Bird World Happenings, Late June 25

There is good news. K3 is alright. The little one was blown off the Red tail hawk nest on the Cornell Campus today. K3 is the third hatch of the 2021 season. Suzanne Arnold Horning who takes beautiful images of the hawks has located both K3 and K1 and says that Big Red and Arthur are fully aware of where their kids are. This is wonderful news. That little K3 is going to give us all quite a few worries it seems! So glad he is OK.

It has been a very sad week in Bird World. The death of Alma and one chick in the Finnish Osprey Nest today is a tragedy. My friend T thinks that the Raven, had it been able to get to the fish tail under the chicks, might have taken that food and left everything alone. But that was sadly not to be the case. The surviving chicks are now in the care of a foster mother. Then there was the death of the chick on the Cowlitz Nest and the announcement that K2 had to be euthanized due to a severe beak injury. The week ended badly.

There are still, however, many things to celebrate in Bird World so let us hop through the nests and see what has been happening.

Little Tiny Bob and Middle Bob were eating a good sized fish on the Foulshaw Moss Nest this evening. Great Big Bob was over wingersizing. It is always nice when she is preoccupied so the other two can eat in peace. Look closely. Little Tiny Bob looks like an osprey! There he is with his juvenile feathers on the right. Mom is busy giving them both bites. These two are not competitive and get a long really well. That is so nice.

Mom and Dad have been on the barge in Port Lincoln, Australia and things will be ramping up there soon. In the image below, Mom is still on the nest and you can see Dad’s ‘man cave’ lower down. This nest is known for siblicide. When things begin to happen, I will post a link so you can watch if you like.

During the 2021 season, the third hatch, little Tapps, was so so tiny compared to the other two and there was clearly not enough food for Mom and three babies. Tapps died when he was 18 days old. It was hard to watch. Solly, the eldest and a female, received a satellite tracker. Dew was the middle chick. We have been able to follow Solly and she is changing the understanding of how far Ospreys go when they leave the nest. Dew was ringed but has no tracker. To my knowledge there have been no sightings of Dew.

Solly is 278 days old today. Let us see where she is staying.

Solly really does love that area around Eba Anchorage. Maybe this will be her forever home. She has shown no interest in returning to Port Lincoln.

Tiny Tot had two nice fish meals today compliments of dad, Jack. The first came at 11:26 and the second was at 4:56. Spaced out nicely!

This image shows the last fish delivery. It is quite a big fish and if you look carefully you will notice that Tiny Tot still has a crop from the morning’s meal. Nice.

There was a big storm near the nest of the Black Storks in Estonia today. The trees were swaying in the forest but oddly, the nest wasn’t. It was an odd sensation. The rain was just beginning to come down when I took these images.

Look how much the storklets have grown. Their beautiful juvenile plumage is starting to show through.

The Black Storks are fine. There continue to be three and that is such good news. Karl II and Kaia are very good parents!

The White Storks at the Mlade Burky nest in Czechoslovakia are really growing, too. The community really worked together to make certain that this family thrived. Just look at these beautiful storklets today.

I am, however, just hoping that it is the angle of the camera and the light outside that is causing the stork’s left leg to appear grey or black – the one at the back on the right. Could that band be too tight? Otherwise they seem impressibly healthy. Hats off to everyone in the community for their kindness!

The remaining chick on the Cowlitz nest had some fish today and has a bit of a crop. Whether there was enough for the chick and Electra is unknown. I did not watch this nest that closely today. I was happy, however, to see the baby ate. So small and so undernourished. It is supposed to be extremely hot on this nest on Saturday – it is the heat wave that is hitting that part of the Pacific Northwest. This chick is going to need lots more fish! Electra, please forget about Wattsworth. Go and get the fish yourself – unhook 65 million years of hardwiring that tells you to stay on the nest and feed the babies the fish Wattsworth brings. Just go. You can fish.

Idris brought in a late day fish for Dysnni and Ystwyth on the Dyfi Osprey Nest in Wales. When he arrived Telyn was not on the nest. Ystwyth was hungry. So what does any good dad do? He feeds his chicks! And that is precisely what Idris did – great guy.

