Summary of 2003 Census of American Oystercatchers in Massachusetts
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Great & Little Brewster
BOHA Terrestrial Vegetation and Intertidal Assemblages - DDRRAAFFTT Great Brewster Island and Little Brewster Island Green Island Mixed Brown Algae/Mytilus Reef Maritime Erosional Cliffs Outer Brewster Great Brewster Island Mixed Brown Algae/Semibalanus Calf Island Island Mixed Brown Algae/Semibalanus Tide Pool Middle Greater Brewster Island Brewster Island Recreational Little Brewster Mixed Assemblage MAP EXTENT Island Boston Harbor Staghorn Sumac Scrub Forest Early Successional Eastern Reed Marsh Woodland/Forest Other Urban Beach Strand or Build-up Mixed Brown Algae/ Northeastern Semibalanus/Green Algae Old Field High Intertidal Green Algae Overwash Dune Grassland Mixed Assemblage Beach High Intertidal Green Algae Green Crust Beach Tide Pool Semibalanus Mixed Brown Algae/Mytilus Reef No macrobiota Little Green Algae Other Urban Brewster Mixed Brown or Build-up Algae/Semibalanus/ Transition Zone Island Mytilus Reef Mytilus Reef Mixed Brown Mixed Assemblage Rock Algae/Mytilus Reef Green Crust Semibalanus Mixed Brown Mytilus Reef Mixed Assemblage Rock/Boulder - Algae/Semibalanus Mixed Zonation Beach Semibalanus Rock Maritime Rock Cliffs & Outcrops New England Rocky Intertidal Community Rock/Boulder - Mixed, No Zonation Rock/Boulder - Mixed Zonation Mixed Assemblage Beach 0 100 200 Meters $ Data Sources: NatureServe. 2009. Draft National Vegetation Classification Data (labeled in black); Bell, R.. 2003. BOHA Intertidal and Terrestrial Area Assessment (labeled in blue) Produced by the NPS FTSC at the University of Rhode Island 02 2010. -
Outdoor Recreation Recreation Outdoor Massachusetts the Wildlife
Photos by MassWildlife by Photos Photo © Kindra Clineff massvacation.com mass.gov/massgrown Office of Fishing & Boating Access * = Access to coastal waters A = General Access: Boats and trailer parking B = Fisherman Access: Smaller boats and trailers C = Cartop Access: Small boats, canoes, kayaks D = River Access: Canoes and kayaks Other Massachusetts Outdoor Information Outdoor Massachusetts Other E = Sportfishing Pier: Barrier free fishing area F = Shorefishing Area: Onshore fishing access mass.gov/eea/agencies/dfg/fba/ Western Massachusetts boundaries and access points. mass.gov/dfw/pond-maps points. access and boundaries BOAT ACCESS SITE TOWN SITE ACCESS then head outdoors with your friends and family! and friends your with outdoors head then publicly accessible ponds providing approximate depths, depths, approximate providing ponds accessible publicly ID# TYPE Conservation & Recreation websites. Make a plan and and plan a Make websites. Recreation & Conservation Ashmere Lake Hinsdale 202 B Pond Maps – Suitable for printing, this is a list of maps to to maps of list a is this printing, for Suitable – Maps Pond Benedict Pond Monterey 15 B Department of Fish & Game and the Department of of Department the and Game & Fish of Department Big Pond Otis 125 B properties and recreational activities, visit the the visit activities, recreational and properties customize and print maps. mass.gov/dfw/wildlife-lands maps. print and customize Center Pond Becket 147 C For interactive maps and information on other other on information and maps interactive For Cheshire Lake Cheshire 210 B displays all MassWildlife properties and allows you to to you allows and properties MassWildlife all displays Cheshire Lake-Farnams Causeway Cheshire 273 F Wildlife Lands Maps – The MassWildlife Lands Viewer Viewer Lands MassWildlife The – Maps Lands Wildlife Cranberry Pond West Stockbridge 233 C Commonwealth’s properties and recreation activities. -
STATUS of the PIPING PLOVER in MASSACHUSETTS by George W. Gove, Ashland
