Posts Tagged ‘Conservation’

Big Cats Don’t Make Good Pets, Part 4

Posted by in Carnivores,Conservation,Endangered,Keepers,Mammals,Zoo News

A student at Texas A & M University at Galveston where she studies marine biology, Kaitlin McGraw interned at the Houston Zoo last summer.   “When I came to the Zoo, I heard stories about the animals, and where they came from,” said Kaitlin. “I was surprised to learn how many of the animals in the Zoo’s Carnivore Department came from private owners who had kept them as pets,” Kaitlin added.   “I wanted to do something to help people understand that keeping big cats as pets is not a good idea,” Kaitlin added. The result was a series of video presentations profiling the ‘rescued cats’ at the Houston Zoo and recounting their individual stories. The videos were produced using a Canon PowerShot camera and edited on the iMovie platform.   “In the future, I hope to work with an organization like the Houston Zoo, promoting conservation education or traveling to new locales, working with marine and wildlife sanctuaries,” said Kaitlin.

 

Big Cats Don’t Make Good Pets, Part 3

Posted by in Carnivores,Keepers,Mammals,Zoo News

A student at Texas A & M University at Galveston where she studies marine biology, Kaitlin McGraw interned at the Houston Zoo last summer.

“When I came to the Zoo, I heard stories about the animals, and where they came from,” said Kaitlin. “I was surprised to learn how many of the animals in the Zoo’s Carnivore Department came from private owners who had kept them as pets,” Kaitlin added.

“I wanted to do something to help people understand that keeping big cats as pets is not a good idea,” Kaitlin added. The result was a series of video presentations profiling the ‘rescued cats’ at the Houston Zoo and recounting their individual stories. The videos were produced using a Canon PowerShot camera and edited on the iMovie platform.

“In the future, I hope to work with an organization like the Houston Zoo, promoting conservation education or traveling to new locales, working with marine and wildlife sanctuaries,” said Kaitlin.

Big Cats Don’t Make Good Pets

Posted by in Carnivores,Keepers,Mammals,Zoo News

Houston Zoo Intern’s Videos Tell the Real Stories

A student at Texas A & M University at Galveston where she studies marine biology, Kaitlin McGraw interned at the Houston Zoo last summer.

Through the ExxonMobil Community Summer Jobs Program, Kaitlin spent 8 weeks working with the Zoo’s carnivore staff.

Kaitlin has a special appreciation for predator species. “Ever since I was little I’ve loved animals and a special place in my heart has always been reserved for predators,” she said.

“When I came to the Zoo, I heard stories about the animals, and where they came from,” said Kaitlin. “I was surprised to learn how many of the animals in the Zoo’s Carnivore Department came from private owners who had kept them as pets,” Kaitlin added.

“I wanted to do something to help people understand that keeping big cats as pets is not a good idea,” Kaitlin added. The result was a series of video presentations profiling the ‘rescued cats’ at the Houston Zoo and recounting their individual stories. The videos were produced using a Canon PowerShot camera and edited on the iMovie platform.

“In the future, I hope to work with an organization like the Houston Zoo, promoting conservation education or traveling to new locales, working with marine and wildlife sanctuaries,” said Kaitlin.

Below is the first installment of Kaitlin’s videos featuring Houston Zoo big cats.  Stay tuned each week as we post a new video.

 

Feast with the Beasts (En español & In English)

Posted by in En Español,Events,Guest Blogger Series,Supporting Your Zoo

For those of you that are just now joining us, this is the third post of my blog series, written in both English and Spanish about my experience as a Marketing Intern, which I will be doing until mid-December.  CLICK HERE for the link to the entire series. 

First, the Spanish version, followed by English below…

Les estoy escribiendo por tercera vez en mi serie de blogs.  ¡Gracias por regresar! Y a los que están leyendo por primera vez: podrán leer mi serie (en español e ingles) hasta mediados de diciembre mientras hago mis practicas en el Zoológico de Houston. ¡Disfruta! Dejame tus comentarios o preguntas y compártelo a través de Facebook y Twitter.

Primeramente quisiera darle un aplauso a toda la gente que ayudo con el éxito de Zoo Boo.  A todos los empleados que planearon y trabajaron el evento y también a toda la gente que nos visito y participo en los juegos, ¡mil gracias!  Si te gustaría ver las fotos del evento visita el álbum AQUI.

Aunque ya termino Zoo Boo no quiere decir que nos podemos relajar.  En el departamento de mercadotecnia, aquí en el Zoológico de Houston, han estado preparando los detalles para el evento Feast with the Beasts.  Este evento es uno de los mas populares y los boletos se venden rápido.  Pero no te asustes con el nombre, no se tiene que compartir la cena con King Kong o Godzilla.  Es mas lo que mas da miedo es la gente que llega con un gran apetito.

