PGC tracking falcons
Peregrines born in Harrisburg and Pittsburgh followed from space HARRISBURG – Satellite technology is being used by the Pennsylvania Game Commission to track the dispersal and migration flights of peregrine falcons born and reared earlier this year on buildings in Harrisburg and Pittsburgh.
Two young falcons, one male and one female, from each city were fitted with satellite transmitter backpacks that are sending out daily transmissions to receiving equipment on weather satellites orbiting earth operated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. When locations are plotted by the satellites using Service Argos receivers, they are transmitted to stations back on earth, and eventually to the Canadian Peregrine Foundation, which forwards information via e-mail to the Game Commission.
The peregrine locations will be plotted on digital maps and regularly loaded onto the agency’s website at www.pgc.state.pa.us. To access the Peregrine Falcon Section, click on “Wildlife,” then “Peregrine Falcon.” The maps will be updated frequently and will be accompanied by brief journal-like reports focusing on falcon movements.
“We have an unprecedented chance to follow the lives of these young peregrine falcons as they explore Pennsylvania, other states, and, eventually, other countries,” explained Game Commission Executive Director Vern Ross. “This study has the potential to shed more light on peregrine movements than we’ve been able to compile from field study over the past 100 years.
“Just as exciting is the opportunity to involve the public in this unfolding drama. It is our chance to familiarize Pennsylvanians with a state endangered species and the steps wildlife managers are taking to ensure the bird’s future is brighter than its past. I have no doubt there will be plenty of interest in following the movements of these four Pennsylvania-born peregrines.”
The young falcons are expected to continually expand their travels in coming weeks. Right now, the Pittsburgh falcons, which are about three weeks older than the Harrisburg falcons, are flying up to 40 miles away from their nest box on the Gulf Tower. The Harrisburg falcons have traveled up to 12 miles away from their nest box on the Rachel Carson State Office Building. The birds are expected to migrate south this fall to winter in the Caribbean, or Central or South America.
“Recent telemetry has shown that the Pittsburgh male falcon is really roaming,” said Dan Brauning, Game Commission biologist. “He’s been to Armstrong County several times and he’s also visited Beaver, southern Allegheny and Washington counties. The younger Harrisburg falcons aren’t quite as adventurous yet. They’ve been to City Island on the Susquehanna River, the Hummelstown area and the Mechanicsburg area.”
The Game Commission began using satellite telemetry a year ago when transmitters were placed on migrating tundra swans. Unfortunately, all four swans were lost to natural causes during migration. This past winter, five more swans were fitted with telemetry collars. Their movements also can be followed on the Game Commission’s website.
Prior to the use of satellite telemetry, wildlife managers were limited to placing bands on birds and hoping someone saw the bird and recorded its band number after it reached its migration destination. Otherwise, the only other way researchers learned about the movements of banded birds was when someone reported finding a dead one. Radio telemetry – using radio frequency transmitters and antennas to follow animal movements – has been used by Game Commission biologists and other wildlife researchers for years, but only when animals are expected to remain in a limited geographic area. Satellite telemetry allows biologists to follow the more wide-ranging and migratory movements of birds.
The solar-powered transmitters used in this study were obtained through the Canadian Peregrine Foundation, which also supplied a veterinarian to affix the backpack-style transmitters to the study birds. The 18-gram transmitter – attached with a neoprene harness – provides data for more than a year. The transmitters were developed by Service Argos, a global data telemetry company headquartered in Largo, Md.
“If the birds carry these transmitters for two years, we’ll have two years of migration data on each bird, as well as information on the territories they establish as adults,” Brauning said. “We also are hopeful the study birds will shed further light on the interactions between falcons with established territories and those looking to establish a territory.
“In some cases, there already have been life-and-death fights for the urbanized territories peregrines now prefer. As the remainder of the preferred territory becomes occupied, we’re watching and waiting for peregrines to return to their historic nesting cliffs. When that happens, we’ll know we’re heading down the home stretch in Pennsylvania’s peregrine falcon recovery program.”
Although peregrines were never really common in Pennsylvania, they historically nested at as many as 44 sites, mostly on cliffs. Some of their former nesting areas included cliffs near Dauphin, Huntingdon, Lewistown, Hyner, Palmerton and other riverside communities. Currently, peregrines have 10 known nests in the state. A majority of the nests are located in the Philadelphia area.
Funding for this program is currently provided by the federal Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Program and the state Department of Environmental Protection. DEP has furthered peregrine falcon education in recent years by web-casting scenes from a peregrine nest box on the 15th-floor ledge of the Rachel Carson Building, which is where the agency is headquartered in downtown Harrisburg.
“It’s going to cost about $10,000 to track each peregrine falcon in the study for one year,” Brauning said. “The small transmitter placed on each bird’s back alone costs about $4,000. But to keep things in perspective, the information this study will provide was previously beyond our reach. It’s fair to say we’re entering a new era, an era of electronic field observation.
“This telemetry tracking will provide benefits above and beyond knowing where the falcon is. For instance, wildlife professionals now have the potential to rescue a bird trapped in an unsafe situation. All of the Harrisburg falcons already have been rescued once from the busy city below when they fledged, or started to fly. The telemetry gear provides the chance to extend that type of assistance.”
Peregrine falcons are strong fliers that hunt on the wing, diving from nose-bleed heights at speeds up to 200 miles per hour to snatch flying blue jays, flickers, starlings, pigeons and other like prey. The birds weigh from one-and-a-quarter to about two pounds and females are larger than males. Also known as the “duck hawk,” peregrines did not nest in the Commonwealth from the late 1950s until 1987. Their population plummeted as a result of poisoning caused by DDT, which was banned in America in 1972.
The peregrine study is the latest addition to the many research projects that have been posted on the Game Commission’s website (www.pgc.state.pa.us). Other studies and projects found in the “Wildlife” section include: a wild turkey study and trap-and-transfer project; elk reproduction and calf survival studies; a fawn deer survival study; an antlered deer movement and antler development study; and the tundra swan study.
The Game Commission also is utilizing radio-transmitter technology to study bobcats, to track female black bears to monitor reproduction and identify possible females for fostering orphaned cubs back into the wild. The agency also is using radio-transmitter technology to track the movements of Indiana bats, which are on the state and federal endangered species list.