Keeping an eye on the pelicans

 
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Mar 31, 2005 - 23:16:25 CST
Biologists are making elaborate plans to monitor and safeguard American white pelicans when they return to their long-time nesting grounds at Chase Lake National Wildlife Refuge, the same sites they mysteriously left last spring, abandoning nests and chicks.

Strategies the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service plans to employ include restricting visitor access to the nesting areas, where up to 30,000 pelicans are expected later this month, and putting up a barrier fence to prevent predation by coyotes and foxes on the peninsula colony.

Also, biologists from the U.S. Geological Survey's Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center in Jamestown will place satellite transmitters on 10 adult pelicans to track their movements and gather other data, but that won't be done until after the pelican eggs hatch.

USGS scientists also will conduct a companion study to a West Nile virus assessment that began in 2004. They will use surveillance cameras, binoculars and spotting scopes to observe the colony from a distance, minimizing human disturbance.

Scientists plan to use the data and observations to put together a management and conservation plan for American white pelicans. The USFWS announced the strategies Thursday.

So far, pelicans don't appear ready to leave their winter digs.

"We're not seeing high-flying flocks headed out yet," Ann Paul, Tampa Bay regional coordinator for Audubon of Florida, said by telephone Thursday. "About 250 pelicans were spotted on a lake last weekend, and there are more on (part of Tampa Bay)."

American white pelicans typically pull out of their coastal wintering grounds along the Gulf of Mexico between mid-March and mid-April, Paul said.

The pelicans are a popular viewing attraction for birders and others who appreciate wildlife, but this year, access routes to the nesting sites will be marked with warnings that say "area beyond this sign is closed." Anyone caught violating the restrictions could face a fine, said Ken Torkelson, a spokesman for the USFWS' Bismarck office.

In the past, pelican watchers could obtain an access permit from the refuge headquarters that allowed them to get close-up looks at the big, white, double-chinned birds.

The best pelican-viewing opportunities this summer will be on wetlands anywhere around Chase Lake, said Torkelson. The refuge is north of Medina.

The pelicans' pullout last year began in late May and carried over into early June. An estimated 27,000 pelicans vanished, abandoning two of the three refuge nesting sites and thousands of eggs.

A third nesting site, located on a large island, continued to hold about 2,500 nests, and nesting activity there appeared to be progressing normally. However, a late June check of the island revealed that those nests, most with newly hatched young, also had been abandoned. None of the chicks survived.

Satellite tracking of four adult Chase Lake pelicans showed one bird moved to western South Dakota, another to eastern South Dakota, a third to northern Minnesota and the fourth to north-central North Dakota.

What caused the exodus remains a mystery. The leading theories have centered around predator or human disturbance, wet and often cold weather, shortages of forage or disease. Investigations, however, did not lead to concrete answers.

The 10 adult pelicans to be tracked will be fitted with backpack-style transmitters that are about the size of a deck of playing cards and weigh about two and a half ounces. Solar powered, the transmitters are expected to last for three years, Torkelson said.

Data from the transmitters will help scientists understand nest attendance, proportion of time spent away from the colony, distances traveled to foraging sites and their locations and characteristics.

Using 10 transmitters was a financial consideration, Torkelson said, explaining that they cost "in the neighborhood of $4,000 apiece." Data collection from the transmitters also costs money, Torkelson added.

"We feel we can get the information we need from that many transmitters," he said.

The fence the USFWS will install will be 540 feet long and 42 inches tall. It will be electric, and solar panels will provide the juice.

"Supposedly, one touch will be a learning process (for predators)," Torkelson said.

The fence is expected to go up within the next couple of weeks.

"The frost is pretty thick on the ground, and the lake is still iced over," Torkelson said. The budget for the fence is $1,500.

White pelicans are one of the largest birds in North America, measuring 6 feet from bill to tail and weighing up to 20 pounds. The wing-span can be nine and a half feet. Adult pelicans have a long orange bill with a pouch.

The Chase Lake nesting colony is believed to be the largest in North America. White pelicans have been nesting there for more than 100 years.

Biologists have monitored Chase Lake pelicans since 1905, when the birds numbered about 50. President Theodore Roosevelt designated the site as a national wildlife refuge in 1908, after many of the birds were being killed for their feathers and used for target practice.

Wildlife officials have been conducting annual aerial surveys of the pelicans since 1972, and their numbers have tripled at the refuge in the past 30 years. In 2000, scientists recorded an all-time high 35,466 breeding pelicans and 17,733 nests.

As for whether the pelicans will return sometime this month, Torkelson is a believer.

"There's no reason to believe they won't be back," he said.