By the time Ystwyth was finished, Dysnni decided he would like some fish, too! Way to go Idris!

And someone at the Falcon Cam Project on the UC Berkeley Campus, put together a compilation video of the Fifth Season of Annie and Grinnell and their chicks – Fauci, Kaknu, and Wek-Wek.

Gosh, by the time the chicks fledge you have forgotten what it was like at the beginning when Annie and Grinnell were just thinking about chicks. So this video is a bit of fun! Not sure about the choice of music but you can mute the sound if you like. Enjoy.

The Muscovy Duck has returned to her eggs and seems to continue building up the nest higher and higher using the bark mulch. Glad to see the bamboo fence to protect her did not frighten her away.

Thank you for joining me today. So glad to hear that K3 is safe – and K1. We can all rest a little easier tonight.

Thank you to the following for their streaming cams where I grab my screen shots: Parkland Florida Duck Cam, Cowlitz PUD, Cornell Bird Lab and RTH, Dyni Osprey Nest, Cumbria Wildlife Trust, Mlade Buky, The Eagle Club of Estonia, Achieva Credit Union, and the Port Lincoln Osprey Project. I would also like to thank the Port Lincoln FB Page for posting the images of Solly’s satellite tracking.

Muscovy Ducks make their nest in a Florida garden

Ah, someone wrote to me and suggested that I check out a streaming cam at a house in Florida. There is a pair of Muskovy Ducks that made a nest and the female has laid a pile of eggs.

The Muscovy Duck is easily recognized by the red warty like patches on its face. They are mostly black with a green iridescence on their wings and white patches. You can see them clearly in the image below. Muscovies are so large that they are often mistaken for geese. They are, however, dabbling ducks not to be mistaken for geese! The Muscovies are larger than a mallard and smaller than a Canada Goose.

Normally they would make their nest in a tree cavity, 3-18 metres off the ground. They will also lay their eggs in specialty nest boxes. On occasion they will make their nest on the ground in dense vegetation near water. Ah, but look. I don’t see any dense vegetation. Hopefully the hill slants down to water for the little ones. Ironically, the female duck will be faithful to this nesting spot all her life! Or that is what the Cornell Bird Lab says. I wonder then if she has made her nest at this location previously? and if she will return next year?

But, as you can see here the couple were attracted to this corner of a residence in Parkland, Florida.

The clutch is normally 8-15 eggs. I can’t count these eggs precisely. Look at all the down she has pulled off her chest to make the lining for the nest. So beautiful. The female must feel pretty secure in this location to leave her eggs unattended. The female defends this nest and will be the only one that looks after the eggs and the ducklings.

That said, I found a photo of a male helping the female get the ducklings across a road.

“Muscovy Duck Family” by Photomatt28 is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

In terms of conservation status, the number of Muscovy Ducks is declining.

This is such a very interesting nest with the eggs in a kind of raised area in a corner. Incubation is approximately 30 days. That said, I do not know precisely when the last egg was laid so it will be a bit of a guess when hatch comes. Wow. Won’t it be wonderful to see all those little ones follow their mom to the water?!

Today, before I could finish this blog, ‘something’ found the ducks nest, removed some of the soft down lining, and broke at least one egg. You can see the broken egg to the left of the image on top of the mulch. There is no time code and I rewound as far as I could with no luck in finding out what had happened or how many of the eggs were damaged. They would have come to the nest when the mother was away and this duck would be fierce if she were there.

The family have put a bamboo fence to help keep away predators. It is possible that a number of eggs were taken if we compare the image below to the one above.

I hope the good intentions of the owners did not frighten the duck off the nest. Lots of things happened to Daisy the Duck and she always returned, fingers crossed here. The camera has been streaming since 23 June when the duck came and laid the eggs. I wonder how many more days to hatch?

It would be so helpful if the males were hard wired to help the female protect these nests!

You can join me watching the ducks here:

Thank you so very much for joining me. I hope that you like ducks as much as I do! Keep your fingers crossed for this mother. She has to have comfort breaks and she also has to eat. It is really warm in Florida now and she must stay hydrated.

Thank you to the Duck Cam – Live Aviary Cam – Duck Nest Cam where I took my screen shots.