Osprey Nesting in the Harbor Estuary Region 2019

Osprey Nesting in the Harbor Estuary Region 2019

Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) Nesting in the NY/NJ Harbor Estuary Region 2019 Hugh Carola, Program Director Hackensack Riverkeeper 2019 HEP Harbor Herons / Colonial Waterbirds Conference Fort Wadsworth, Gateway National Recreation Area Staten Island, New York December 10, 2019 First, MANY thanks to: Terry Doss, Drew McQuade – NJ Sports & Exposition Authority Dr. Cait Field, Katie Leung – NYC Department of Parks & Recreation Lisa Masi – New York State Department of Environmental Conservation Don Riepe – American Littoral Society Mike Ruscigno & Pat Hilliard, Bayonne Nature Club Bill Schultz – Raritan Riverkeeper Ben Wurst – Conserve Wildlife Foundation of NJ On the Hackensack River, it started with THIS pair in 2006 & 2007 PSE&G Hudson Generating Station, Jersey City, NJ MIDDLE AND NORTHWESTERN REACHESb OF THE NEW YORK / NEW JERSEY HARBOR ESTUARY NJ Meadowlands District 2018 Results: Blue 12 Current/past 15 Unused in 2019 5 Future nest platform sites* *Tripod-style platforms being considered for installation on closed landfills, marshy areas. Watershed region consists of lower (tidal) Hackensack River, NJ Meadowlands District, and Newark Bay. 2019 Results: *Seventeen nest sites *Five failures *Two “housekeeping” *Ten successful Meadowlands District: 10 nests • Former PSE&G site, Jersey City – 3 fledglings • Decommissioned transmission tower, Secaucus – Fail • East Kearny Marsh dike – “housekeeping” • Former NJ Transit Bridge, Kearny – 3 fledglings • PSEG transmission tower I, Kearny – 1 fledgling • Berry’s Creek, Lyndhurst – Fail • PSEG transmission tower II, Lyndhurst – 1 fledgling • Kean Tract, Carlstadt – “housekeeping” • Bloomberg Radio tower, Carlstadt – Fail • NJT Vince Lombardi Service Area, Ridgefield - Fail 7 additional Lower Hackensack / Newark Bay sites: Relay tower @ Overpeck Park, Teaneck – Fail Rte. 7 / Wittpenn Bridge, Jersey City – 2 fledglings Point-No Point railroad bridge, Newark – 2 fledglings Lehigh Valley railroad bridge, Bayonne – 1 fledgling Anchored barge One, Bayonne – 2 fledglings Anchored barge Two, Bayonne – 1 fledgling Shooters Island, Elizabeth – 1 fledgling MEADOWLANDS REGION SUCCESS RATE: 1.21/nest Harbor Estuary birds nest anywhere! Especially in Bayonne! Conserve Wildlife Foundation of NJ Osprey nesting results in HEP region: *Shrewsbury River *Navesink River *Sandy Hook (GNRA) *Raritan Bay (south) *Matawan Creek *CheesequakeFlllkkhjhj Creek *Raritan River *Arthur Kill *Newark Bay *Lower New York Bay *Hackensack River 55 active nests in 2019* 39 produced 54 young 1.38/nest success rate *102 surveyed in 2017 One anecdotal reason for the species’ 2019 breeding success: MENHADEN! NYC Parks & Recreation: 16 sites Conference House Park, Staten Island – Fail Nest platform @ Marine Park, Brooklyn – 3 fledglings Cell tower @ Pelham Bay Park, Bronx – 1 fledgling Dolphin @ Heritage Park, Staten Island – 1 fledgling Nest platform @ Alley Creek, Queens – 3 fledglings Channel marker @ MacNeil Park, Queens – Fail Vernam Basin, Far Rockaway, Queens – 1 fledgling Platform @ Sunset Cove Park, Queens – 1 fledgling Platform @ Udall’s Cove Park, Queens – 3 fledglings Fresh Kills Park alone: 7 sites Utility pole near north mound One – 2 fledglings Utility pole near north mound Two – 3 fledglings Utility pole near north mound Three - Fail Utility pole near east mound – 1 fledgling Utility pole near south mound – Fail Pole near Rte. 440 & north mound – 2 fledglings Utility pole ON west mound (DSNY) – 1 fledgling Results: 22 fledglings @ 12 out of 16 sites NYC PARKS & RECREATION SUCCESS RATE: 1.31/nest Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge and Adjacent 30 nesting pairs in 2019, 24 successful 60 fledglings produced 2.5 fledglings/nest success rate The 2019 Bottom Line(s): Grand Totals: 105 active nests / (79 successful) 142 fledglings 1.35 (1.8) fledglings per nest “The last year that a census was conducted (in Northeast NJ in 2017) a total of 102 nests were active in this same area. The total number of structures in this area is around 225-250 and this area is largely an underrepresented area in our annual surveys (most data is gathered from volunteer osprey watchers and the public).” – Ben Wurst, Conserve Wildlife Foundation of NJ Did I mention Menhaden? MANY thanks to the colleagues to helped me and HAPPY HOLIDAYS to all! .

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    16 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us