Lawrence Peregrines: watching over first egg!

April 6, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0406The female has spent most of today watching over her first egg!  She has dug for tight incubation, she has been out of the nest box, and she has been just getting used to having an egg, and knowing more eggs are likely to follow soon.  Sometimes she completely covers the egg and other times, like this, she hovers over, but does not fully cover the egg.

 

 

2018.0406.1In this next photo, she shows herself hunkered down, much more on top of the egg, with her tail down low and wings slightly elevated

A Falcon Soars Above Lawrence for 16 Years, Falls To Rival!

April 6, 2018 in lawrence peregrines, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

IMG_9459A Falcon Soars Above Lawrence for 16 Years, Then Falls To A Rival

‘The end of a long and impressive legacy’                          

By Keith Eddings at The Eagle Tribune

LAWRENCE — He was first named “Crash,” for his clumsy landings as a weeks-old peregrine falcon fledgling with three siblings from their nest atop what is now the Brady Sullivan Tower in Manchester, New Hampshire, in 2001.

The four were the first of their species known to have fledged from a downtown urban setting in that state, making the event notable enough that it was covered by a local newspaper.

Crash – he was soon renamed Black6/Green4 for the colors and numbers that identified him on his leg band – was the weakest and not expected to survive. But he showed up in Lawrence a year later, met a female and made a home in an abandoned nest built by red-tailed hawks on an empty tray that had held an air conditioner on the sixth floor of the New Balance building on South Union Street. The pair eventually moved up to the clock tower over the building, formerly the Ayer Mill, where they became favorites among local birdwatchers and state wildlife officials, in part for their prolific breeding.

Black6/Green4 and the female fledged 32 chicks over a dozen years in downtown Lawrence, taking a giant step for wildlife in a dense urban environment by contributing significantly to a species that was on the federal endangered species list for 30 years. Peregrines were removed from the list just two years before Black6/Green4 was born, after a recovery that began when the federal government banned DDT, the pesticide that softened the shells of the eggs laid by falcons, hawks and eagles, causing them to crack.

The female died in 2015, at 14 years old. Another female soon took her place in the clock tower nest. The new pair had another 10 chicks over three years. Another of their annual clutches had been anticipated this spring, which would have given peregrines another foothold toward recovery.

That hope ended on March 30, when Black6/Green4 left his nest to hunt for the pigeons and songbirds that are among peregrines’ favorite meals. His hunt took him to a yard on Waverly Road in North Andover, where he was confronted by a much younger peregrine that may have been stalking him for days and even visited his nest in the clock tower, state wildlife officials suspect.

Feathers flew.

“It was the unrecognizable screeches that brought us outside,” said Elizabeth Carlson, who witnessed the attack on her lawn with her son, Robert, a professional photographer who took pictures of it. “The birds were the same size, but the younger clearly the advantage…. Growing up around all sorts (of animals) I have never seen such aggression.”

The younger bird flew off when the Carlsons and two others approached but quickly resumed the attack, swooping down from surrounding trees and between the four people, who were standing just feet apart. Carlson said the swoops were “a little unnerving” and said the determined look on the younger peregrine’s face suggested he was asking, “You want to be next?”

The attack lasted 20 minutes. The younger peregrine flew off, leaving Black6/Green4 mortally wounded. He remained on the lawn for 20 minutes more and was able to fly off when the Carlsons attempted to place him in a box so they could deliver him to a wildlife rescue clinic.

Two days later, another homeowner found him lying in his yard in Amesbury, about 15 miles from where he was attacked. The homeowner was able to place him in a parakeet cage and posted his picture on Facebook. A New Hampshire falconer saw the picture and contacted Massachusetts falconer Wendy Pavlicek, who picked him up and delivered him Monday morning to the Tufts Wildlife Clinic in North Grafton, operated by Tufts University’s Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine.

News of the attack and the attempt to rescue Black6/Green4 spread quickly among the scores of birders in the region who have followed his life in Lawrence, including Tom French, the assistant director of the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife responsible for the division’s endangered species program. To protect Tufts from being overwhelmed with phone calls and emails seeking to learn the peregrine’s fate, French sent out an email declaring himself the point person between the birders and the rehab center.