STATUS OF THE PIPING PLOVER IN MASSACHUSETTS by George W. Gove, Ashland On January 10, 1986, the Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus) was added to the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service list of endangered and threatened species of wildlife. The entire breeding popula tion of this species in North America has been estimated at less than 2200 pairs. Piping Plovers breed in the Great Plains from southern Alberta eastward to Minnesota, the Dakotas, and Nebraska; at scattered locations around the Great Lakes; and on the Atlantic Coast from the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Maritimes to Virginia and the Carolines. They winter along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts from South Carolina to Texas and north ern Mexico. The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated the Great Lakes population, which is down to less than twenty pairs, as "endangered," a term applied when extinction is imminent, and the Great Plains and Atlantic Coast populations as "threatened" (describing the state that is precursor to "endangered"). The decline of the Atlantic Coast population has been attributed to increasing recreational use and development of ocean beaches. In Massachusetts, the Piping Plover breeds coastally from Salis bury south and east to Cape Cod, the islands, and Westport. It is normally found in the state from mid-March through mid-September. This species makes a shallow nest, sometimes lined with fragments of shells, with pebbles, or wrack, along ocean beaches and filled- in areas near inlets and bays. The normal clutch of pale, sand- colored, speckled eggs is four. Incubation is underway by mid- May in Massachusetts. -
Annual Report of the Board of Harbor Commissioners, 1877 and 1878
: PUBLIC DOCUMENT .No. 33. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Board of Harbor Commissioners FOR THE YEAR 18 7 7. BOSTON ftanb, &berg, & £0., printers to tfje CommcntntaltJ, 117 Franklin Street. 1878. ; <£ommontocaltl) of Jllaesacfjusetta HARBOR COMMISSIONERS' REPORT. To the Honorable the Senate and the Home of Representatives of the Common- wealth of Massachusetts. The Board of Harbor Commissioners, in accordance with the provisions of law, respectfully submit their annual Report. By the operation of chapter 213 of the Acts of 1877, the number of the Board was reduced from five to three members. The members of the present Board, having been appointed under the provisions of said Act, were qualified, and entered upon their duties on the second day of July. The engineers employed by the former Board were continued, and the same relations to the United States Advisory Council established. It was sought to make no change in the course of proceeding, and no interruption of works in progress or matters pending and the present Report embraces the business of the entire year. South Boston Flats. The Board is happy to announce the substantial completion of the contracts with Messrs. Clapp & Ballou for the enclosure and filling of what has been known as the Twenty-jive-acre 'piece of South Boston Flats, near the junction of the Fort Point and Main Channels, which the Commonwealth by legis- lation of 1867 (chapter 354) undertook to reclaim with mate- rial taken for the most part from the bottom of the harbor. In previous reports, more especially the tenth of the series, the twofold purpose of this work, which contemplated a har- 4 HARBOR COMMISSIONERS' REPORT. -
Sculptors Gallery Proudly Hosts “34,” a Group Exhibition Curated by Liz Devlin of FLUX
!"#$"% #&'()$"*# +,((-*. !"#$%&'"(!) *++, 486 Harrison Ave, Boston,."t ! XXXCPTUPOTDVMQUPSTDPNtCPTUPOTDVMQUPST!ZBIPPDPN FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 7, 2015 Exhibition Title: 34 Exhibition Dates: July 22 – August 16, 2015 Artists’ Reception: July 26 from 3 – 5 pm SOWA First Friday Reception: August 7 from 5 – 8 pm Gallery Hours: Wed. – Sun. from 12 – 6 pm (Boston, MA): As a part of the Isles Arts Initiative, a summer long public art series on the Boston Harbor Islands and in venues across Boston, the Boston Sculptors Gallery proudly hosts “34,” a group exhibition curated by Liz Devlin of FLUX. Boston Sculptors Gallery will showcase work inspired by the intrinsic beauty and divergent tales of the Boston Harbor Islands National and State Park. “34” is a group exhibition that includes 34 regional artists each responding to one of the 34 Boston Harbor Islands. Each imaginative work will be accompanied by a placard, featuring text from Chris Klein’s Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands, which outlines a brief history of the particular island and will provide additional context for the work itself. The exhibition serves as a physical