2009 NESTING SEASONThis very sad information was posted on the Raptor Resource site by the King Operator:
"PI's peregrine female euthanized; leaves lasting legacy"
The resident female peregrine falcon at Prairie Island (PI's) Nuclear Generating Station, near Red Wing, Minn., spent the last months of her life at the University of Minnesota Raptor Center but finally had to be euthanized after months of treatment. She was discovered on the ground near the plant in June, ''just not acting like a normal adult peregrine,'' reported Lisa Kuehl, in Communications at Prairie Island.
Raptor Center medical specialists found a large mass adhered to the falcon's esophagus, a lesion caused by the parasite trichomonas. ''These parasites are pretty common in bird-eating birds such as peregrine falcons,'' Kuehl said. ''The parasite is carried by a large percentage of the pigeon population, and peregrines like to eat pigeons.'' This particular kind of trichomonas parasite is only transmitted ''bird to bird'' and does not pose a threat to humans, Kuehl added.
Specialists treated the peregrine with antibiotics and surgically removed the mass, Kuehl said. ''She was doing well following surgery and appeared to be recovering. But still, something wasn't right.'' The vets at the Raptor Center did not want to release her until she was fully recovered.
Last week, Kuehl received the following e-mail:
I have some bad news. Today we had to euthanize that peregrine falcon. During her time here, she began to develop some odd neurological signs, respiratory difficulties and chronic bloating of her abdomen. Using an endoscopic surgery device, we were able to visualize a large amount of old damage to her internal organs. Initial diagnosis is an old yolk coelomitis, which is essentially an unformed egg that ruptured in the abdomen of the bird. The damage was not seen for months while the bird was here; it's something for which there is no repair.
''This female falcon certainly left her mark on the current peregrine population here in the Midwest,'' Kuehl said. She was fledged from the old Montgomery Wards tower in St. Paul in 1993 with the band number 7/1.
''She found our nest box in the mid 1990s, and in 1997 her first offspring were fledged,'' Kuehl said. ''She continued to come back annually, and last year she was the oldest breeding female in the Raptor Resource Project. Since 1997, a total of 35 of her young were fledged from our nest box.''
Peregrines in captivity can live up to 18 years, but in the wild that number decreases to only about six years, Kuehl said. ''Hopefully, a new female will adopt our site as her own next year and continue our peregrine legacy at Prairie Island.''She has left behind a remarkable legacy, having raised and fledged 35 young over the years, and she will not be forgotten. She was very beautiful.