Monday, July 2, 2012

DIY Biodiversity


#1 Compost nurtures populations of soil food web organisms. 
#2 Organic Gardens exclude toxic fertilizers, in- crease biodiversity, protect biological communities, and fight climate change. 
#3 Mulch provides food for soil organisms and shelter for predators. 
#4 Plant and Save Heirloom Seeds to pre-serve genetic diversity and promote locally adapted varieties. 
#5 Plant a Chestnut Tree for the future. 
#6 Grow Saprophytic Mushrooms to increase fungal biodiversity. 
#7 Disperse Mycorrhizal Fungi to promote symbiotic relationships that help forest health. 
#8 Seed Bombs distribute seeds with soil food web organisms. 
#9 Plant for Insect Diversity and encourage “beneficial” insects. 
#10 Pledge your yard as a Pesticide Free Zone/Honey Bee Haven to protect pollinators. 
#11 Nesting Places for Insects preserve pollinators and predators. 
#12 Nesting Places help conserve bird populations. 
#13 Encourage Insectivores and bring balance to the garden. 
#14 Water is necessary for life. 
#15 Feed animals through lean times.
#16 Brush Piles provide shelter and habitat.

Pesticides and You, Beyond Pesticides, Spring 2012


(From the July Newsletter)

A Home Energy Solutions Assessment Will Help You Save and Also Benefit Menunkatuck


Menunkatuck Audubon Society has partnered with Wesson Energy for Home Energy Solutions Assessments. The partnership provides Menunkatuck with a $25 referral check for each $75.00 HES that is completed.

When you sign up for a HES two highly-qualified technicians will spend 2½ -4½ hours, depending upon the characteristics of your home, assessing your home’s energy efficiency.
  • Air leaks are identified and sealed using door seals, door sweeps, caulking, and foam.
  • Insulation is checked in your attic and basement and the technicians can tell you about options and available rebates.
  • Duct testing and duct sealing are done if your home has air conditioning.
  • Lighting is surveyed and made more efficient with up to 25 compact fluorescent bulb being installed. This can be worth as much as $75.00.
  • Water efficiency is improved. The technicians will offer to install aerators and low-flow showerheads and hot water pipe insulation.
  • Rebates are offered for the purchase of new Energy Star appliances.

The cost to the homeowner for the HES is $75.00. When you sign up for the HES with Wesson Energy, state that you were referred by Menunkatuck Audubon Society and that you want Menunkatuck to receive the referral check. When the HES is completed, Menunkatuck will receive $25.00.

The HES program does a fantastic job in analyzing and repairing the energy leaks in your home. A HES audit is valued at $700-$800 yet the service costs the customer $75.00.
Every home can benefit from this program. It will save you energy, make your home more comfortable, and save you money every year. The average home saves about $200.00 a year in energy savings by having HES audit.

Call Wesson Energy at 203-759-3800 to book an audit today. Be sure to mention that you were referred by Menunkatuck Audubon Society.

(From the July Newsletter)


The Nuthatch’s Vertical World


The white-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis) is one of four species of nuthatch found in North America and is a year-round resident of our local mature hardwood and mixed forests. This compact, amusing little bird with absurdly short legs hitches headfirst down tree trunks as it searches for food, headed in the opposite direction of the brown creeper and our various woodpecker species. Its sharp, pointed bill probes among the crevices in the bark for insects and spiders, teasing out these tasty morsels that the other birds may have missed on their way up the trunk. (The nuthatch also enjoys acorns, as well as sunflower seeds, peanuts, and suet offered at feeders.) But once a meal is secured, how will the nuthatch eat it? Its bill is not equipped to crack open seeds, acorns, or crunchy insects, nor are its legs able to grasp the morsel while the bird hammers it open. Therefore, the nuthatch must rely on its vertical habitat to provide the means to prepare its meal. It flies to a furrowed tree trunk and wedges the tidbit into a crevice in the bark and proceeds to pound it open with its bill.

Wikimedia

The nuthatch nesting season is in full swing; you may have noticed vocal sparring as a pair of territorial nuthatches give their nasal “ank-ank” call in rapid succession as they oust another pair from their territory. Their visual displays may include brief chases or a spread of their very short tail feathers into a fan. 

