Tuesday, April 24, 2012

2012 Guilford Horseshoe Crab Survey Schedule

These are the times when you should arrive at the Indian Cove Public beach.
Note: Underlined times are surveys which are actually the “next morning."

Moon Phase DATE Daytime Nighttime
May 3 Thursday 8:45 AM 9:05 PM
FULL May 5 Saturday 10:30 AM 10:50 PM
May 7 Monday 12:15 PM 12:30 AM
May 18 Friday 9:50 AM 10:00 PM
NEW May 20 Sunday 11:10 AM 11:15 PM
May 22 Tuesday 12:30 PM 12:30 AM
June 2 Saturday 9:15 AM 9:30 PM
FULL June 4 Monday 11:05 AM 11:20 PM
June 6 Wednesday 12:50 PM 1:10 AM
June 17 Sunday 10:00 AM 10:00 PM
NEW June 19 Tuesday 11:25 AM 11:30 PM
June 21 Thursday 12:45 PM 12:45 AM
July 1 Sunday 9:00 AM 9:15 PM
FULL July 3 Tuesday 10:50 AM 11:05 PM
July 5 Thursday 12:30 PM 12:50 AM

Bio Bits: The Mourning Cloak


One of our earliest flying butterflies, the mourning cloak (Nymphalis antiopa) overwintered under tree bark until bright sunny days brought it forth to sip flowing sap from broken tree branches. This largest member of the tortoiseshell family (Nymphalidae) is a common butterfly that can be found across much of North America. Since emerging from her hibernation, the female has mated and laid her tiny eggs in clusters along a branch or on the underside of a leaf.

Because mourning cloak eggs are laid in groups on their host plants, the hatched caterpillars can be seen feeding together. These gregarious caterpillars will remain with their siblings on their host plant of willow, elm, hackberry or cottonwood to munch on the tree’s leaves. They will continue feeding, growing and molting for about a month.

At full size, a mourning cloak caterpillar can be over two inches long. Its body is a deep black covered in white specks, with a row of cherry-red spots running down its back. A beautiful insect, until you notice the many-branched, shiny black spines daring you to touch it. It is probably safe to assume that this caterpillar is not on a bird’s list of first-choice meals.

Though the caterpillar’s spines can protect it from some predators, they do not prevent various parasitic insects from attacking it. Species of chalcid and ichneumon wasps, as well as tachinid flies, are known to parasitize the caterpillar by laying their eggs within its body. The hatching larval wasps and flies then feed on the caterpillar, which eventually dies.

When it is time for the mourning cloak caterpillar to transform into a butterfly (and it has been fortunate enough to avoid the parasites), it will leave its host plant to find an appropriate branch or grass stem on which to pupate. Its thorny brown chrysalis will hang upside down from the stem for about two weeks before a chocolaty-brown butterfly with a band of lovely blue spots and creamy yellow margins emerges.

Submitted by Cindi Kobak
Photos: en.wikipedia.org/

(From the May Newsletter)

Menunkatuck Announces Summer Nature Photography Workshop Week


Menunkatuck Audubon Summer Nature Photography Week
July 30  - August 3, 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 noon
Dudley Farm, Guilford
Nature Photography 

Menunkatuck Audubon Society announces its first Summer Nature Photography Workshop for children in grades 6-8 at the Dudley Farm at the corner of Routes 77 and 80 in Guilford.

Children will take daily hikes while learning to compose pictures and work with natural lighting. Landscape, portrait, and macro photography will be included.

The workshop instructors are experienced educators in the Guilford Public School system.

Children are responsible for providing their own camera.

The workshop fee is $175. Space is limited to 10 campers.

For complete details go to http://goo.gl/gNMvh.

Film Screenings: Nourish and Nicotine Bees


Nourish
Sunday, May 20, 2012, 2 p.m.
Blackstone Library, Branford

With beautiful visuals and inspiring stories, the Nourish film traces our relationship to food from a global perspective to personal action steps. Nourish illustrates how food connects to such issues as biodiversity, climate change, public health, and social justice.

