We wanted to provide you with
some preliminary statistics from the 2014 Audubon Alliance for Coastal
Waterbirds monitoring season from Audubon Connecticut and the Roger Tory
Peterson Institute of Natural History. These numbers are
not from
CT DEEP or USFWS and not official in that they reflect only AAfCW's
data and information. The data is still changing as well - hours are
still being accumulated, volunteers recruited, birds being recorded and
so forth. There are some great success stories coming out of the 2014
nesting season and without your help none of this would have been
possible!
- Piping Plovers pairs successfully fledged 97 young
across Connecticut beaches in 2014, a sum that would be the second
highest total ever for a year in the state! This very strong number
included fledged birds from sites such as Short Beach in Stratford and
Pleasure Beach in Bridgeport that had Piping Plovers as historic
breeders but none in recent years.
- Over AAfCW 387 volunteers
combined their efforts to put in 2,200+ hours of stewardship and
monitoring, conservation surveys, education and outreach in Connecticut.
Both of these totals will be increasing through the remainder of the
year and are a testament to your devotion to the program!
- We
surveyed and recorded 51 species of shorebirds, terns and long-legged
waders at over 183 important sites in Connecticut including barrier
beaches, offshore islands, tidal marshes, inland waterways, wet meadows,
grasslands, and other critically important or endangered habitats.
- American
Oystercatchers were discovered on 33 sites in Connecticut in 2014 with
124 individuals (42 breeding pairs, 40 non-breeding individuals)
recorded. Those pairs successfully fledged 26 chicks. Nest failures took
place at 20 of 42 nests, all believed to be due to predation, an issue
we will continue to work on in future seasons. The good news is that
there were no failures due to humans thanks to our collectively vigilant
stewardship efforts.
- Least and Common Tern numbers are
still being calculated after a difficult year for terns in general
throughout all of the Northeast and much of the Atlantic. In our case we
had low numbers attempting to nest - something beyond our control - and
did have some decent productivity and a couple of success stories from
specific sites thanks to the hard work of volunteers, staff, state
officials and partners.
Thank you all
so very much for your tireless work throughout the spring and summer
and, for some of you, year-round! We at AAfCW will stay engaged
throughout the year and are already preparing for the 2015 nesting
season as well. As always please email us at
ctwaterbirds@gmail.com if you have any questions, want to sign up to assist in other ways or are looking to join our efforts for the first time.
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