Category Archives: 6. Wildlife and Plants

Viral spread: “Hurricane Irene Damage Ruins NC Waterfowl Refuge. Waterfowl not coming.”

This story caught me eye last week when several Google Alerts reported that Irene ruined the Waterfowl Refuge.  And birds would not becoming. Rather alarming so I started to check it. Trying to connect the dots of which there were many.

I  finally called  Dennis Stewart at the FWF,  who was quoted in the story.   His comments  was taken out of content and large sections of his interview were edited down to make the news more enticing than the reality. Dennis told me that   Hurricane Irene had little to no impact on the wildfowl.   While there was change in marshes, wild life adapted readily after the storm.

This is the  kind of misinformation (waterfowl not coming)  creates what has been be called knowledge of the web. In this case the knowledge was flawed.

CASE 1

  1. Today,you can find newly published web  knowledge at a site  http://www.mountaincabinsforsale.org/BOWHUNTING-NEWS/Hurricane-Irene-Damage-Ruins-NC-Waterfowl-Refuge-153062  [this site is dedicated to the sale of cabins in MONTANA.] They copied  info from
  2. http://www.grandviewoutdoors.com/duck-hunting/articlecontent/2/2012/3255/Hurricane-Irene-Damage-Ruins-NC-Waterfowl-Refuge
  3. who gathered the info from HATTERAS, N.C. (AP) [WHOEVER THAT IS]

CASE 2

  1. http://outerbanksontheweb.com/tag/news/ yesterday  from 2/13 story in
  2. http://www.foxcarolina.com/story/16920511/hurricane-irene-damage-ruins-nc-waterfowl-refuge based on an article
  3. http://hamptonroads.com/2012/02/hurricane-irene-damage-ruins-refuge-waterfowl By Gabriella Souza
    The Virginian-Pilot

 THE ORGINAL REPORT:

Five months ago, Hurricane Irene ripped a 200-foot hole in the pond’s west end and drained it, leaving an oval of mucky sand. Now, the pond comes and goes with the tide, and the lack of a consistent water level has prevented the waterfowl from landing and feeding. Coupled with an uncharacteristically warm winter that could have prevented birds from migrating as far south, it has meant a huge drop in the number of birds, Stewart said.

“If we see 300 birds in here total, waterfowl and non-waterfowl, we feel pretty lucky,” he said, gazing at the expanse of sand. He can’t recall seeing a swan in the pond all winter.

The 5,800-acre wildlife refuge on the north end of the island, managed by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is known as a birders’ paradise. Almost 3 million people venture here each year, many to spy rare migratory fowl like Redhead ducks in the winter and shore birds in the summer. Pedestrians with telescopes over their shoulders are common winter sights along N.C. 12.

Birding groups and other visitors have still come, but they are concerned about the breach and its impact on the refuge.

But Stewart reassures birders the fowl will return. He hopes to patch the breach, which is up to 14 feet deep in some spots, by the end of March, which will give aquatic vegetation, a food source, time to grow.

Continue reading

Beached whale found in Nags Head

beached_whale_20120208195215_JPG

(Photo courtesy OBX Marine Mammal Stranding Network.)

Updated: Wednesday, 08 Feb 2012, 9:48 PM EST

NAGS HEAD, N.C. (WAVY) – Researchers with the Outer Banks Center for Wildlife Education aren’t sure what killed a whale that washed up in Nags Head on Feb. 4.

The whale was found about a half a mile north of Jeanette’s Pier in Nags Head. Crews worked with the town to get heavy equipment to aid in the removal of the 27-foot female whale. On Monday, the stranding team performed a necropsy, but the whale’s cause of death has not yet been determined. However, the center believes she died before washing up on the beach.