“He is in very poor shape,” French said in an email to the birders Monday. “He is severely emaciated and very depressed, so he is now being kept in an oxygen cage. He has bruises and talon punctures, but apparently no broken bones.”

A few hours later, French sent another email.

“I just learned from the Tufts Wildlife Clinic that the 17-year-old male Peregrine Falcon, 6*/4* from Lawrence just died,” he wrote. “This is not a surprise, but it is the end of a long and impressive legacy.”

By then, the bird that attacked and killed Black6/Green4 had moved into his nest and copulated with his mate.

On Thursday, she laid her first egg. She laid another Friday night. One or two more are expected to follow over the next few days.

It was a Shakespearean end to Black6/Green4’s life, straight from the pages of “Hamlet.” But his fate is common among peregrines, French said Friday.

“That’s the way it works,” he said. “The old-fashioned concept (of how peregrines meet and mate) is that a young male and a young female settle into a place to reproduce. In reality these days, a lot of the best places already are taken. So a hostile takeover is more common. When they get to breeding age and move around looking for a place, they find one that has an established pair and kill the member of the pair that’s the same sex. If they succeed, they inherit the mate, the nest and all the territory that goes with it.”

Females will attack females with the same purpose that males attack males, French said.

At 17, Black6/Green4 was the second oldest peregrine ever recorded in Massachusetts, French said. The oldest disappeared at 19 and was never found. Their average lifespan is 10 years.

The Lawrence falcon’s long life and the 42 chicks he produced with the two females is a landmark event in the peregrine’s more than half-century of recovery nationwide, including when they went extinct first in Massachusetts in 1955 and then the entire eastern United States. The first returned to Massachusetts in 1987. Today, there are 48 known pairs in the state.

“Peregrines are one of the icons, the poster children,” of the recovery all raptors have made since the pesticide DDT was banned in 1972, French said. “There are a lot of superlatives to describe them. They’re the fastest animal in the world. The fastest measured at 242 mph in a dive. They’re (unique) in their design and engineering and they’ve been marveled at since the kings and princes of falconry in the Middle Ages. They have a lot of history to go with them.”

Craig Gibson, the Roman Catholic chaplain at Lawrence General Hospital, had been observing Black6/Green4 in the sky above Lawrence since in November 2011. He said the bird’s life in the city is replicated daily on the streets below.

“It’s a fascinating story, right in our backyard,” Gibson said. “Here you have a 17-year-old male who was the runt of the litter. It didn’t look like (when he fledged) up in Manchester that he would make it. So he’s an incredible survival story in a city where there are many who against all odds find their way to success.”

Black6/Green4 survival story includes this: He outlived his three siblings and most of his fledglings, whose fate is known because they were tagged, according to records French described in his emails to the other birders last week.

Among his fledglings, a female was killed when she flew into the Travelers Tower in Hartford while chasing a pigeon in 2003. A male with severe bumblefoot – a bacterial infection of the feet – was euthanized after he showed up in the backyard of a pigeon racer in 2004. Another female was hit by a car on Nantucket in 2009. A male living above Fox Hall at UMass Lowell lost an eye from a shotgun pellet in 2016 and was euthanized a few months later after he was found emaciated at Governor’s Academy in Newbury. Another male was euthanized in 2016 after he was struck by a plane at Logan International Airport.

Against these odds, Black6/Green4’s former mate and the young male who is taking his place in the clock tower above New Balance are expected to hatch their chicks late in May.

To see a live webcam of Black6/Green4’s nest, where his former mate is incubating eggs fathered by her new mate, visit http://lawrenceperegrines.com/, then click on “New Balance Falcon Cam”

 

Lawrence Peregrines: first egg late in day

April 5, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0405.4It is always a joy-filled day when the first egg is laid, and the new breeding season is underway.  It has been a dramatic week with “Crash” getting caught in a major altercation, and having the nest taken over by another peregrine falcon, and then his death.  The first egg has been laid just under 6 days after the big fight.  The female is right on schedule despite this major, unexpected change.  She laid her first egg almost to the day a year ago, and then laid 3 more eggs in the following days.  Once you see the first egg, you can’t help but look in again, and again!  Great news!

