds spend the winter. The trees are removed or burned and the microbes/fungi/bacteria that help make soil are depleted. The forest birds have little food. Grass is planted for cattle to graze, but the land wasn’t meant for grass, it was meant for many, many, many different species of plants, and the soil is actually made in the canopy, not on the ground. 8 March/April 2015 Natives…(cont.) When the trees are removed, so is the good soil, and the whole ecosystem suffers. The grass survives for a few years but once the nutrients in the soil are depleted, the grass languishes because they don’t have the proper soil microbes to support them. So, more forest is cut down to feed the cows. I sometimes wonder, ‘How much forest can you cut down before bad things happen?” I don’t know. But we may be around to find out.... H-m-m-m. Thoughtprovoking. Pretty harsh. I don’t really want to find out, do you? Now picture Long Island as it was a few hundred years ago—Oak/Pine forest or Oak/Beech forest. Actually American Chestnut forest, too, but don’t get me started on what we did to that poor tree... Chestnut blight brought in on imported Chinese Chestnut trees wiped the American Chestnuts out. So many of our plants and animals suffer from this kind of problem - invasive microbes, plant, and animal species that breed out of control because they’re no longer in their own native environment and have nothing to stop their numbers from multiplying out of control. And our plants and animals have no way to compete with them....but that’s an article for another time. The irony is that we imported the Chinese Chestnuts because they were resistant to our local insects. Sheesh ...and there’s the first few holes in the ecosystem. No more American Chestnuts, no more insects that specialize in eating the leaves of those chestnut trees. The turkey and grouse population plummeted because nuts were a substantial part of their diet. Then we cut down most of the oaks to establish ‘Suburbia’. nothing. Especially when sharp blades chop both lawn and the small amount of animal species that live in the lawn to smithereens. Now add the amount of fertilizers and chemicals we use yearly to keep up that lawn, because it didn’t evolve around here. Plus, there must be no unsightly weeds to mess things up or insects to eat the lawn. Now add to this desertlike landscape the mostly non-native plants that we usually plant by our houses. The ones which actually are native have an over-abundance of native insects on them because there’s no other food source to be found. Just like little oases in that grass desert. So, we spray non-specific pesticides to control the overabundance of insects. Which usually not only kills the pest insect but also kills any good insect that would eventually put the bad insect into balance with the ecosystem...oopsie. And we lose the native pollinators, because they’re not immune to pesticides, either. Less seeds develop because there are fewer native pollinators. Did I mention that native pollinators prefer native flowers? Less seed and berry production means fewer seed- and berry-eating native birds and other animals. Less insects mean less insect-eating birds and other animals. Hey, wait...it IS anarchy! Did I mention that 96% of our summer songbirds feed insects to their young? No? Did I mention that about 25% of a fox’s diet is made up of insects? No? Did I mention that many native insects rely on native plants for food? Or that many other insects rely on the plant-eating insects for food? How about the little factoid that we’ve lost about 40% of our bird population in the past 50 years? They need to eat, you The acorn numbers were severely depleted. Now we know. We all need to eat. Next time you see one of those commercials for starving children on TV, let it had an easier time finding the turkey and grouse with also be a reminder to think about your own yard and less trees in the way... and there went the rest of the what it’s doing to feed the locals. Then ask me if we turkey and grouse. Another couple of holes in the need native plants. ecosystem. Then we started growing grass for our lawns around our homes. And mowing it nice and short. You might as well plant a desert, because the plant and animal biodiversity in a lawn is next to 9 March/April 2015 An Interview with a Young Birder Patrice Domeischel Young birders these days are not as common as we would all like. We here at Four Harbors are very fortunate to know a young man with an