Rick Cameron

Observe the pair for a while and you may find their nest cavity – usually a natural knot hole in a tree or an old woodpecker excavation, though sometimes nuthatches will use a nest box. The female has created a cup nest within made with bark strips, fine grasses, and animal fur. A fascinating aspect of nuthatch nesting is the bird’s ritual of grabbing an insect in its bill and, using a sweeping motion, rubbing the insect back and forth around the nest’s entrance hole. It is believed that the insects, usually beetles or ants, are specially chosen because they emit a noxious smell that persuades predators to look elsewhere for a meal. If food is plentiful and the odorous predator guard works, the nuthatch pair may fledge from five to ten youngsters in two weeks time. The fledglings will continue to be fed by their parents for another two weeks or so as they move through the forest - their vertical world.

Submitted by Cindi Kobak

(From the July Newsletter)

Citizen Science: Yard Map


YardMap is a citizen science project from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology designed to cultivate a richer understanding of bird habitat, for both professional scientists and people concerned with their local environments.

The YardMap Network is an NSF-funded project that builds online communities to investigate the impacts of bird-friendly and carbon-neutral practices in backyards, community gardens, and parks. Participants will locate their yards or parks on a Google maps interface, then document their sustainable practices, such as adding native plants, putting up bird feeders, installing a solar panel, or biking to work. 

YardMap will serve as a detailed site description for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s citizen-science bird observations. By providing access to rich media resources for learning about sustainable practices and enabling people to share their maps and practices with each other, YardMap strives to create online conservation communities engaged in real life sustainable practices.

The YardMap Network is a partnership with the National Audubon Society, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Roger Tory Peterson Institute, Empire State College’s online alumni program, and the American Community Gardening Association.

YardMap is designed to help answer questions such as:
  • What practices improve the wildlife value of residential landscapes?
  •  Which of these practices have the greatest impact?
  •  Over how large an area do we have to implement these practices to really make a difference?
  •  What impact do urban and suburban wildlife corridors and stopover habitats have on birds?
  •  Which measures (bird counts? nesting success?) show the greatest impacts of our practices?

The YardMap web site is at yardmap.org.

(From the July Newsletter)

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Join the Fun - Project Limulus

Project Limulus is a horseshoe crab research project that relies heavily on data gathered from physically tagging and recapturing animals. The project leaders at Sacred Heart University rely on volunteers - citizen scientists - to conduct the surveys and tag the horseshoe crabs.

The survey is a fun activity for young and old alike. See for yourself in this video by Jim Murtagh.


Menunkatuck volunteers survey one of the  Guilford beaches. Volunteers from other organizations cover  New Haven and Branford beaches. Other beaches in West Haven, East Haven, and all of Connecticut's shoreline towns from Madison to Stonington need to be surveyed. If you are interested in becoming a Project Limulus volunteer, contact Judy Knowles, Memnunkatuck's Project Limulus coordinator.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Menunkatuck has received two grants for kestrel restoration in Connecticut.


Menunkatuck has received two grants for kestrel restoration in Connecticut.

Audubon Connecticut Grant is for $1550


Audubon Connecticut awarded us $1550 for kestrel next boxes and baffles for the mounting poles. We’ve partnered with Tom Sayers and the Northeast Connecticut Kestrel Project on his project to rebuild the nesting population of American kestrels in Connecticut.


Tom’s 55 kestrel boxes are not protected from climbing predators. This Audubon grant will provide for raccoon baffles for the boxes. Additionally, ten new kestrel boxes will be built and installed in the Menunkatuck Chapter area. The grant will be matched with funds from the generous contributions of our members. 


The American kestrel, a robin-sized falcon, was listed as “threatened on Connecticut's Endangered, Threatened, and Special Concern Species List in 2004, primarily due to a lack of information, coupled with a perceived decline in nesting and migrating numbers and diminishing habitat.” (CT DEEP)

About five years ago, Tom Sayers created the Northeast Connecticut Kestrel Project (NECKP) nest box program in northeastern Connecticut. The research shows that the single greatest factor in helping improve kestrel numbers are well run nest box projects tailored specifically for this species.