Lawrence Peregrines: First egg!!

April 5, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0405.1Here we are at minutes before 6AM, with sunrise at about 6:16AM, and looking in on the female.  It sure looks like she is hunkered down tight on her fist egg.  But, not yet able to confirm until she lifts up, and provides a look!  She is seen here in typical incubation posture, providing every indication that the first egg has been laid.

 

 

2018.0405.2A few minutes before 8AM, the male returns to the nest box with prey in bill and offers it to the female who has maintained her incubation posture.  As she receives th eprey, she does little to help confirm that the first egg has been laid!

 

 

 

2018.0405.3Finally after waiting and waiting, the female laid her first egg early this morning well before sunrise.  Her behavior was very consistent with the general lethargy that a female falcon typically experiences  in the few days prior to laying the first egg.  In many cases this lethargy may last a week or longer.  She lazes around and spends lots of time in the nest box, nest scraping, and other courtship related activities.

Incubation usually will not begin until the second to last egg has been laid.  In this colder weather, the female will spend time incubating the egg, but it may not be a non-stop effort!

Literature cited:

Nelson, R.W. 1971. Captive breeding of peregrines: suggestions from their behavior in the wild. Raptor Research News 5(2):54-82. 

Lawrence Peregrines: very sad news….”Crash” has passed away..

April 2, 2018 in Near the Clock Tower, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

Update from Tom French:

CF2C1926-002I just learned from the Tufts Wildlife Clinic that the 17 year old male Peregrine Falcon, 6*/4* from Lawrence just died.  This is not a surprise, but it is the end of a long and impressive legacy.  I will pull together a brief summary of his legacy soon.

Lawrence Peregrines: food exchange

April 1, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0401-001Happy Easter!  The peregrine falcons were seen on Easter morning while engaged in a classic food exchange, under cloudy skies, winds from the SW at 15MPH, and gusts up to 23MPH, and temps in mid-fifties.  For many this morning was filled with hopes of a first egg, but not quite yet!  Here’s a bit of background on food exchanges among large falcons:

Food-Transfer Display: A common courtship display involves the transfer of food from one mate to the other, usually male to female. Either sex may initiate a transfer.The female uses a wail vocalization or rarely a whine, combined with a vertical head-low posture to solicit transfers when the male does not have food. If the male has food, the wail and Ee-chip vocalizations are used about equally by the female, often accompanied by the vertical Head-Low BowDisplay.

Male solicitation which elicits the female’s approach always occurs when he has food, either spontaneously or initiated by female intention movements to engage in transfer.This solicitation by the male is characterized by a very sharp and clear Eechip vocalization. The male alternates between a relaxed posture, with the head up, and a posture with his head down while he manipulates or contacts the prey item. This posture,with the head low, does not appear to be the nonaggressive Head-Low BowDisplay. Transfer from the female to the male is not obviously solicited.

Prior to actual transfer, the male picks the prey item up in his beak and stands vertically, head up. The female maintains head-low postures, often horizontal, and both sexes give complete Eechip vocalizations. 

Literature Cited:

Cade, T. J., J. H. Enderson and J. Linthicum. 1996a. Guide to Management of Peregrine Falcons at the eyrie. Boise, ID: The Peregrine Fund, Inc. (Excerpt: Linthicum, Janet. Observing Breeding Behavior)

Wrege, P. H. and T. J. Cade. 1977. Courtship behavior of large falcons in captivity. Raptor Res. no. 11:1-46.

Lawrence Peregrines: more scraping!

March 31, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0331-001A late afternoon view of the female peregrine in the nest box alone.  She appears to continue the process of scraping the gravel in the nest box in continued preparation for egg laying.  Also the female has been seen picking at pieces of gravel, as if doing a bit of house cleaning.