The award-winning Nourish engages viewers with the following program segments:

  • Connections: By connecting seemingly unrelated people and places, this segment demonstrates the interdependence of our global community. Weaving together such themes as food and health, food and biodiversity, and food and community, “Connections” examines some of the most important issues of our time.
  • Seed to Table: This segment leads viewers on a remarkable tour of our food chain. The story follows two seeds—corn and tomato—each traveling a very different path to make a meal. “Seed to Table” vividly illustrates where our food comes from and how it gets to us.
  • Vote with Your Fork: With clarity and wit, best-selling author Michael Pollan shows how food serves as a metaphor for our values. In a far-ranging conversation, he invites a reflection on such questions as “What is food wisdom?” and “Why should we know the story of our food?”
  • Be the Difference: The final segment offers specific steps that individuals and groups can take to create a more sustainable food future. Themes include: Teach and Learn, Grow Your Own, Create Community, Change the Menu, Shop Wisely, and Take a Stand.


Nicotine Bees
Saturday, June 23, 2012, 2 p.m.
Blackstone Library, Branford

In 2005-2006, bee “colony collapse” occurred simultaneously in dozens of countries. After years of research, experts and recent studies point to neonicotinoids – a widely-used group of pesticides used on food crops. This was unlike anything seen before, even by the oldest beekeepers in the U.S., Canada and Europe. And contrary to popular belief, the jury is not out on what happened. It seems that bees are now being bombarded by pesticides made of synthetic nicotine that is bonded with cyanide. This new material hit the market in 1995 and in 2005, when the patents expired, many companies around the globe released their versions of the same chemicals. Ever since, bees and other insects have been paying the price for this new class of poison. And since these systemic pesticides spread throughout the whole plant (pollen, nectar, leaf, etc.), there is no escape for honey bees or the hundreds of other native bee species that plants depend on for pollination.

Nicotine Bees is a 2010 documentary film by Kevin Hansen. The goal of the film was to get to the truth about why the honeybees of the world are in big trouble, and why our food supply is in trouble with them. The answers are clear - and have been for several years. They filmed on 3 continents to find out the real reasons why bees are in catastrophic decline - and why many people don’t want the real story to be told.

These films are cosponsored by Audubon Connecticut.


(From the May Newsletter)

Spring Field Trips


Birdathon Bird Walk at Branford Supply Ponds
Saturday May 12, 2012,8:00 a.m.

Join Menunkatuck Audubon for a birdwalk on our Birdathon fundraiser day.  We will meet at 8:00 am at the Branford Supply Ponds parking area on Chestnut Street in Branford, CT to look for migratory songbirds and waterfowl.  Depending on local sightings, we may continue on to some other local birding spots.  Beginning birders welcome!

For more information or to sign up for the trip, please contact Nina Levenduski at 860-301-1547 (after 5 p.m. only), or nina@menunkatuck.org.

Livingston Ripley WaterfowlConservancy
Litchfield, CT
Sunday May 20, 1:00 p.m.

Livingston Ripley Waterfowl Conservancy, located in Litchfield, Connecticut, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the research and protection of rare and endangered ducks and other waterfowl throughout the world. The organization maintains an aviary with a diverse collection of waterfowl from around the world for educational and research purposes. Many of the resident waterfowl will have paired off and mated during the winter months, and spring is an excellent time to see the young that have hatched!

Join Menunkatuck Audubon Society for a tour of LRWC’s aviaries, and experience a unique opportunity to view and learn about waterfowl from around the world. Please dress for the weather and be prepared to spend up to two hours outside during the tour. Boots or other waterproof shoes are recommended in case of muddy conditions at the facility. The tour provides excellent opportunities for close-up photography of the birds, and participants are welcome to bring cameras.

Pre-registration is required, and a $10 per person donation is requested. To register for this trip, please contact nina@menunkatuck.org. Carpools from the shoreline area may be set up, inquire with the leader if interested.


(From the May Newsletter)

Connecticut Birding Spot: Branford Supply Ponds


The Branford Supply Ponds Park encompasses about 350 acres of open water and forested land that support a variety of recreational activities including birding, fishing, hiking trails, and picnic areas. The ponds were created over a century ago through the construction of a 16-foot high stone dam that created a reserve water supply for the Town. A fish ladder has recently been installed, allowing fish to again gain access to 86 acres of open water, 9 acres of riparian habitat and 5 miles of river and stream habitat.