Desafortunadamente, si aun no has comprado tus boletos para este evento lamento decirte que es muy tarde.  Y si te estas preguntando porque es tan popular este evento te diré que es porque con la compra de un boleto de entrada puedes probar los deliciosos antojitos de 65 restaurantes,  tomar 2 bebidas, ver presentaciones de animales, y ver el concierto de los B-52s!  Y como si eso no fuera suficiente, si compras un boleto te llenaras de gozo al saber que le ayudaste al Zoológico recaudar fondos para sus programas de conservación, educación, y cuidado de los animales.

Estoy contando los días que quedan para Feast with the Beasts y si fuiste una de las personas que alcanzo boleto entonces ¡te veo ahí!

Si quisieras mas información sobre Feast with the Beasts visita http://www.houstonzoo.org/Feast/

Y si no haz leído mi serie desde el principio no te preocupes porque están todos AQUÍ.

For those of you that have been scrolling down to find the English version, you are in the right place!!  You can read the entire series about my experience as a Marketing Intern until mid-December HEREFeel free to leave me any comments or questions!  I will gladly reply as soon as possible. Also, don’t forget to share this with your friends via Facebook and Twitter.

First of all I’d like to give a big round of applause to everyone that participated in Zoo Boo’s success! Whether you are someone on the staff that helped organize it or a Zoo visitor that came and enjoyed the festivities, you did a great job. If you’d like to take a look at our pictures from Zoo Boo Click HERE!

Just when we here at the Zoo thought, “Zoo Boo’s over, now we can kick back and relax (insert sigh of relief),” we get reminded that there’s yet another exciting event right around the corner! 

The Marketing Department has been simultaneously organizing Zoo Boo and Feast with the Beasts and though it’s a lot of work, they’re doing a great job!

 Feast with the Beasts is one of our most popular events here at The Houston Zoo.  Though the name is slightly scary and gives me images of Godzilla stomping around the Medical Center as I eat a turkey sandwich, it’s really NOTHING to be afraid of.  In fact, if you love food just as much as I do then the scariest thing about this event would be you and your appetite.

Unfortunately, if you haven’t already bought your ticket then you will have to wait for next year’s tickets to go on sale. I’ve been told that this event gets sold out quickly. Why? Well because with a purchase of a ticket you get to taste delicious snacks from 65 Houston restaurants, 2 drinks, animal presentations, AND a concert featuring the B-52s, that’s why! Plus, each purchase of a ticket will help The Houston Zoo’s conservation, education, and animal care programs!

HOLY CANNOLI! I’m currently counting down the days ‘til Feast with the Beasts and it’s almost here! For those of you that purchased your tickets in time, I will see you there!

Catch your attention? Read more about Feast with the Beasts on our website and join us next year!

Also, if you haven’t already checked out my previous blog posts go ahead and click here!

 

 

Full Circle: Pongos Helping Pongos Helping Tapirs Supporting Tapirs

Posted by in Conservation,Endangered,Events,Featured,Mammals

 

Tapirs Helping Tapirs

 

Aurora

Aurora won’t sleep in her bed tonight and I can’t sleep at all so here we are in the Wortham World of Primates, the baby orangutan dozing under a blanket on my chest.  My mind is south of here at an event called “Tapirs Supporting Tapirs” that should just be wrapping up in São Paulo, Brazil.  It’s fitting.  Tapirs Supporting Tapirs wouldn’t exist if it hadn’t been for “Pongos Helping Pongos”. This project was born eight years ago when primate keepers dreamed up the idea of putting paintings created by the orangutans in our care into a gallery and selling them to raise funds to help orangutans who live on the other side of the globe in the rainforests of Borneo and Sumatra. We probably would never have thought to do it if not for the big sister of the orangutan currently nestled right here, her little hands moving as if she’s dreaming, Luna bela. Aurora isn’t old enough yet to paint or to draw chalk murals on the walls of her room, or to entertain guests by wrapping herself in a sheet and then opening her arms, whipping the sheet away to reveal herself dramatically again and again (I’m a butterfly! I’m a chrysalis! I’m a butterfly! I’m a chrysalis!) as her sister Luna did. But Aurora reminds me very much of her, good natured yet spunky, ticklish on her ridiculous pink and mauve cow-print belly, and lady-like enough to burp like a sailor and look cute doing it.

