Author Topic: News: Peregrines  (Read 381321 times)

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Offline carly

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Re: News: Peregrines / 2009
« Reply #2 on: May 04, 2009, 16:32 »
Old Age Peregrines Hatch Miracle Chick

video = http://www.youtube.com/v/LGFLjNUEPl4&rel=0&hl=en_US&feature=player_embedded&version=3"

RANDY old birds of prey have successfully hatched a falcon chick almost a decade after they normally stop breeding.
The peregrine chick was born in the early hours of Monday morning after the mother and father – both in their mid twenties – had clutch of eggs.  Peregrine falcons rarely live to beyond 20 years old and it is unusual for them to breed after 17.

Animal workers were amazed the OAPs – Old Aged Peregrines – had bred for the first time in five years but assumed the eggs would be infertile. However they were left stunned when they heard the sound of cheeping coming from one of the clutch.  And to their amazement – and delight – a single chick hatched and is said to be “bold, healthy and happy”.



Now staff at Elite Falconry in Fife plan to rear the baby bird of prey on minced quail before returning it to its parents later this week. Barry Blyther, head falconer at the sanctuary near Kirkcaldy, said he was delighted about the eggs but more amazed when one hatched.

He said: “The birds lay a clutch of three eggs and we thought the eggs would be infertile. We were just pleased that they had produced eggs at all but after 10 or 12 days one of the eggs disappeared and we decided to take them in and incubate them. We started to suspect that one egg was fertile and on Sunday we heard one of the eggs cheeping and it turned out the chick had started the hatching process.  It hatched out sometime in the early hours of Monday. It is a strong, bold, healthy and happy chick and we are absolutely delighted.”



Barry said staff had given up hope of the pair breeding again after they had gone five years without mating.

He said: “A good age for a peregrine falcon is 17 or 18 years old and to have them still breeding at that age is doing really well. These ones are in their mid-twenties and although we have kept them in good condition the idea that they could produce eggs had passed from our minds, it was a real surprise from us.”

Barry is currently feeding the chick tiny amounts of minced quail but plans to return the chick to its rightful place as soon as possible.

“We want the chick to be parent reared but we will keep feeding it by hand until it is about four or five days old when we will return it to its parents. We don’t know what sex it is yet but by the time it is six or seven weeks old we should be able to tell by the size of the bird.”

Peregrine falcons are a protected species in the UK, with just 1,250 breeding pairs although numbers have increased since the 1970s and ‘80s when the bird was seriously endangered.


http://deadlinescotland.wordpress.com/2009/05/04/old-age-peregrines-hatch-miracle-chick-939/
« Last Edit: January 03, 2011, 18:48 by The Peregrine Chick »

Offline carly

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News: Peregrines
« Reply #1 on: April 24, 2009, 08:33 »
Elizabetha Sets a New World Record

Autumn 2008

Elizabetha, an adult female peregrine that we tagged in Chile on 21 January 2008 as part of the Southern Cross Peregrine Project, migrated north to Baffin Island, Canada, to breed last summer. After raising her family, she began to migrate south again on 22 September, generally following the classic US east coast route. On 19 October, she was flying off the coast of New Jersey when she apparently caught the counter-clockwise storm system of Hurricane Omar. With solid tail winds, she flew south all the way to Palm Beach, Florida in a day, a distance of at least 954 miles and a knock-out world record. None of us had even dreamed that a peregrine could fly that far in a single day. This is yet another example of how satellite transmitters are revolutionizing our understanding of so many organisms worldwide.

As I write this bulletin (28 December), she is still migrating slowly south, having just arrived in Chile once again. She is demonstrating that some adult females perform an unanticipated “slow migration” south, long suspected but now confirmed for the species.
« Last Edit: January 01, 2012, 16:51 by The Peregrine Chick »