The ponds, woods, power line right-of-way, and stream side wetlands provide viewing opportunities for a wide variety of birds. Warblers in spring migration are an annual highlight.



View Branford Supply Ponds in a larger map


(From the May Newsletter)

Citizen Science: North American Bird Phenology Program


Phenology is the study of recurring plant and animal life cycle stages, or phenophases, such as leafing and flowering of plants, maturation of agricultural crops, emergence of insects, and migration of birds. Many of these events are sensitive to climatic variation and change, and are simple to observe and record.

The North American Bird Phenology Program, part of the USA-National Phenology Network, was a network of volunteer observers who recorded information on first arrival dates, maximum abundance, and departure dates of migratory birds across North America. Active between 1880 and 1970, the program was coordinated by the Federal government and sponsored by the American Ornithologists’ Union. It exists now as a historic collection of six million migration card observations, illuminating almost a century of migration patterns and population status of birds. Today, in an innovative project to curate the data and make them publicly available, the records are being scanned and placed on the internet, where volunteers worldwide transcribe these records and add them into a database for analysis.
You can become one of the many volunteers from around the country to sign into the site and convert these files into the database. Once cards are transcribed into the database the information can be analyzed, revealing changes in migratory bird patterns.

Visit www.pwrc.usgs.gov/bpp/ for complete details and to sign up as a transcriber.

(From the May Newsletter)

Help Locate Banded Purple Martins

The purple martin, the largest member of the swallow family in North America, has a range that stretches from the east coast of the United States and the Maritime Provinces of Canada, west to the Rocky Mountains, with isolated pockets in the western United States. Overall, the purple martin population is considered to be stable. However, based on Breeding Bird Survey data, purple martins have been showing range-wide declines in eastern North America and have been declining over most of their range in New England for the last 20 years. Early accounts from the 1920s suggested that purple martins were once widespread and abundant in New England. In Connecticut, the purple martin has declined to the point where it is listed as a threatened species.
Purple martins migrate from their winter range
in South America through Central America
and the Caribbean islands to their North American
breeding colonies.
http://www.natureserve.org/infonatura/
The recovery of this species in Connecticut and throughout New England is potentially straightforward because martins in this region rely exclusively on human provided nest structures. While adult martins show great site fidelity, returning to the same nesting location year after year, sub-adult martins (or returning juveniles) are much more likely to move to new locations. In theory, if housing is provided, sub-adult martins should find it, use it, and increase the population. However, this is not the case. Many housing locations in Connecticut, including some adjacent to active colonies, are available yet remain unoccupied. The reasons for this lack of occupancy and use are not clear. The criteria these birds use for selecting nesting sites in Connecticut are not understood. A lack of knowledge about dispersal patterns of young birds and the optimal conditions for establishing new colonies threatens to hamper recovery efforts. Where active colonies do exist, martins are often slow ·to colonize new locations.
Wildlife biologists from the DEEP band a purple martin chick
with silver USGS and colored DEEP bands.
To close this knowledge gap, a color banding project was initiated in early July, 2011, at six known martin colonies. Four coastal colonies in Clinton, Westport, and Madison (2 sites) and two inland colonies (both in Kent) were selected to see if coastal and inland colonies exhibit similar or different dispersion patterns. [Birds from the Hammonasset colonies were included in the banding program.] From those six sites, a total of 540 juvenile purple martins were fitted with both a standard silver United States Geological Survey (USGS) band and a color band. Each colony was assigned a different color (red, blue, green, purple, orange, or yellow) to facilitate the identification of the natal colony during future sightings of these birds. Additionally, each of the color bands has a unique alphanumeric code (CT###) so that individual birds can be identified. Other data collected by DEEP staff and volunteers included the weight and approximate age of each bird to assess its overall health.

The project will be repeated this year at the same locations with the same band colors to increase the number of banded birds, resulting in a greater likelihood of future sightings. The success of this study will be directly dependent upon the number of reported sightings of banded martins. You can help by keeping an eye out for banded birds starting this spring. If you see a color-banded purple martin, please report the sighting to the DEEP WIldlife Division by e-mail (geoffrey.krukar@ct.gov) or phone (860·675·8130). Be sure to provide the following information: location of the bird, date, color of the band.

DEEP’s Connecticut Wildlife,
September/October, 2011 (edited)

(From the May Newsletter)