 

Luna

But I digress. Over the years, the Primate staff held four gallery events, as well as numerous smaller endeavors that involved hundreds if not thousands of participants and supporters. Art created by Luna and her fellow Houston Zoo orangutans was displayed and sold, raising awareness and a considerable amount of money, primarily for the Kinabatangan Orangutan Conservation Project based in a village called Sukau in Malaysia. Thinking someone else might be able to use our simple idea, I presented “Pongos Helping Pongos” at the Zoos and Aquariums Committing to Conservation conference, offering from the podium help to anyone who wanted to use art created by zoo animals to support conservation.

And Patrícia Medici took me up on it! Pati, a charismatic Brazilian conservationist, had the idea to organize an event where paintings created by tapirs living in zoos in the U.S. would be displayed and sold in São Paulo to benefit the Lowland Tapir Initiative. The event, later christened “Tapirs Supporting Tapirs” would increase appreciation of the lowland tapir (Tapirus terrestris), an IUCN Red List Vulnerable species, which many Brazilians regard as common, unintelligent, and uninteresting animals.  The event would also raise awareness of the human activities, such as hunting for meat and habitat encroachment for farming and grazing that negatively affect wild lowland tapir populations.

Tapir painting by Brookfield Zoo tapirs

So we contacted the Large Mammal staff at the Houston Zoo as well as our colleagues at several other institutions that provide support for Pati’s research.  So many were willing to help out that we actually had to narrow it down so that Pati wouldn’t be overwhelmed trying to get all the paintings back to Brazil.  We sent art supplies all over the country to Brevard Zoo, Brookfield Zoo, John Ball Zoo, San Diego Zoo, and Woodland Park Zoo and walked them over to our own Houston Zoo tapir keepers.  Some of these zoos had previously painted with their tapirs but some might never have done so if not for this project; that would have been a shame because, from what I can see, they get a kick out of it.   And look what we got back: Pictures of paintings here. Twenty-nine beautiful paintings for the event!

When Pati started planning and set a date, it was amazing to watch it all happen! She picked the São Paulo Zoo as a venue. She got great artists like Ronald Rosa Obra and Desenho Luccas Longo involved.

She got a lot of attention from the media. You can friend it, follow it, and otherwise check it out. It’s all in Portuguese but still fun to watch:

I can’t wait to hear how it turned out! I’d go to the computer right now but, though my mind is in São Paulo, my lap is here at Wortham World Of Primates and, at the moment, it’s occupied by a baby orangutan who’s just trying to get some shut-eye.

Written by Amanda Daly, Houston Zoo Natural Encounters Supervisor

Why Did the Cassowary Cross the Road? Cassowary Spotlight on the Species: July 23rd!

Posted by in Birds,Conservation,Spotlight on Species

Unfortunately, there’s no punch line and the situation is no laughing matter. Habitat loss and fragmentation have left the Australian population of cassowaries on the brink of extinction. These huge birds need large amounts of land to roam in search of food and to breed, but their habitat is breathtakingly beautiful, leading to a boom in residential and commercial construction in the area. Everyone wants to live near the rainforests of Australia, but there’s simply not enough room for everyone.

When roads are built through cassowary habitat, horrible things happen:

Cassowaries don't belong on roads!

 

The reality of the human impact on wild cassowaries.

 

It’s not just the cassowary that’s impacted by humans moving in. Habitat loss and fragmentation affect ALL the animals and plants of the rainforest. The cassowary just happens to be the largest and most noticeable example of species that are just around the corner from extinction.

The Australian rainforests are home to approximately 3,000 different plant species from 210 families including:

  • 65% of Australia’s ferns
  • 21% of the country’s cycads
  • 37% of its conifers
  • 30% of its orchid species

AND

  • 36% of Australia’s mammals
  • 30% of its marsupials including tree kangaroos and possums
  • 60% of its butterflies
  • 48% of its bird species
  • 25% of its frog and reptiles
  • 37% of its freshwater fish
  • 50% of the country’s bat species

The cassowary is just one of so many threatened species!

If you’re still wondering what this has to do with you, given that Australia is on the other side of the world and you may never get there to visit, think about this:

80% of the flowers in the australian rainforest are not found anywhere else in the world.

Still don’t care? They’re just flowers? Well, a large amount of the ingredients we use for modern medication come from rainforest plants. Imagine where we would be as a species without modern medicine, and imagine how far we still have to go. With plant and animal species becoming extinct, we not only lose diversity and beauty in our world, but we lose knowledge, and potential scientific and medical breaththroughs!

That’s why this Saturday, July 23rd, we are hosting a Spotlight on the Species for the Double-wattled Cassowary! We will be raising funds to help the C4 Foundation save precious rainforest habitat.