 

Alonso Goes to NPS

 

This documentary follows “Alonso” as he arrives at his new home with the National Park Service on Ocracoke Island, NC. He was captured from the wild herd of Colonial Spanish Mustangs managed by the Corolla Wild Horse Fund in Corolla, NC by herd manager, Wesley Stallings. This partnership with the National Park Service will help to bring back Colonial Spanish Mustang traits to the Ocracoke herd. http://www.CorollaWildHorses.org

Swans on Winter Refuge

PHIL DICKINSON | Winston-Salem Journal
Published: February 03, 2012
» 0 Comments | Post a Comment
Picture a fallow cornfield or shallow lake this time of year. Now picture them covered with large, white birds moving about as they feed. Or maybe they are just sleeping peacefully on the water. Each year, thousands of tundra swans migrate to winter refuges in eastern North Carolina. I just returned from a birding trip to the Outer Banks. The swans were a sight to behold.
Tundra, or whistling, swans are large, almost 5 feet from head to tail, have a 5½-foot wingspan and weigh more than 20 pounds. They breed on the Canadian tundra, thus their name, but in winter they seek unfrozen habitat along both coasts of the United States. Two places they like are Lake Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge and Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge near Columbia.
Swan numbers are down this year at the two sites with only 2,000 or 3,000 at each. These totals remain impressive to see, even when compared with an estimated 20,000 at Pocosin’s Pungo Lake unit three years ago. The reasons for the decline are not known. Are they staying farther north in a warm winter? Is there less food? Along Maryland’s Eastern Shore, feral populations of the tundra’s cousin, the mute swan, are also blamed, but more on that later.
At their winter residences, tundra swans sleep on the water, but they often move to nearby agricultural fields to feed during the day. The Mattamuskeet and Pocosin locations provide the ideal combination of food and water.
The movements of wintering swans and snow geese would have jeopardized birds and pilots had the U.S. Navy’s plans for a nearby airfield come to fruition. Now, the birds face another danger: a proposal to install wind-energy turbines near Pocosin. Creatures that fly are not easy to relocate.
Swans migrate in large flocks, but on breeding grounds far to our north, the mating adults spread out and only young birds or nonbreeding adults group together. Courting pairs put on quite a display, flapping their wings and making lots of noise as they face each other. Males help with incubation and care for the young. Parents will fight off small predators, but in the event of a wolf or bear, they try to hide the nest by quickly leaving the area.
If you have seen a swan on a pond at a park or resort, it probably was a mute swan with its gracefully curving neck and an orange bill bordered by black. Adult tundra swans have black bills. Mute swans were introduced into the United States about 100 years ago. Over the years, many have escaped and bred in the wild. Not only are they not native, but they are considered invasive. A number of states are taking steps to control their populations.
Around Chesapeake Bay, their numbers have increased significantly. They eat underwater bay grasses, and one bird can consume 8 pounds of grass a day, tearing up the root or rhizome in the process. Tundra swans and many ducks also depend on the bay grasses for food.
In Maryland, the numbers of wintering tundra swans reportedly have plummeted by 40 percent in the past five years, and mute swans could be a factor. That state now has a management plan for mute swans after a 2004 law removed them from protection as migratory birds. North Carolina has yet to experience this problem, but wild mute swans sometimes are seen in small numbers at Pea Island on the Outer Banks and in a few other places.

Cape Hatteras National Seashore Interim Protected Species Management Strategy 2011-2012

2011 annual reports on protected species management and annual law enforcement report.
2011 Piping Plover Annual Report2011 Piping Plover Annual Report   (3.4 MB, PDF file)
2011 Sea Turtle Annual Report2011 Sea Turtle Annual Report   (2.1 MB, PDF file)
2011 Seabeach Amaranth Annual Report2011 Seabeach Amaranth Annual Report   (17.5 KB, PDF file)
2011 Colonial Waterbird Summary2011 Colonial Waterbird Summary   (1.4 MB, PDF file)
2011 American Oystercatcher Summary2011 American Oystercatcher Summary   (3.5 MB, PDF file)
2011 Annual Law Enforcement Report2011 Annual Law Enforcement Report   (341.0 KB, PDF file)
Disclaimer: Links within the above document(s) were valid as of the date published.
Note: Some of the files may be in PDF format and can be viewed using the Adobe Acrobat Reader software.
You may download a free copy of Acrobat Reader from Adobe Systems.