insatiable thirst for knowledge and the enthusiasm endemic in those that are true lovers of nature. It is our great pleasure to know and bird with him. May I introduce Aidan Perkins. Q. Aidan, let me first ask you your age. A. I am 12 years old and turning 13 in March, and I am in 7th grade. Q. And how long have you been birding? A. I have been birding for about 2 1/2 years. When I first started, I didn’t know how to tell a Great Black-backed gull from a Ring-billed gull, I thought they were both ‘sea gulls’. I started to get more serious when I joined some local clubs like the Young Birders Club. I realized there was a lot to learn about birds and really started taking a serious interest and spending a lot of time looking through bird guides, exploring the area I live in and watching birding videos on line. Q. What would you say was the defining moment you caught the “birding bug?” A. That would be a couple of years ago when I was at Frank Melville Park, and it was loaded with all different ducks like Hooded Mergansers, Wood Ducks, Mallards and Northern Shovelers. I had seen pictures and videos before, but this was when I first realized all these great birds could be found by just looking around where I live. After that I wanted to go everywhere and start exploring. There are so many new birds to see when you first start looking seriously. It was very exciting. I went from being interested in birds to, as my parents would say, completely obsessed. Q. What bird, to date, has been your most exciting discovery? A. The Snowy Owl was my most exciting discovery so far. Last year we had a big irruption of Snowy Owls, and I started hearing about them being spotted on the South Shore. I was determined to try to find one. There is something about owls that I think everyone even non-birders find really cool. I had been reading reports and we had gone looking a few times, and we had no luck. On the fourth trip, my parents surprised me and pulled me out of school a little early, and we went to Dune Road to search. We spent about 2 hours searching when we finally saw one perched on a telephone pole right in front of us. We got out of the car to look, and he flew right over our heads! It was definitely my most exciting birding moment so far. Snowy Owl Q. And what was your most unusual sighting? A. The Bohemian Waxwing I found in my back yard in December was my most unusual sighting. I was home sick from school and watching birds in my backyard from the couch. I knew that something was up with a “Cedar Waxwing” as it looked larger and slightly different than the ones we normally have. I grabbed my binoculars, bird guide and camera and went outside to take a closer look. I was able to get real close and got great looks. I realized I had a Bohemian Waxwing! 10 March/April 2015 Q. What made it so unusual? A. At the time I did not realize how uncommon it was for Bohemian Waxwings to be in this area so I often searched the flocks of Cedar Waxwings when birding in hopes of finding a Bohemian. It wasn’t until after seeing this Bohemian and doing some checking on eBird that I realized how rare this bird was for Long Island. According to eBird, the Bohemian Waxwings are only seen every few years on Long Island, and when they do it is only 2 or 3 birds per year. I was very lucky to have him come to my yard. We probably had over 50 birders come to my house over the weekend to see him too. It was a lot of fun. Q. What organizations do you belong to or are you involved with? A. I am in the New York State Young Birders Club, the American Birding Association, and the National Audubon Society. Q. Tell us your aspirations and/or career choices for the future. A. At this point I am really not sure what I want to do after school, but I have a love of birds and nature, and I hope my career will keep me involved with nature and environmental conservation. Q. Do you have any advice to give young people interested in the field or in birding? A. My first suggestion would be to get a good field guide and a decent pair of binoculars. I also found out quickly that there are a lot of good, experiBohemian Waxwing enced birders in the area and there are many bird/ nature walks you can take. Q. Do you keep a life list? Going on bird walks with good birders is a great way A. Yes, I currently have 285 birds on my life list. to learn how to identify difI started my life list in January 2013 and I also did ferent species. I also think a big year that same year. My goal is to have over it is great to have a bird 300 birds by the end of this year. Each new season feeder at your house. It is I try to make a target list of birds that I can possiamazing how many birds come to your feeder, and bly see. you get to see them up close. Cassin’s Kingbird Many thanks to the Perkins family for their assistance with this interview. 