There will be numerous keeper chats throughout the bird area, Natural Encounters and the Reptile buidling highlighting Australian species, as well as an ostrich keeper chat at 11 AM!

Come to the cassowary exhibit for games, prizes and tons of fun! Just take a look at what we have planned for our guests!

Follow the Cassowary Crossing signs to Darwin's exhibit where you can play games and chat with keepers!

Think you can jump like a cassowary? Find out this Saturday!

 

All coins go to save the Australian Rainforest!

 

What's this cassowary missing? His wattle! Help him find it at the Cassowary Exhibit this Saturday!

 

Hand-made crafts, like these cassowary finger puppets, will also be for sale.

Can You Jump as High as A Cassowary? Find Out at Our Spotlight on the Species!

Posted by in Birds,Endangered,Spotlight on Species

Cassowaries can clear a six foot jump.  Can YOU jump as high as a cassowary? What about a rat, or a flea? The only way to find out is to visit the zoo next Saturday!

On July 23rd the Houston Zoo is hosting our first Cassowary Spotlight on the Species event from 9 AM to 4 PM, where guests can participate in games, hang out with the cassowary keepers, win prizes, and learn about Darwin, our very own Double-wattled Cassowary!

Darwin, our Double-wattled Cassowary. Photo courtesy of Samantha Montgomery.

In the cassowary exhibit area, you will be able to play games like Pin the Wattle on the Cassowary and a very special version of Candy Land.  You can watch a training demonstration, or giggle as Darwin enjoys a shower in his exhibit!

Prizes will be raffled off, and you will have the opportunity to purchase some very special home-made animal items such as some castings of Darwin’s prehistoric footprints, or Attwater’s Prairie Chicken Artwork, and photography courtesy of our very own talented zookeepers!

An Example of some of the beautiful photography that will be for sale to benefit wild cassowary populations. Photo by Samantha Montgomery

 

All proceeds will go towards purchasing critical cassowary habitat that is currently tagged for commercial and residential development. As habitat fragmentation is the biggest threat to dwindling wild cassowary populations, every bit of habitat is crucial to their survival!

Stop by and see us, grab yourself a ‘I Heart Cassowary’ sticker and get familiar with one of the coolest animals at the zoo!

   

 

The Most Dangerous Bird in the World Needs Your Help: Cassowary Spotlight on the Species

Posted by in Birds,Conservation,Spotlight on Species

My parents were surprised when I became a zookeeper. As I recall, they really should have seen it coming.

The zoo was my favorite place in the world growing up, and I pestered them so much to make the one hour drive to the Gladys Porter Zoo that they had to tell one of those white lies parents love so much–the zoo is only open for a few months during the summer.

If that wasn’t enough to tip them off, I also climbed onto the roof every Christmas to make sure Santa’s reindeer had carrots and plenty of water. I had decided it wasn’t fair that everyone gave Santa cookies and milk, but the reindeer, doing so much work, were ignored.

What does any of this have to do with ‘the most dangerous bird in the world’? Well, I didn’t like birds growing up. I was really interested in reptiles and primates, but I really did not understand the appeal of birds.

However, the cassowary was a very different matter. I distinctly remember the resident cassowary at my childhood zoo. She sat with her legs bent forward, and those wicked-looking feet with scary dagger-like nails relaxed in front of her. She was always right by the fence, and I had such a close view.

The bird just looked mean and prehistoric, unlike any other animal in the zoo. I remember my mother saying, “Come away from there, Megan. I don’t like the way that bird is looking at you.”

Years later, I had made birds my professional focus and fell in love with their variety, intelligence and beauty. I also never forgot that cassowary I met as a kid. She definitely made a lasting impression.

I always hoped to work with a cassowary at some point, and when Darwin, our Double-wattled Cassowary, arrived at the Houston Zoo, I was immediately in awe of this huge, flightless and very dangerous bird.

Darwin stands approximately five feet tall, weighs in at 110 pounds, and like all cassowaries, has a powerful kick, rendered even more severe by a viciously long nail on each of his inner-most toes.

That's a pretty intimidating claw! Image courtesy of www.epiccreature.blogspot.com

It’s those powerful kicks and sharp long nails that make the cassowary the most dangerous bird in the world. At the zoo, Darwin is a protected-contact animal, much like our lions or tigers, and we never go into his enclosure with him.

So why does a bird, so obviously well-equipped to take care of itself, need our help? As large and intimidating as a cassowary may be, they are simply no match for a car.

A cassowary chick, injured by a car in Australia. Most cassowaries that have the misfortune to meet with a vehicle are not so lucky. Image courtesy of www.globalgiving.org

Habitat destruction and fragmentation have devestated the cassowary population, and after several years of being the proud home to a Double-wattled Cassowary, we at the Houston Zoo decided it was time to help Darwin’s wild counterparts.