beacon on land that will be in conversation with the artwork on the harbor. Artists’ work will educate and inspire visitors, sharing unique perspectives and visionary iconography that will demonstrate why the islands’ history is among the most fascinating in our region. About Boston Sculptors: Founded in 1992, Boston Sculptors Gallery is an artist-run organization that presents and promotes innovative, challenging sculpture and installations. It is the only sculptors organization in the United States that maintains its own exhibition space. The organization has presented exhibitions of its sculptors in other venues and countries and occasionally invites Curators to present exhibitions in its gallery in Boston’s South End. -
Junior Ranger Program Booklet (Camping Islands)
Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area Bumpkin Island Green Island Nixes Mate Sheep Island Button Island Hangman Island Nut Island Slate Island Calf Island Langlee Island Outer Brewster Island Snake Island Deer Island Little Brewster Island Peddocks Island Spectacle Island Gallops Island Little Calf Island Raccoon Island Thompson Island Georges Island Long Island Ragged Island Webb Memorial Park Grape Island Lovells Island Rainsford Island Worlds End The Graves Middle Brewster Island Sarah Island Great Brewster Island Moon Island Shag Rocks Can’t turn in this booklet in person? Make a copy of your Junior Ranger Program Booklet completed booklet and send it with your name and address to: Boston Harbor Islands Junior Ranger Program 15 State St. Suite 1100 Camping Islands Boston, MA 02109 Activities created by Elisabeth Colby Designed and illustrated by Liz Cook Union Park Press, proud supporters of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park and publishers of Discovering the Boston Harbor Islands: A Guide to the City's Hidden Shores. A of Map Boston Harbor JUNIORJUNIOR RANGERRANGER NATIONAL PARK AREA N H O A T R EAST BOSTON B S O O R B SNAKE ISLAND THE GRAVES DEER ISLAND I GREEN ISLAND S S L A N D BOSTON LITTLE CALF ISLAND OUTER BREWSTER ISLAND CALF ISLAND MIDDLE BREWSTER ISLAND NIXES MATE GREAT BREWSTER ISLAND LOVELLS ISLAND SHAG ROCKS LITTLE BREWSTER ISLAND As a SPECTACLE ISLAND GALLOPS ISLAND LONG ISLAND Junior Ranger, THOMPSON ISLAND GEORGES ISLAND RAINSFORD ISLAND I pledge to: MOON ISLAND PEDDOCKS ISLAND • Continue learning about the -
Land Protection Plan
Appendix G S. Maslowski/USFWS Least tern Land Protection Plan ■ Introduction and Purpose ■ Project Description ■ Refuge Purpose ■ Status of Resources to be Protected ■ Threats to the Resource ■ Action and Objectives ■ Protection Options ■ Land Protection Methods ■ Service Land Protection Policy ■ Funding for Fee or Easement Purchase ■ Coordination ■ Socioeconomic and Cultural Impacts ■ Literature Cited Land Protection Plan Appendix G. Land Protection Plan G-1 Project Description Introduction and Purpose This land protection plan (LPP) provides detailed information about the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (Service, we, our) proposal to expand Nantucket National Wildlife Refuge (Nantucket NWR, refuge) on Nantucket, Massachusetts. This LPP identifies the proposed land protection boundary for the Nantucket NWR. Working with numerous partners, we delineated 2,036 acres of biologically significant land on the island of Nantucket. These acres are encompassed by the recommended acquisition boundary established in alternative B of the Nantucket NWR Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment (draft CCP/EA). We plan to protect these lands through transfers at no cost, fee-title acquisition, conservation easements, and management agreements. Of the total acreage, we recommend acquiring 206 acres in fee title through transfers at no cost, 17 acres in fee title through purchase, 1,117 acres in conservation easements, and 696 acres through management agreement. The purposes of this LPP are to: 1) Provide landowners and the public with an outline of Service policies, priorities, and protection methods for land in the project area. Amanda Boyd/USFWS Nantucket National Wildlife Refuge 2) Assist landowners in determining whether their property lies within the proposed acquisition boundary. -