11 March/April 2015 Please Join The Four Harbors Audubon Society At the Port Jefferson Library Sunday, March 22, 2015, 2 p.m. Featuring the viewing of Dark Hollow Films documentary film The Condor’s Shadow The Condor’s Shadow profiles the ongoing challenge of bringing the iconic California condor back from the brink of extinction. Focusing on the ongoing work of creating a selfsustaining population, this year-in-the-life story of endangered species recovery sheds light on how an environmental problem becomes intertwined with peripheral political agendas and even hunter’s rights. With vérité footage shot in the ruggedly beautiful nesting habitat of the condor and interviews with those who have lived the story for more than thirty years, this heart-wrenching and beautiful film will make you appreciate the passion and hard work required to pull a species back from the brink. Description courtesy: thecondorsshadow.com 12 March/April 2015 BIRDS OF THE MONTH MARCH American Woodcock Timberdoodle, Labrador Twister, Bogsucker, Mudsnipe, are all names for the same bird: the American Woodcock. The woodcock is known for its fascinating aerial breeding display performed by the male in spring. A voracious feeder, it is reported to stamp its feet on the earth to stir earthworms into movement before probing the ground with its long bill to collect the tasty treat. Within a 24-hour period, it will have eaten its weight or more in earthworms, 75 percent of its diet, other animal life, particularly insects, and plant material, mainly seeds. Although the woodcock is classified as a shorebird, it is not found along the shore like others of its kind, instead it lives in wet woods and lowlying areas. Very rarely are we treated to the sight of a woodcock as they are nocturnal, but if you are lucky enough to spy one, you will notice its large eyes, set back and high on the sides of its head, giving it nearly 360 degree vision, a protection from predators. The males are generally smaller than the females, 6.2 ounces versus 7.6 ounces, and of course, you will not be able to miss the very long bill. The nest of a woodcock is a mere hollow or cuplike depression in the ground, lined with dead leaves and a few twigs around the rim; it is usually within 100-150 yards of the male's occupied "singing field". Both sexes breed during their first spring, when 10-12 months old. Have you ever seen a Woodcock? Why not join Four Harbors for our March 24th Woodcock walk at Avalon? If we are fortunate, we will witness the fascinating aerial display of the male woodcock. Meet just before dusk at the barn. APRIL Piping Plover The Piping Plover is one of the first shorebirds to return to its Long Island breeding grounds in spring. By mid March, you may see the earliest of these small birds running along the beach and shore searching for Photo by Joe Kelly marine worms, insect larvae, and other small marine animals. Listed as an endangered species in New York and as Threatened by the federal government, Piping Plovers have been protected since 1918 when the Endangered Species Act went into effect. Populations had recovered but since the 1940s began to steadily decline again due to habitat loss, human intrusion on breeding grounds, predation, and de- Photo by Joe Kelly struction of nests by high tides. Renewed efforts to protect and monitor the plover population have increased since 1984. Signs informing the public of sensitive areas, fencing erected around nesting sites, and monitoring of breeding pairs is being conducted. An annual census is kept. The Long Island Sound Study data for nesting pairs in New York lists 61 in the year 2000 with a high in 2008 of 94. Nesting pair numbers in 2014 were listed as 68. longislandsoundstudy.net/indicator/piping-plovers/ For three-quarters of the year, Piping Plovers winter along the Gulf of Mexico and the southern Atlantic seacoast from North Carolina to Florida, with a few along beaches on Caribbean Islands and the Yucatan Peninsula. The plover's Atlantic breeding grounds extend from Newfoundland to South Carolina. The male creates a nest by scraping a shallow depression in the sand and fills it with pebbles and seashell bits. The mating ritual includes a "marching" behavior, also known as the "goose-step,” performed by the male as he approaches the female. Once the eggs are laid, the male and female take turns incubating for a period of 27 to 30 days. Their young, resembling cotton balls on toothpick legs, are precocial, ready to explore almost from the moment of birth, making them particularly vulnerable to predators. 