EPOC Awards $3960


The Environmental Professionals’ Organization of Connecticut (EPOC) awarded us $3960 for radio tracking Tom’s kestrels.

At approximately 15 days old, all young birds are banded with federal metal leg bands which they wear for life. If those birds are recovered on either their northern breeding grounds or southern wintering grounds (through netting programs, found dead, etc.) their bands can be traced back to the original banding site, yielding very important data about their movements throughout the year. 


But leg band recovery rates are typically only 1-2%, yielding very small data sets. The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection has shown a great deal of interest in Tom’s work, but the limited data from the project to date has only been marginally useful in helping direct their efforts towards better land management practices for this species throughout the state.

Tom is determined to improve the quality and quantity of data which his program is generating to help improve management practices aimed at helping this species. Currently, it is not known where the young birds immediately disperse to or how far they go while still in Connecticut or if the birds returning to the boxes in the spring are the same adults from the previous year, other adults new to the area, or previously fledged young birds from that box or some other box in the study area. 

Radio telemetry can provide the answers to these questions and a myriad of others. Basically, the young birds are fitted with transmitters which are then monitored by following them in the study area, and beyond, with a handheld receiver. Getting accurate data on their post-breeding dispersal patterns and site fidelity (which birds are actually occupying the boxes the next spring) is immensely important when making management decisions about land use, the direction, literally and figuratively, that expanded nest box projects should take, and where new nest box projects should be established.

In addition, there are two other university and grant-funded kestrel researchers on the east coast who will be starting up their first ever radio telemetry work with kestrels in the upcoming season to help answer exactly the same research questions referred to earlier. Hawk Mountain, a nationally renowned raptor research center in Pennsylvania, has asked Connecticut to coordinate telemetry work with them as they move forward with their inaugural telemetry work in the upcoming season. To be able to compare/analyze telemetry data sets from three different east coast projects would allow researchers to make great strides in answering some of the questions that need to be answered for more effective conservation and management decisions regarding this threatened species.


The EPOC grant will provide for the purchase of 20 light-weight radio transmitters that will be fixed on the birds’ backs. Using telemetry equipment (antennas and receivers), Tom and DEEP and university researchers will be able to track the movement of the kestrels both in Connecticut and as they migrate.


Audubon Connecticut—an operating unit of the National Audubon Society—is one of Connecticut's premier conservation and environmental education organizations. Its top-notch staff of seasoned professionals works hard to carry out the Audubon mission within the state—protecting birds, other wildlife and their habitats through education, research, advocacy and land protection.

EPOC represent the interests of Connecticut's Licensed Environmental Professionals (LEPs) by providing information, training and updates regarding the LEP program in Connecticut. EPOC welcomes the participation of all members in our activities and recognizes the strength of drawing on a membership of diverse careers, interests and backgrounds.

The EPOC Grant Program provides non-profit and not-for-profit environmental advocacy groups, community based groups and environmental education organizations, funding for local projects that benefit the environment on an annual basis. This year they awarded a total of $9020.

Photos: Tom Sayers

Monday, May 7, 2012

New Haven Breeding Bird Atlas

Audubon Connecticut, with support from the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven, is looking for volunteers to participate in the third season of the New Haven Pilot Breeding Bird Atlas program. All levels of birders are welcome. Training is scheduled for May 21st at 10:00 am or 6:30 in the evening at the Bent of the River Audubon Center in Southbury, Connecticut (map). Training is not mandatory but is suggested. 



Volunteers will be asked to conduct surveys between May 25th and July 1st. We ask that volunteers visit a site two mornings during this period. The sites are located in the greater New Haven area from Milford to Madison and stretching inland as far as Cheshire.

Volunteers can survey a spot that they have been meaning to visit, a site close to home or even a site that is not usually open to the public. This is a great excuse for a walk in nature. Do something you enjoy and help birds too. To participate or for more information please contact Kim Anglace at KEA316@gmail.com.