Of the Boston Harbor Islands I: Species Parasitizing Coccinellidae and Staphylinidae, with Comments on Typification
Laboulbeniales (Ascomycota) of the Boston Harbor Islands I: Species Parasitizing Coccinellidae and Staphylinidae, with Comments on Typification The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Haelewaters, Danny, Serena Y. Zhao, André De Kesel, Rebecca E. Handlin, Isabel R. Royer, Brian D. Farrell, and Donald H. Pfister. 2015. “Laboulbeniales (Ascomycota) of the Boston Harbor Islands I: Species Parasitizing Coccinellidae and Staphylinidae, with Comments on Typification.” Northeastern Naturalist 22 (3) (August 19): 459–477. doi:10.1656/045.022.0304. Published Version doi:10.1656/045.022.0304 Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:20487898 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA 20152015 NORTHEASTERNNortheastern Naturalist NATURALIST 22(3):459–477Vol. 22, No. 3 D. Haelewaters, S.Y. Zhao, A. De Kesel, R.E. Handlin, I.R. Royer, B.D. Farrell, and D.H. Pfister Laboulbeniales (Ascomycota) of the Boston Harbor Islands I: Species Parasitizing Coccinellidae and Staphylinidae, with Comments on Typification Danny Haelewaters1,*, Serena Y. Zhao1, André De Kesel2, Rebecca E. Handlin1, Isabel R. Royer3, Brian D. Farrell4, and Donald H. Pfister1 Abstract - This paper, based on a recent comprehensive sampling of insects, is the first report of Laboulbeniales from the New England region since the 1930s. We present 7 new records of laboulbenialean parasites on Staphylinidae (rove beetles) and Coccinellidae (lady beetles) from the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area. -
Bird Observer VOLUME 37, NUMBER 5 OCTOBER 2009 HOT BIRDS
Bird Observer VOLUME 37, NUMBER 5 OCTOBER 2009 HOT BIRDS Vern Laux, Peter Trimble, and Eddie Laux were out cruising off Nantucket when they sighted this extremely cooperative White-faced Storm Petrel (left). Peter Trimble took this fabulous photograph. Among the avian stars of the BBC Extreme Pelagic trip in early September 2009 were this Band-rumped Storm-Petrel (left) and Bridled Tern (right), both photographed by Jeremiah Trimble. On September 29, Pat Ryder told Mark Faherty about “something weird” at Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary. Mark identified it as a Fork-tailed Flycatcher (left) and took this great photograph. Matt Garvey, Marshall Iliff, and Jeremiah Trimble were stunned to discover a Brown-chested Martin (right) at the Cumberland Farm Fields in Halifax/Middleboro on October 12, 2009. CONTENTS FALL MIGRATION HOTSPOTS IN MASSACHUSETTS: EMPHASIS ON SPARROWS Bird Observer Staff 265 FIFTY YEARS OF BIRDING: AN INTERVIEW WITH MARGARET ARGUE (reprinted from Bird Observer 21(1): 5-14) Martha Steele 277 SECOND REPORT OF THE MAINE BIRD RECORDS COMMITTEE (2007) William Sheehan, Secretary, and Peter Vickery, Chairman 287 THIRD REPORT OF THE MAINE BIRD RECORDS COMMITTEE (2008) William Sheehan, Secretary, and Peter Vickery, Chairman 290 ONA STREET WITH NO NAME John Nelson 295 ABOUT BOOKS A Modern Day Melampus Mark Lynch 298 BIRD SIGHTINGS May/June 2009 305 ABOUT THE COVER: Short-billed Dowitcher 322 ABOUT THE COVER ARTIST: Barry Van Dusen 324 ATA GLANCE Wayne R. Petersen 325 Editor’s Note: Margaret Argue died on Saturday, October 3, 2009, just two months short of her 102nd birthday. Margaret started birding with her husband Arthur in 1941 and was birding very actively right up into her nineties, when a fall curtailed her driving. -
Outer Cape Cod and Nantucket Sound
186 ¢ U.S. Coast Pilot 2, Chapter 4 26 SEP 2021 70°W Chart Coverage in Coast Pilot 2—Chapter 4 NOAA’s Online Interactive Chart Catalog has complete chart coverage http://www.charts.noaa.gov/InteractiveCatalog/nrnc.shtml 70°30'W 13246 Provincetown 42°N C 13249 A P E C O D CAPE COD BAY 13229 CAPE COD CANAL 13248 T S M E T A S S A C H U S Harwich Port Chatham Hyannis Falmouth 13229 Monomoy Point VINEYARD SOUND 41°30'N 13238 NANTUCKET SOUND Great Point Edgartown 13244 Martha’s Vineyard 13242 Nantucket 13233 Nantucket Island 13241 13237 41°N 26 SEP 2021 U.S. Coast Pilot 2, Chapter 4 ¢ 187 Outer Cape Cod and Nantucket Sound (1) This chapter describes the outer shore of Cape Cod rapidly, the strength of flood or ebb occurring about 2 and Nantucket Sound including Nantucket Island and the hours later off Nauset