13 March/April 2015 Registration is now open for the Long Island Natural History Conference, being held at Brookhaven National Lab on Friday and Saturday, March 20-21, 2015 and the associated field trips on Sunday, March 22, 2015. Registration is limited, and can be done online at www.LongIslandNature.org Abstracts of the presentations, and bios of the speakers, can also be found on the website. Below is the schedule of speakers / presentations and field trips. We have put together an exciting program and we hope to see you there. Tim Green, Melissa Parrott, John Turner, Art Kopelman, Mike Bottini, Jim Monaco Long Island Natural History Steering Committee Friday, March 20, 2015 8:00 - 9:00 9:00 - 9:10 Registration / set up Welcoming Remarks 9:10 - 9:50 Effects of Excessive Nitrogen Loading on L.I.’s Coastal Ecosystems. Dr. Chris Gobler, SUNY Stony Brook University Saturday, March 21, 2015 8:00 - 9:00 Registration / set up 9:00 - 9:10 Welcoming Remarks 9:10 - 9:50 Fidelity. Harbor Seals at Cupsogue Beach: Population Trends and Site Dr. Arthur H. Kopelman, CRESLI 9:50 - 10:30 White-tailed Deer and Their Influence on Forest Vegetation. Thomas Rawinski, U.S. Forest Service 10:30 - 10:50 BREAK: Poster Session 10:50 - 11:30 Long Island Lichens: an Exploration of a Hidden World. Dr. James Lendemer, New York Botanical Garden 11:30 - 12:10 Networked Ecological Initiatives for Climate Change Research and Education. Dr. Kerissa Battle, Community Greenway Collaborative 9:50 - 10:30 Cybertracker Conservation Track and Sign Certification: Origins and Applications. George Leoniak, Cybertracker Conservation 10:30 - 10:50 BREAK: Poster Session 10:50 - 11:30 Status of Orchids on Long Island, New York. Dr. Eric Lamont, Long Island Botanical Society Tom Nelson, Co-author, Orchids of New England and New York 12:10 - 1:10 LUNCH 1:10 - 1:50 ies. The Role of Ctenophores (Comb Jellies) in Long Island Estuar- 11:30 - 12:10 An Evaluation of Management, Urbanization and Isolation on Grassland Biodiversity. Polly Weigand, S.C. Soil and Water Conservation District Dr. Marianne E. McNamara, Suffolk Community College 12:10 - 1:10 1:50 - 2:20 Novel Ecosystems: a Threat To Wildlife. Dr. Marilyn Jordan, The Nature Conservancy 1:10 - 1:50 2:20 - 2:40 BREAK: Poster Session 2:40 - 3:20 Bald Eagles Nesting on Long Island. Michael S. Scheibel, The Nature Conservancy 3:20 - 4:00 Area. New York's Newest Immigrants: Coyotes in the Metropolitan Open Discussion / closing remarks Breeding Birds of Long Island: Past, Present & Future. Eric Salzman, Board Member, South Fork Natural History Society 1:50 - 2:20 Sharks and Rays of the New York Seascape. Dr. Merry Camhi, Wildlife Conservation Society 2:20 - 2:40 BREAK: Poster Session 2:40 - 3:20 Coyotes on Long Island: a Framework for Planning Ahead. Dr. Mark Weckel, American Museum of Natural History 3:20 - 4:00 Falcons on FIRE (Fire Island Raptor Enumerators). Drew Panko and Trudy Battaly, Fire Island Hawk Watch 4:00 - 4:30 Open Discussion / closing remarks Chris Nagy, Mianus River Gorge Preserve 4:00 - 4:30 LUNCH 14 March/April 2015 BIRDING TRIVIA AND INTERESTING FACTS 1. What is an Alpha Code? 2. What is the English code for the following birds? American Robin Blue-winged Teal Lazuli Bunting Black-crowned Night Heron Northern Shoveler 3. A group of Woodcocks is called... Answers on page 16 Feather Fest: A Celebration of International Migratory Bird Day Saturday, May 16th from 1:00 p.m.- 4:00 p.m. Theodore Roosevelt Sanctuary 134 Cove Road, Oyster Bay, NY Celebrate spring and Long Island’s diverse migratory bird species returning from their winter away at Theodore Roosevelt Sanctuary’s second annual Feather Fest! Enjoy a guided birdwatching walk led by an experienced naturalist, bird-themed crafts and games for the kids, purchase a wildlife-friendly native plant, have an up-close encounter with one of our resident migratory avian ambassadors, and learn how you can make your own space a bird- haven. All proceeds will benefit the education programs and conservation projects of the Theodore Roosevelt Sanctuary & Audubon Center. There will be a $2 suggested donation for visitors to the event. Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Four-Harbors-Audubon-Society/152428014767332 Follow Four Harbors on Twitter at: https://www.twitter.com\4harborsAudubon You may also e-mail us at: [email protected] 15 March/April 2015 ANSWERS TO TRIVIA The Alphabetic (alpha) code system was developed by the Bird Banding Laboratory (BBL) for use by birdbanders to record data and is annually revised according to American Ornithologists Union (AOU) taxonomy and nomenclature. It is now widely used by amateurs and professionals alike. Making use of the bird code is a convenient and efficient method of making observations, a kind of short hand for notation of species you wish to record. It may be used during eBird submission, or in reports of unusual or rare finds on other forums such as the American Birding Association Rare Bird Alert. In the field, use of the code saves time - time better spent in observation. One less second spent writing can mean the difference between a more accurate observation and the “that one got away” syndrome commonly experienced by all of us. What do you do with names such as, Cactus Wren, Carolina Wren and Canyon Wren? The solution is to take a variation of the letters, the first three letters of the first name and one from the group name. CACW, CARW, and CANW. In examples such as the above, if there is still no unique code, the first letter of the first name and the first three of the group name are used. Other species code conflicts exist that cannot be resolved using the basic concepts stated here. The solution lies in creative alternatives to letter placement resulting in unique codes. Luckily for us, updated and comprehensive AOU lists containing all the codes are available online for us to refer to when the need arises. What is the English code for the following birds? American Robin - AMRO Simply put, the species name is abbreviated into four letters, if using the English name, or 6 letters, if using the scientific name. (We will discuss the English system here. ) Variations in the structure of the name call for variations in code. For instance, one-word names such as Osprey consist of the first four letters of the name, OSPR. In a name with two unhyphenated words such as Purple Finch, the first two letters in each word are combined, thus, PUFI. Hyphenated names, such as Orange-crowned Warbler (OCWA) or Eastern Screech-owl, (EASO,) take one letter from each of the hyphenated words and two from the remaining word. Three-word unhyphenated names take one letter from the first two name parts and two letters from the last name, such as American Tree Sparrow (ATSP.) Four-letter words, hyphenated or unhyphenated take one letter from each word. Blue-winged Teal - BWTE Lazuli Bunting – conflicts with Lark Bunting; both would be LABU, so take 3 from first, and one from group name, hence LAZB. Lark Bunting is LARB. Black-crowned Night Heron – BCNH Northern Shoveler—conflicts with Northern Shrike. Both break down to NOSH. Using the first alternative option makes both NORS, still a conflict, so the third option is a go...take 1 letter from first name and three from last—NSHO for Northern Shoveler and NSHR for Northern Shrike. A group of Woodcocks is called a Fall. 16 March/April 2015 SUFFOLK COUNTY RARE AND UNUSUAL BIRD REPORT HIGHLIGHTS Some rare and unusual sightings, confirmed and unconfirmed, during the months of January and February are listed below. For complete reports, go to: eBird.org. American Bittern: Dune Road, various Jan 3-Feb 8; Hampton Bays, Jan 2; Shinnecock Co. Park West, Jan 21; Baltimore Oriole; Jamesport, Jan 28; Suffolk, Feb 13 Barnacle Goose: St. Charles Cemetery, Jan 5; Belmont SP, Jan 6-18; Colonial Springs Golf Course, Jan 6-15; Barrow’s Goldeneye: Breakwater Beach, Jan 21; Duck Pond, Jan 21; Lake Montauk, Jan 21-22, 25; Bailie Beach, Jan 23; Black-headed Gull: Setauket Harbor, Jan 1-3; Black Vulture: Patchogue, Feb 14 Bohemian Waxwing: Chandler Estate, Jan 8-11; Route 6, Feb 13 Glaucous Gull: Shinnecock Inlet, various Jan 2- 20; Captree SP, Jan. 15; Cedar Beach, Feb. 16 Greater White-fronted Goose: Riverhead Sod Farms, various Jan 1-Feb 16; Hook Pond, Jan 2, 21, 25, 29; Northville Turnpike, Jan 3; 1552 Cross River, Jan 2; East Hampton, Jan 4; St. Charles Cemetery, Jan 5; Belmont SP, Jan 6-18, Feb 4; Maratooka, Jan 11; Green-winged Teal (Eurasian): Centerport Pond, Jan 5-19; Little