DNREC seeks volunteers for osprey monitoring project

DNREC seeks volunteers for osprey monitoring project

Division of Fish and Wildlife to hold orientation March 1 and 2

 

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Osprey hunting at the Indian River Inlet

DOVER (Feb. 21, 2014) – The Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife is seeking volunteers to help monitor the state’s osprey population. These majestic raptors with their distinctive stick-built nests on tall poles or platforms can be seen along many Delaware waterways, especially Sussex County’s Inland Bays. Osprey depend on a healthy and abundant food supply, and since their diet consists primarily of fish, monitoring their population and activities statewide provides a good indication of water quality and the general health of Delaware’s waterways.

For those interested in either getting to know these unique birds better or gaining additional knowledge of them, the Division of Fish and Wildlife will hold two orientations for volunteer osprey monitors:

  • Saturday, March 1, 1-2:30 p.m. – Nature Center at Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge, located off Route 9 east of Smyrna at 2591 Whitehall Neck Road, Smyrna.
  • Sunday, March 2, 1-2:30 p.m. – Field office at Prime Hook National Wildlife Refuge, 11978 Turkle Pond Road, Milton.

Volunteers only need to attend one of the orientations.

Osprey populations throughout the United States suffered serious decline in the 1950s and 60s, largely due to the effects of DDT, PCBs and other chemical contaminants. DDT and most PCB uses were banned in the 1970s, and – despite residual contamination in the environment – osprey populations have recovered markedly. In the early 1990s, to assist their recovery, the Delmarva Ornithological Society partnered with the Division of Fish and Wildlife and other organizations and took the lead in constructing, installing, repairing and replacing osprey nesting platforms throughout the state.

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Osprey nest platform in Long Neck Delaware

Before 2003, the Division of Fish and Wildlife conducted osprey surveys in the Inland Bays and Nanticoke River areas where osprey populations were traditionally the highest. That year, statewide surveys began as a result of an increase in osprey sightings.

“We know that Delaware’s osprey population has increased immensely, so assistance with monitoring is definitely needed,” said Wildlife Biologist Anthony Gonzon of the Wildlife Species Conservation and Research Program. “The contributions of our volunteer monitors will work in conjunction with the completion of our statewide survey, which we will perform early this summer.”

Osprey will become a common sight beginning around mid-March, with nesting pairs returning and starting to rebuild their nests. Veteran monitors anxiously await the first signs of the ospreys’ return to begin recording data at least every other week. Observers note osprey activities from nest building to the juveniles’ first flight, turning in their data when the ospreys depart for migration in late summer.

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Osprey above the towers of the Charles W Cullen bridge spanning the Indian River Inlet

“Ideally, volunteers should monitor nests near their work or home or be willing to drive to their monitored nest often,” Gonzon said, noting they also need email access to report their findings as well as receive updates about the project and details about other nesting sites throughout the state.

Volunteers who know of an existing nest that they would like to monitor should bring location information with them to the osprey monitoring orientation.

For more information, or to attend the orientation, please contact Vickie Henderson at 302-735-8657 or email Vickie.Henderson@state.de.us

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