[Bristol-Birds] Re: Breaks Park Peregrine Falcon nest appears eminent

  • From: "Wallace Coffey" <jwcoffey@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Bristol-birds" <bristol-birds@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2012 15:46:07 -0400

  
On Saturday, June 9, Roger Mayhorn announced that he and others were 
concentrating their search for a Peregrine Falcon nest in Breaks Interstate
Park in Southwest Virginia in the wrong place and that was not their nesting
site.  

He revealed that Peregrine chicks are in the area and almost ready to 
fledge. The new site is being monitored and appropriate actions are being 
taken to study the birds. 

As many of you know, members of the Buchanan County Bird Club have 
been working for the last two years with the Virginia Department of Game 
and Inland Fisheries to help monitor the Breaks gorge from overlooks and 
have seen adult Peregrines flying there. 

Wallace Coffey
Bristol, TN
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Wallace Coffey 
  To: Bristol-birds 
  Sent: June 07, 2012 12:22
  Subject: [Bristol-Birds] Breaks Park Peregrine Falcon nest appears eminent






















   
  This may be the year when
  Jeff Cooper, Sergio Harding
  and the Virginia Department
  of Game and Inland Fisheries
  add the Breaks Interstate
  Park to the mountain cliff face
  sites for Peregrine Falcon nests
  in the Old Dominion.

  Mike Sanders of Bristol made
  this digiscope photo of the
  suspected cliff site where you
  can see the extensive streak 
  of whitewash from the droppings
  of the young.  They may well be
  ready to fledge and the final and unofficial confirmation that young were 
  reached and banded is upon us.  This would then be the first known nesting 
  of Peregrines at Breaks Interstate Park in the five years since birds were
  first brought there from coastal areas of the state and eventually released 
into 
  the wild from a hack box on the north end of Pine Mountain in Dickenson 
County.
  The 19 Peregrine chicks hacked from the site are among 200 Virginia has 
  released since they began to concentrate on mountain population restoration. 

  VDGIF is monitoring this cliff site along with Big House Mountain in 
Rockbridge County
  where, on 15 June of last year, they found and banded Virginia's first known 
nesting of
  wild Peregrines on mountain cliffs.  That was a new known breeding pair. 
                                                                                
                                                                                
                      
  Two other cliff face sites with 
  adults on territories
  have been monitored
  by the National Park Service
  with one of those being
  the famous White Rocks
  of Lee County in the far
  southwest corner of the
  state.  It is being checked
  by the staff of Cumberland
  Gap National Historic Park.

  The goals of the hacking 
  program are to repopulate 
  the historic breeding range 
  in the southern Appalachians, 
  provide a safe fledging 
  environment, and reduce the
  impact of nesting peregrines 
  on sensitive species along 
  the coast. 

  The young Peregrine shown
  at the left was banded and
  photographed by Jeff Cooper
  last June at Big House Mnt.
  in Rockbridge County.  There
  were two known falcon chicks
  banded there.  One of the
  parents was an adult confirmed
  to have originated at a Virginia
  nest site.  Of the three other known cliff face sites with adults on 
territories, biologists were 
  never able to determine if any of the sites actually had eggs or young.  No 
clear evidence 
  was established to indicate that nesting took place. One of those is a 
hacking site at 4,000 
  feet in the Shenandoah National Park along the border of Madison and Page 
counties.   

  For two months, VDGIF biologists have been aware and monitoring the Breaks 
Park
  site.  While no official word has been released by the agency, it is widely 
known the 
  biologists have found what is believed to be an active nest.  There are many 
other key
  observations which point to nesting activity.

  The nest site is on a very tall cliff face above River Trail down near the 
railroad and
  Russell Fork River.  The ledge with white droppings is about one third of the 
way
  down what is maybe a 500 to 600 foot high cliff.  It offers a stiff challenge 
to 
  climbers who would go down on ropes to the nest.

  A joint effort has was made by the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife 
and the 
  Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries to try to locate the birds 
in the park.
  A promising pair of Peregrines is in the park and the initial search was 
centered near
  the State Line Overlook.  Biologists found the possible nest site during 
their early
  search. 

  The park provides excellent cliff habitat for peregrines, and is thought to 
be the last 
  known peregrine nesting location in Virginia prior to the serious decline of 
the Peregrine
  throughout its North American range due to DDT. 

  Successful discovery of nest sites on the mountain cliffs of Virginia is just 
one among
  many successes that must be experienced by Peregrines before the population 
can sustain
  itself in these mountains.  This is only the cheering and shouting part we 
are experiencing
  now.  The rest of the success, when it finally takes root, will be much less 
in the public
  eye and a quieter and more secluded experience.

  Wallace Coffey
  Bristol, TN

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