Gull, Montauk Pt., Jan 25, Feb 8; Long-billed Dowitcher: William Floyd Estate, Jan 25 Long-eared Owl: Cedar Beach, Feb 1 Monk Parakeet: Coolidge Ave., Jan 30 Cackling Goose: Riverhead Farm Fields/Sod Farms, various Nashville Warbler: Wading River, Feb 14 Jan 1-Feb 17; Hook Pond, Jan 2; Belmont SP, various Jan 6 Northern Goshawk, Napeague, Jan 25.; Cedar Beach, Feb. Feb 4; Van Bourgondien CP, Jan 13; Sound Ave., Jan 18; W. 22 Sayville Gold Course, Jan 17; St. Charles Cemetery, Jan 20; Fuchs Pond, Jan 22; Merritts Pond, Jan 25 Orange-crowned Warbler, Old Ponquogue Bridge, Jan 11; Common Murre, Pelagic, Jan 11 Pink-footed Goose: Riverhead Sod Farms, Various Jan 1 Common Raven, Three Village Greenway, Jan 21; SC Farm Feb 22; Reeves & Roanoke area, Riverhead, Jan 11; K-Mart Woods, Jan. 15; and Education Center, Jan 23; Patchogue, Jan 31; Exit 67-LIE, Feb. 5; Chandler, Feb 8; Lowell Eastview, Feb 15; Babylon, Purple Finch: Sunken Meadow SP, Jan 1 ; Inlet Pond CP, Feb 11; Jamaica Ave., Feb 22; NYIT, Feb. 19; Jan 3; Jamaica Ave, Suffolk, Jan 11; Uplands Farm Preserve, Common Redpoll, Avalon Gardens, Jan 2; Dune Rd., vari- Jan 15; Sag Harbor, Jan 18; Camp Hero, Jan 18; Wertheim, Feb. 21 ous Jan 18-25; Lake Montauk Inlet, Jan 18, 21; Robert Moses SP, Jan 17, 23; Montauk Fort Pond, Jan 19; Nepeague SP, Jan Red-shouldered Hawk: Haskells Bait & Tackle, Jan 8; Gar19; Shinnecock CP West, Jan 19, 21; Orient SP, Feb 1; Cedar diner CP, Jan 16; Montauk Fort Pond, Jan 19; Shelter Island, Beach, Feb 7; Smith Point CP, Feb 1; Jamesport, Feb 2; LeeFeb 8; Orowoc Creek, Feb 13; ward Ct, Feb 6; Route 2, Feb 6 Common Raven: Setauket Harbor, Jan 1; Riverhead Sod Farms, Jan 2; Cedar Beach, Jan 3; Hampton Bays, Jan 14; Brookhaven National Lab., Jan. 14; Meadow Croft Estate, Jan 16-17; Sunken Meadow, Jan 17 Ross’s Goose: Southaven CP, Jan 10; Riverhead Sod Farms, Jan 10; Rusty Blackbird: Fuchs Pond, Jan 15, 28, 30; Riverhead Sod Farms, Jan 23 Dovekie: Shinnecock Inlet, Jan 3; Pelagic, Jan 11; Eastern Meadowlark, Riverhead Sod Farms, Feb 16 Eastern Phoebe: Sages Blvd., Jan 3; Arshamomaque Preserve, Jan 3; Meadow Croft Estate, Jan 3-5, 19; Robert Moses SP, Jan 4; Islip Terrace, Jan 17; Centerport Pond, Jan 19 Tundra Swan: Hook Pond, Jan 1-4, 18, 21-23, 25; Yellow-breasted Chat: Cedar Beach Marina, Jan 1 Short-eared Owl: EPCAL, Jan 1-29; Thick-billed Murre, Lake Montauk Inlet, Jan 20-23; Camp Hero, Feb 6-7; off Tiana Beach, Feb 8; Eurasian Wigeon: Heron Park/Mill Pond, Jan 3; W. Sayville Golf Course, Jan 2-23; Mill Pond Centerport, Jan 4-19; St. John’s Pond, Jan 4, 7; Patchogue Lake, Jan 5; Deep Hole, Jan 17, Feb 8;Connetquot SP, Jan 24; Route 13, Feb 13 Yellow-headed Blackbird: Sound Ave, Northville, Jan 1 Vesper Sparrow, SC Farm & Education Center, Jan 14-16 17 Sweetbriar Nature Center Birdseed Order Form March/April 2015 Order your birdseed to help the birds through the winter Product Cost / Bag Scarlett Basic, 20 lbs $16.00 Scarlett Classic, 20 lbs $20.00 Scarlett Ultimate, 20 lbs $26.00 Scarlett Patio / Deck, 20lbs $45.00 Scarlett Outdoor Finch Blend, 20 lbs $36.00 Scarlett Cardinal Blend, 20 lbs $29.00 Scarlett Woodpecker Complete, 20 lbs $40.00 Scarlett Fruit and Berry Mix, 20 lbs $40.00 Black Oil Sunflower, 25 lbs $26.00 Black Oil Sunflower, 40 lbs $38.00 Black Stripe Sunflower, 25 lbs $37.00 Black Stripe Sunflower, 40 lbs $56.00 White Millet, 25 lbs $28.00 Safflower, 25 lbs $35.00 Sunflower Chips, 25 lbs $59.00 #2 Sunflower Chips, 25 lbs $34.00 Cracked Corn (Medium), 25 lbs $15.00 Thistle (Niger), 25 lbs $43.00 Peanut #2 Split, 25 lbs $46.00 Peanuts in Shell Fancy, 25 lbs $63.00 Natural Beef Suet, one case (12) $56.00 High Energy Suet Cake, one case (12) $23.00 Suet Cake, peanut butter, one case (12) $32.00 Total Total Due Order by April 10, 2015 - Pick Up April 19, 11 - 2 Fill out and mail with check or credit card info to: Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Dr., Smithtown, NY 11787 YOU CAN ALSO PAY WITH PAY PAL WHICH IS ON OUR WEBSITE Name_______________________________________________________________Phone____________________________ Address_____________________________________________________________ City___________________________State____________Zip__________________E-Mail address_________________________ Credit Card Info:___Visa___Master Card___ Card Number_________________________Exp.Date_______Security#____ There will be a 3% processing & handling fee for all credit card sales 18
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