Sunday, May 3, 2015

A Slow (but steady) Start

April 22

The birds are checking out the beach!


April 23

WE HAVE A NEST!!!

We have much more activity this week as more and more black skimmers arrive!  One Bird Steward counted 214 black skimmers!   

We have seen 4 pairs of American Oystercatchers on the south end…and an Audubon staff member discovered our first nest (a scrape with an egg) this week!   The pair of Oystercatchers in front of the condos on the north end also has a nest now!  Looks like we could potentially have chicks before Memorial Day this year! 

April 27

Looks like the Skimmers are starting to pair up!






April 30

Some of you may have noticed our Least Tern "colony". Audubon staff members put out decoys in the hopes of attracting the terns back to the south end now that the dredging is over and they have new habitat. Keep your eyes peeled for the real thing!


May 1 - 2

The least tern decoys just may be working! Although at times there seems to be some confusion as a fish (aka marriage proposal) is offered to a decoy.  For those walking on the beach it may just be a challenge to tell what is or isn't the "real thing". (Can you spot the live terns?)





The willets, oystercatchers, common terns and an occassional royal tern are also making regular appearances.





photo by Laura Scullin

















Thursday, April 23, 2015

Nesting Season Opens (2015)

(The following is from an article published in the Lumina News written by Miriah Hamrick on April 1, 2015.) 
          A few American oystercatchers were first to land on Wrightsville’s beach strand, kicking off the 2015 nesting season late in March.  
The oystercatchers are typically the first shorebirds to nest after pairing off and establishing nesting territory, said Audubon North Carolina Coastal Biologist Lindsay Addison. She expects black skimmers, least terns and common terns to arrive and nest later in April.
“We hope to have the entire cast of characters back this year,” Addison said.
(Bird Stewards post the nesting area on March 30th)





The south end bird habitat, enclosed March 30 to keep nests safe from human disturbance, was home to hundreds of nesting least tern pairs in previous years, but hosted no successful nests in 2014. Six pairs attempted to nest, but Addison attributed the failure to disturbance from marine construction crews dredging sand from Masonboro Inlet to pump on the beach for Wrightsville’s coastal storm damage reduction project.
“We basically lost the entire least tern colony,” Addison said. Because the south end has accreted sand over the past year, providing more open sandy habitat preferred by the birds, Addison said some of the lost least terns should return for the 2015 season. The chicks will fledge, or begin to fly, in June and July, a metric Audubon uses to determine the success of each species’ nesting efforts. Information about nesting birds inside the south end enclosure is available via Audubon volunteers, typically staffed around the enclosure perimeter. Beginning April 27, Audubon will also offer educational bird walks around the nesting habitat every Monday at 9 a.m., with groups meeting at the gazebo near Public Beach Access No. 43. Addison said beach visitors are often excited to observe the nesting birds and baby chicks.
“Most of the time, especially people who don’t live around here don’t know birds nest on the beach,” Addison said. “They didn’t know when they came to the south end they would get to see an egg or a chick, or adult birds courting and fishing. They’re doing all these different behaviors that are fun to watch, and it adds a different dimension to the beach.”
Several Bird Stewards have already been checking the area and the excitement is building for an amazing season.
Skimmers are everywhere!
 (photo by Laura Scullin, Bird Steward)

               .... why a skimmer is called a Skimmer!

(photo by MaryAnn Walton, Bird Steward)
Skimmers, and Royal Terns, and More!


Which is which? .... American Skimmer, Least Tern, Royal Tern!


Here are some great photos of the Least Tern courting behavior...... The male offers a fish to a potential mate and sometimes she excepts it!

(photo by Laura Scullin, Bird Steward)
 and sometimes she doesn't......
(photo by Laura Scullin, Bird Stewarad)

The Common Terns have also been seen checking out the beach!

(photo by MaryAnn Walton, Bird Stewarad)

So it looks like the full cast of characters has arrived. All that's missing is YOU!

Add caption:)










Thursday, August 21, 2014

Shorebird Nesting Season Comes to a Close

The lead story in last week's Lumina News was an extrememly well written recap of our nesting season. The article compares the 2013 nesting season with this year's and includes a reminder that just because the nesting season is coming to a close doesn't mean there are no birds to enjoy.  Sandpipers, plovers, terns, and skimmers (and others) have already started to arrive at nearby inlets. They will be here en masse in September with peak numbers in late October or early November.

(The following article was written by Miriah Hamrick)
As nesting season wraps up at the south end of Wrightsville Beach, Audubon North Carolina is beginning to shift focus to the inlets, where the birds prepare for the long journey to winter grounds.
Lindsay Addison, coastal biologist with Audubon North Carolina, said the south end colony had a successful nesting season overall despite a loss of open, sandy habitat some birds prefer following the beach renourishment project earlier in 2014.
Black skimmers produced approximately 0.7 fledglings per pair, with a high count of 69 fledglings for 101 pairs of nesting birds. The black skimmers did not fare as well as they did in 2013, when 137 pairs fledged on average one chick per pair. Black skimmers will nest on sparsely vegetated stretches of sand, unlike least terns.


A handful of least tern pairs attempted to nest at the south end but the habitat they prefer was dredged away and no pairs were successful. In 2013, more than 250 pairs of nesting least terns settled on the south end of Wrightsville Beach.
A dozen pairs of common terns fledged a dozen chicks and two pairs of American oystercatchers on the south end fledged one chick per pair.


 Both oystercatcher chicks were banded and the Audubon team hopes to see them return in coming years.


Audubon counts the chicks after they fledge, or begin to fly.
Addison said some of the chicks and adults continue to use the posting and the area around it. One oystercatcher chick still roosts inside the posting, while crowds of black skimmer adults and chicks roost on the beach outside the posting around high tide. Audubon will remove the postings around the end of August, allowing time for the chicks to use the area to hone flying skills before moving to inlets to fatten up and rest before fall migrations.
“They’re getting the hang of it. They’re like awkward teenagers learning how to do things for the first time. This is a difficult time for the chicks,” Addison said during an Aug. 8 phone interview. “It’s good for the chicks to have a place to rest and be undisturbed.”
Addison said some shorebirds, sand pipers and plovers as well as terns and skimmers, have already started to arrive at Masons, Rich’s and Topsail inlets to feed and rest. She said the first piping plovers arrived from summer nesting grounds in the Arctic in July.
Addison said female birds are generally the first to arrive.
“The males will sort of be stuck with the teenager chicks and the female … spent a lot of energy early on, producing the eggs, so she tends to migrate first,” Addison said.
Although some birds are already checking in, the birds will begin to arrive en masse in September, with peak numbers in late October or early November before they all leave for southern winter grounds by Thanksgiving.

Addison said Masons Inlet hosted more than 2,000 black skimmers in 2013. The Audubon team will monitor the inlets weekly to count the birds.
The birds are fun to watch but Addison warned against disturbing them, even with actions as simple as making them scatter while walking down the beach or disrupting feeding.
“It doesn’t look like much is happening but you’re taking up a little of that energy that they need, and if everybody takes a little bit, then they might not have any left over for themselves,” she said.

Friday, August 8, 2014

Weekly Friday Bird Walk with Guest Photographer

This morning the bird stewards outnumbered the guests! But we were able to watch a large colony of black skimmers and their LARGE chicks on the beach. All of this week's photos were taken by LAURA SCULLIN!












And a guest at the gazebo.... a beautiful five lined skink...

Only a few walks left before the nesting season is officially over and our birds have all left for Central and South America.