Lawrence Peregrines: report from battle field!

March 31, 2018 in Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

IMG_9461Report from Elizabeth Carlson:

Good Morning! My sons and I have always been avid bird watchers, this experience is one of the top ones! Of course any pictures my son took and story can be shared. I’m just taking the lead on the emails and investigating information. It was the unrecognizable screeches that brought us outside to witness this event. The birds were the same size, but the younger clearly the advantage in aggression.  The 20 minutes on the lawn was what it took to get in touch with Tom as we tried to call animal control and were sent through a series of phone calls. The entire time the younger male stayed in close range being very intimidating vocally. The bird on the ground seemed unhurt and we sensed it appreciated our guard or else we would have backed off. Growing up around all sorts, big and small I have never seen such aggression once humans intercepted. That he flew between us was a little unnerving, and my read on the photo Rob took with the falcons stare of, ” you want to be next” message in his eyes. Rob and I feel very fortune to witness this event and the world that it has opened up for us. Thank you so much for reaching out! There is so much information, we are a little overwhelmed, or at least I am.  I hope to keep in touch and that you have a great day. For now it’s back to the live view! Thank you!

Lawrence Peregrines: back story on 6*/4* a.k.a. “Crash”

March 30, 2018 in Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts, Peregrines at 250 Canal St.

Report from Ursula and David Goodine:

Hello Tom and everyone,

Many thanks to Robert Carlson for the stunning photos and report about the male Peregrine Falcon, Black 6/ Green 4.  The altercation between the two males that was witnessed today, was a once in a lifetime opportunity to see Nature in action, and will surely not be easily forgotten!

CF2C1964-002If anyone is interested, here is a little history that we would like to share about 6*/4*.  Tom, you may recall that Dave and I have “known” this Peregrine since 2001, when we witnessed him and his other siblings fledge from the then “New Hampshire Building” in Manchester.  He was the runt of the brood, and took a lot of time taking that first leap.  In fact, we knick-named him “Crash”, as he seemed to have a tough time with his landings after fledging.  He finally got it right, and he and his siblings liked to roost on the letters on top of the building.  Of course, the building was later sold and the name was changed to the Brady Sullivan Tower.

It was in 2002 that Joe Hogan first discovered a pair of Peregrines in Lawrence, and followed their activities that eventually led to their nesting in that city, beginning in 2003.  We subsequently confirmed the male’s band, as you mentioned in your note, and have been monitoring him ever since then.  We named his mate “Victoria”, as her bands were Black V/ Green 5, and they dominated the territory until her death in 2015, at the age of 14.  By our calculations, the pair raised 32 chicks over the 12 years they reigned.  She was replaced by the presumably current unbanded female.

CF2C1926-002Even though Crash was grounded by the new aggressive male, he did manage to fly off, and it is our hope that he is still alive, and can protect his dominion.  But as you said, time will tell who will prevail.  Chris Martin of New Hampshire Audubon, who banded Crash in 2001, once wrote an article about this runt and named it, “Don’t Count the Little Guy Out”.  Chris depicted this Peregrine as the least likely to survive his siblings, but wrote that this was not the case.  It turned out that 6/4 out lived all three of his siblings.  At the ripe age of 17, please don’t count the “little old guy” out!

Again, thanks to Robert Carlson for reporting the incident, and to Tom for passing on this very important information.

All the best,  Ursula & Dave Goodine

Lawrence Peregrines: new male in the box?

March 30, 2018 in In the Nest Box, Peregrine Falcons Eastern Massachusetts, Peregrine Falcons Massachusetts

2018.0330-001Made a mid-morning visit tot he nest box and observed an interaction with two peregrines in the nest box.  At the time it looked like the ongoing pair of peregrines.  But upon closer look, it appears that the new male is in the box.  The bird seen has a silver, federal leg band on its right leg and no left leg band.  This is consistent with the new male, who may have been making a visit of two over the past few days…..stay tuned!  They are engaged in head bowing and vocalizing with each other.