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WindStar Wildlife Garden Weekly
February 19, 2007
February 19, 2007
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Dear Tom,
TomP


THE 10TH ANNUAL GREAT BACKYARD BIRD COUNT (GBBC) is coming up February 16-19. Help create a mid-winter snapshot of where the birds are by counting birds at any location for at least 15 minutes on one or more of the count days.

Last year, participants recorded more than 7.5 million birds of 622 species across the United States and Canada, and submitted 60,503 checklists, just a few hundred shy of an all-time record!

Three cavity-nesting birds made the GBBC top-10 list for most frequently reported birds last year: Downy Woodpecker, Tufted Titmouse and Black-capped Chickadee. Charlotte, NC was the locality reporting the most Eastern Bluebirds (308 bluebirds on 113 checklists). Participants in Santa Fe, NM shattered the previous record for Western Bluebirds and Mountain Bluebirds, reporting 481 Western Bluebirds on 64 checklists (previous high was 119 on 4 checklists from Idyllwild, California) and 509 Mountain Bluebirds on 27 checklists (previous high was 300 on one checklist from Colorado City, CO).

Help put your birds and your community on the map. Enter your tallies on the Great Backyard Bird Count website to share your results and to be automatically entered in a prize drawing for binoculars, bird books, bird feeders and more. Visit to see the results, view the photo gallery, or enter your counts.

bee hive



























By Sandy Bauers
SOMETHING is killing the nation's honeybees. If the die-off continues, it would be disastrous for U.S. crop yields.

Dave Hackenberg of central Pennsylvania had 3,000 hives and figures he has lost all but about 800 of them. In labs at Pennsylvania State University, the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, and elsewhere in the nation, researchers have been stunned by the number of calls about the mysterious losses.

"Every day, you hear of another operator," said Dennis vanEngelsdorp, acting state apiarist with the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. "It's just causing so much death so quickly that it's startling."

At stake is the work the honeybees do, pollinating more than $15 billion worth of U.S. crops, including Pennsylvania's apple harvest, the fourth- largest in the nation, worth $45 million, and New Jersey's cranberries and blueberries.... Read On


purple martin

PERHAPS no other North American bird has a more interesting association with humans than the Purple Martin.

As early as the 1800's, it was discovered that Native Americans had been providing the birds with hollowed out gourds to attract them to their dwellings.

Martins were useful in driving off vultures, small hawks and crows from the vicinity, and it's possible that the Native Americans also appreciated the birds' voracious insect-eating appetites! (Purple Martin begins nest-building)

Over time, perhaps because of the safety of being near humans, and the success of the provided nesting gourds, Martins began to prefer nesting in close proximity to us and using man-made housing over the natural cavities they had used previously. Now Martins use man made housing exclusively and are very particular about wanting to nest near their human benefactors.

Because Purple Martins have become so dependent upon us for their survival, it's important to realize that... Read On


deergolf

By Garry Smits
JACKSONVILLE, FL-- A Bald Eagle has made a perch of sorts atop a dead tree on Jacksonville, FL Beach Golf Course's 10th fairway.

When the eagle takes flight and begins to swoop over the lake between Nos. 10 and 18, the rest of the wildlife know it's time to scatter--especially since course workers and players have seen the bird dining on seagulls and ducks.

"When he takes off, everything else goes into motion," head professional Boots Farley said. "The other birds and animals have figured out by now that when he starts flying, something's going to get caught and eaten."

It's the Circle of Life, links-style.

The variety of golf courses in terms of water, woods, terrain and other vegetation also lends itself to a variety of wildlife.

There are the usual alligators, snakes and birds, but on many courses, 18 holes of golf also can be like living in an episode of Wild Kingdom... Read On


cranesultralite


By Matt Mendenhall
STRUGGLING to cope with the sudden deaths of 17 young birds, leaders of the effort to establish a migratory flock of endangered Whooping Cranes in the eastern United States last week voiced gratitude for the many expressions of condolence and support they've received and vowed to continue on with the project.

The cranes that died all hatched in 2006. They perished when a powerful storm born in the Gulf of Mexico made landfall directly over Chassahowitzka NWR, their new winter home, early on Feb. 2.

Tornadoes then raced across the state, spreading the misery wider. By morning, 20 people were killed, dozens were injured, and 1,500 homes were destroyed or uninhabitable. Preliminary necropsy results show that the birds likely drowned.

The so-called First Family--the first adult pair of Whooping Cranes to hatch and raise a chick--was not in the path of the deadly storm. All three birds are... Read On

deerartwolfe



















Beauty In Motion!
Fleet-footed Whitetail Deer show off their speed for the camera. During the course of his 30-year career, Art Wolfe has produced more than a million photographic images and published 60 books. Wolfe’s stunning pictures interpret and record the world’s wildlife, landscapes and native cultures, inspiring people to celebrate and protect these precious assets.

Next May, a new 13-episode public television series, will be launched-- Travels To The Edge With Art Wolfe. Viewers experience remote and awe-inspiring places through Wolfe’s lens, whether tracking Bengal tigers on elephant-back through the forests of India, marveling at the dreamscapes of the Bolivian Altiplano, navigating fjords in the icy oasis of South Georgia Island, or witnessing ancient tribal ceremonies that are disappearing in remote Ethiopia.

Wolfe will conduct a 2-day workshop at the National Conservation Training Center near Shepherdstown, WV February 24-25.





For more nature photographs, see
the Gallery on WindStar's web site and Nature's Best Photographs Album in the American Wildlife Blog.
madbluebirdthermalmug


Mad Bluebird Thermal Travel Mugs
Set of 2 (16-oz. each) $19.95


Usually he's the "Bluebird of Happiness" but here he appears ruffled and disgusted with the onset of colder weather in this reproduction of the photograph by Michael L. Smith. Usually he's the "Bluebird of Happiness" but here he appears ruffled and disgusted with the onset of colder weather in this reproduction of the photograph by Michael L. Smith. Here it has been reproduced on 16-oz. thermal travel mugs that are dishwasher safe. Each mug has a snap on cover with a spill resistant closure.

Find more nature products in the
Nature Shop

blackandyellowspider


A Welcomed Visitor

THE BLACK and yellow garden spider (Argiope aurantia) is a welcomed visitor to my garden in the late summer. I love its colorful patterning as it sits motionless on its web that it has carefully attached to the surrounding flowers. I know this large 1- ½“ spider is a female, as the male is much smaller and does not have the coloring like that of the female .

The male will often sit at the far edge of her web, waiting for the right time to mate, but because she could easily eat him, he often will make his own ,smaller web, near hers. If you take the time to watch, you may see her “bouncing” her web back and forth, as a possible means of having it stick to an insect that is near, or entangling one that has just landed on it.

There is some speculation that the vibrating web makes the spider look more menacing and may be done when... Read On

That's it for this week. Be sure and sign up for the American Wildlife Blog for the latest commentary and please feel free to add comments of your own.

Have An EXCELLENT Day in your WILDLIFE HABITAT!

(Bald Eagle by Art Wolfe)

eagleartwolfe

Tom Patrick
WindStar Wildlife Institute

Phone: 301-293-3351

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