(Reach Richard Hinton at 250-8256 or outdoors@bismarcktribune.net.)
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Keeping an eye on the pelicans
Comments

sister wrote on Dec 12, 2007 11:03 PM:

" your missed dearly buddy. "

guess wrote on Feb 13, 2007 12:19 PM:

" Thanks for putting MY efforts into the paper. You rock. No Alyysa, this is my idea. "

Alyssa Roller wrote on Jan 1, 2007 10:27 PM:

" hey . thanks for putting that sweet article in the news paper i just love when people can read about me ! well thanks love : alyssa roller "

Question? wrote on Dec 30, 2006 9:52 AM:

" How come is the school improvement director for DPI not a licensed teacher? Is this a patern the State Superintendent of Public Instruction has been doing for years? I've heard rumors to that effect. It would be nice if someone would check this out - and not only in the school improvment department. I think the State Superintendent should be held to the same standard as public schools are held to in North Dakota. Currently when schools hire teachers who do not have a current North Dakota Teacher's License, someone (the teacher) pays a fine ( I think it is about $ 100. per day.) I think what is good for the goose is good for the gander. DPI should be held to the same standard as teachers and the schools. "

Correction wrote on Dec 30, 2006 9:38 AM:

" The article states that "The plan provides further details to state assessments, which are currently given to fourth-, eighth- and 12th-graders and will eventually be expanded to other grades." This is incorrect. For the past 2 years the state assessments were administered to students in grades 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 11. Twelfth grade students haven't been assessed for 3 years. "

Let's do it!! wrote on Oct 19, 2006 5:34 PM:

" Lets give back the whole state to the Native Peoples of this land. It's there's anyway!! "

Buck wrote on Aug 30, 2006 9:59 AM:

" Or whiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaaaaaaaaaaaaat! "

Kristin wrote on Aug 24, 2006 2:09 AM:

" Well i was searching for my friend Kelly Winn the snow boarder i meant from the max air show at a Carnival in Carbondale IL... i use to work with Harris Exoitics and we were set up right behind him... Kelly and i kept in touch for a while after but i guess i know why the letters stopped now. you know it sucks to have had to find out this was. i still thought of him from time to time hoping one day we'd see eachother again i cant believe i had to find out this way years later what had a happen. RIP Kelly. Im just sorry it took me this long to find out.. "

ummyeah wrote on Aug 16, 2006 10:39 AM:

" These comments aren't even about the article. Wow. "

washingtongirl1 wrote on Aug 3, 2006 3:30 AM:

" Wow! These comments don't even seem to apply...? Far too confusing for those who read, to even try to care. Hmmm, who screens this anyway? "

L33tmaster wrote on Jul 28, 2006 7:51 AM:

" I hate the government. They have no right to tell me what I can or can't do. I'll gamble online whenever i damn please. "

hunkpapa wrote on May 24, 2006 9:32 AM:

" The Gaming Division of North Dakota need to furhter investigate this man. He has been given a license to steal just as he did at Standing Rock. Banks accounts and other financial information needs to be collected and examined on how he was able to obtain the funds to purchase the establishment in Fargo. One would believe it was from the money that was obtined from the Standing Rock Tribe. Be where of this individual. "

Shannon wrote on May 16, 2006 11:49 AM:

" Whay happpend to this women is unbelivable but the article was to discriptive of the scene. Yes, we are curois about the events that surrounded her murder but to what extent? Could you emagine if you read about your grandmother this way.... what would be your feelings then?! "

berber wrote on May 8, 2006 6:50 PM:

" what is another bird in the pelican family "

kathy toohey wrote on May 4, 2006 12:26 AM:

" I never fully understood the vital lifeline that Greyhound is, or was according to the article. It is somewhat confusing, you don't know if they are going or coming back. All of the stories are everyday stories and these are the ones that should be heard, and considered in such a decision, community, and communities that were all connected by this one bus line, and the jobs that were connected with this company, to rid these individuals of this one required mode of transportation is totally uncalled for and should be rectified immediately. We have to remember what we are dealing with here, humans who by helping them, they help one another, and it continues on,and all concerned will benefit and they will make their money, they have to remember maybe their pockets are to full and might need some individuals to be held accountable for the reasons that this is happening at all. "

Bob Armentrout wrote on Apr 17, 2006 9:21 AM:

" Just a quick note, my wife (who is from the La Crosse, WI area) and I saw about 200 white pelicans on the Mississippi River, just south of Stoddard WI. She told me she had never seen pelicans in this area before. We saw the flock first on Easter Sunday, April 16, 2006. Today, April 17, the flock has scattered some, mostly appearing to be in breeding pairs. If we see any nesting, we will post additional comments. "

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