Subject: [Tweeters] Re: RFI: Looking for "natural" Osprey nests in Puget
Date: Oct 14 07:34:27 2013
From: Hal Michael - ucd880 at comcast.net


Old age clouds my memory.? For at least the last three years there has been an Osprey nest in the top of a tree on a small island in Lake St Clair, southeast of Lacey.? We check them out each time we boat the lake.


Hal Michael
Olympia WA
360-459-4005 (H)
360-791-7702 (C)
ucd880 at comcast.net

----- Original Message -----
From: "Hal Michael" <ucd880 at comcast.net>
To: " stan Kostka lynn Schmidt" < lynnandstan at earthlink .net>
Cc: tweeters at U.WASHINGTON. EDU
Sent: Monday, October 14, 2013 7:22:44 AM
Subject: Re: [Tweeters] Re: RFI : Looking for "natural" Osprey nests in Puget????????Sound area


While we're at it, how many Barn Swallow, Cliff Swallow, Cave Swallow nests has anyone seen not on a man-made structure?


Hal Michael
Olympia WA
360-459-4005 (H)
360-791-7702 (C)
ucd880 at comcast.net

----- Original Message -----
From: " stan Kostka lynn Schmidt" < lynnandstan at earthlink .net>
To: tweeters at u. washington . edu
Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2013 10:31:05 PM
Subject: [Tweeters] Re: RFI : Looking for "natural" Osprey nests in Puget????????Sound area

Hi Bud,
I'm unaware of any peer-review articles on the subject, ?but here's one I recall from a popular publication.

? https :// www . nwf .org/News-and-Magazines/National-Wildlife/Birds/Archives/2001/A-Little-Osprey-tality-Goes-a-Long-Way. aspx

"The great majority of coastal osprey nests today are on artificial sites," says ornithologist Alan F. Poole, author of Ospreys: A Natural and Unnatural History. "On the New England coast between New York and Boston, it's close to 100 percent."
?"Like it or not, we've created populations that are dependent on human structures. Ospreys have become the purple martins of the raptor world."



Stan Kostka
lynnandstan AT earthlink .net
Arlington

Subject: RFI : Looking for "natural" Osprey nests in Puget Sound area
From: Bud Anderson < falconresearch AT gmail .com>
Date: Sun, 13 Oct 2013 10:27:28 -0700
Over the last decade or two, Ospreys have been adopting more and more
artificial nesting sites (power poles, pilings, cell towers, light poles,
platforms) for breeding.

In fact, I am starting to wonder if there aren't more "artificial" nests
now in western Washington than natural ones.

Anyway, I find myself in need of a few photos of natural Osprey nests, i.e.
those placed in trees/snags.

And although I am supposed to be a raptor biologist, I am no longer aware
of many such sites.

Anyone out there willing to share the locations of some local "natural"
tree nests ( Whatcom , Skagit , Snohomish , King, Pierce, Island counties) so I
can go and get some photos?

Plus, I am really kind of interested in this apparent shift in nesting
habitat.

Are we seeing the gradual demise of natural Osprey nesting sites?

Anyone out there working on this?

Thanks,

Bud Anderson
Falcon Research Group
Box 248
Bow, WA 98232
(360) 757-1911
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