Beach Light than off Chatham southern and eastern shores of Martha’s Vineyard. Also Light. described are Nantucket Harbor, Edgartown Harbor and (11) the other numerous fishing and yachting centers along the North Atlantic right whales southern shore of Cape Cod bordering Nantucket Sound. (12) Federally designated critical habitat for the (2) endangered North Atlantic right whale lies within Cape COLREGS Demarcation Lines Cod Bay (See 50 CFR 226.101 and 226.203, chapter 2, (3) The lines established for this part of the coast are for habitat boundary). It is illegal to approach closer than described in 33 CFR 80.135 and 80.145, chapter 2. -
November 23, 1987 Scott M. Melvin Natural Heritage And
STATUS OF PIPING PLOVEES IN MASSACHUSETTS: 1987 SUMMARY November 23, 1987 Scott M. Melvin Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife 100 Cambridge St. Boston, MA. 02202 STATUS OF PIPING PLOVERS IN MASSACHUSETTS: 1987 SUMMARY Observers reported a total of 126 breeding pairs of Piping Plovers (Charadrius melodus) from 49 sites in Massachusetts in 1987 (Table 1). The 1987 total was lower than in either of the previous 2 years - 139 pairs (1986) and 132 pairs (1985). Observer effort in 1987, measured as number of sites surveyed and intensity of census efforts at each site, was greater than in 1985 and at least comparable to that in 1986. Thus, we believe the 1987 census results reflect a real population decline. We define breeding pairs as pairs that are observed with .either a nest or unfledged chicks, or that exhibit site tenacity and evidence of pair bonding and territoriality. Single birds that are observed during the breeding season and exhibit agitated, site tenacious behavior or distraction displays when approached are generally considered indicative of a breeding pair at a site. Breeding plovers were present at coastal sites from Plum Island south to the Rhode Island border and east to Cape Cod and Nantucket. All but 10 pairs (92%) occurred south of Boston, and 66 pairs (52%) occurred at sites on Cape Cod. More specifically, 10 pairs (8%) occurred at sites on the North Shore (New Hampshire border south to Boston), 10 pairs (8%) along the South Shore (Boston south to the Cape Cod Canal), 29 pairs (23%) at lower Cape Cod sites (Cape Cod Canal east to Brewster and Harwich) , 37 pairs (29%) on the outer Cape (Chatham and Monomoy NWR north to Provincetown), 20 pairs (16%) along the west shore of Buzzards Bay (Wareham south to Rhode Island border) and 20 pairs (16%) on the outer islands (Elizabeth Islands east to Nantucket). -
Birding the Boston Harbor Islands
Birding the Boston Harbor Islands John Move Introduction Boston Harbor Islands After nearly a decade of lobbying by m Representatives Gerry Studds and Joe Moakley and Senator Edward Keimedy, the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area was created by an Act of * * Congress in 1996. Unique among sites in the National Parks system, it is managed by a partnership made up of the twelve owners and operators of the thirty islands named in the legislation together with several advocacy groups and the National Park Service (NPS) itself After a five-year process of study and public input, a management plan was recently released that will guide the park as it moves into the new millennium. Of interest to birders and to visitors in general is the recommendation that calls for increased public access to the islands. At the same time, several of the more remote islands, traditionally used by colonial nesting species, are to remain undeveloped. In operation since the early 1970s, the Boston Harbor Islands State Park, now a part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area (the name it now goes by after Native Americans objected to using the phrase “recreation area” to describe islands on which some of their ancestors were imprisoned and died), is co-managed by the Massachusetts Department of Enviromnental Management (DEM) and the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC). Currently, six of the nineteen state-owned islands make up the nucleus of the Area, hosting nearly 125,000 visitors aimually. They are staffed seasonally and are accessible by ferry and water-taxi link from Boston as well as from the North and South Shores.