On Saturday, July 23rd, please join us at the Houston Zoo Cassowary Exhibit from 9 AM to 4 PM for a day of all things Cassowary!

There will be games!

There will be prizes!

There will be FUN!

Along the way, you’ll learn a thing or two about cassowaries, birds, habitat conservation, AND you’ll help the Houston Zoo raise funds to buy back and restore critical cassowary habitat, which means less of this:

A male cassowary and two chicks, attempting to make their way through traffic. Photo by Karl Dekok

 

and more of this:

A cassowary and his chick, in the forest, where they belong. Image courtesy of www.rainforesthideaway.com

 

It’s Not Easy Being A Green Dad

Posted by in Amphibians,Endangered,Holidays

When you are small, moist and squishy amphibian, you make a very tasty snack for most mammals, birds, fish and reptiles. In fact, you are kind of like a green (or other colored) oreo cookie! You are very popular in the pond, and not in a good way. You most likely spend the majority of your time not making friends, but being quite anti-social, hiding under logs, leaves, and high up in the trees trying to avoid being someone else’s lunch.

As you might imagine, this makes things especially difficult when parenting comes in to question. Can you imagine if, while attempting to change your child’s diaper or tying their shoes, or teaching them how to throw a baseball you had to constantly be looking over your shoulder or warding off predators, without a weapon, claws, beak, hooves, horns or sharp teeth? It would make things pretty dang stressful and tiring, that’s for sure! And, because of other creatures “sweet tooth” for you, there is a good chance you would be sitting in a stomach basking in gastric juices before you were able to raise your offspring successfully.

For this reason, and others, you do not usually see a lot of parental care in the amphibious creatures. Most amphibians may be absent parents once the deed is done, but they have good reason, and they have adopted a reproductive strategy that works better for their kind.

Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs

What’s the strategy you ask? Lots, lots, lots and lots, of eggs! By laying hundreds, if not thousands of eggs, there is the hope that a small percentage will make it to adulthood and eventually make more frogs or toads.

This is very different in the mammal and bird world where you see parental care as the major reproductive strategy, having less offspring at a time.

And- if you do have more than 2 or 3 offspring, you generally have aunties, uncles and grandparents to help with the rearing. Why else are we so engrossed by those national stories of those human parents who have 4, 6, 8 babies at a time?! We are amazed and question, how do they do it? The truth is these people must rely on family, good friends and corporate sponsors to make it work! Frogs do not have this luxury!

HOWEVER and quite amazingly, if you look close enough, there are several examples of frog dads out their that do protect their young, proving once again that amphibians (frogs, toads, salamanders and caecilians) are one of the most surprising and diverse groups of vertebrates on this planet.

Although there are quite a few examples of good frog mommies, the majority are generally the males exhibiting parental care. This is because female frogs use up a profound amount of energy producing and carrying around all of those hundreds and thousands of eggs and don’t have much to give once the eggs are deposited. Babies mamma is usually way too tired, ready to prop her feet up, maybe get a massage, and eat a nice fly quiche.

So, in honor of Fathers Day, here are just a few examples of Toad-ally Amazing Amphibian Dads:

* Glass frog dads guard their fragile eggs which hang from leaves snapping at any potential intruders and mimicking their clutch of eggs as well.

* The African bullfrog guards his eggs and will aggressively defend the offspring. Once the eggs have hatched, he will dig a channel between the small pools of water the tadpoles started in, and an adjacent stream so the tadpoles may escape their evaporating natal pool!

* Species of the midwife toad actually carry eggs on their back legs until they are ready to hatch. The male will then transport them to water and let them go!

Poison dart frog

* Poison dart frogs will let little tadpoles take a ride on their back, moving them around to a nursery bromeliad plant filled with still water. Some will even transport them to nearby streams.

* Some African rain frog species will protect their eggs which have been laid in burrows in the ground.

* Gladiator frogs defend their stream side nursery pools and bust out with arm spears projecting from their bodies to aggressively defend their young from other frogs and/or sneaky cockroaches!

* Darwin frogs brood their tadpoles in their vocal sacs until they are ready to complete metamorphosis. Now that’s commitment!

Let’s hear it for the dads! Celebrate Dad by giving him a memorable Father’s Day gift this year – Name a Houston Toad after him! With your gift, you help us support Houston Toads, a critically endangered species native to Texas. Click here to learn more about Houston Toads and how you can further the Houston Zoo’s conservation efforts that help ensure their survival.

The ciritically endangered Houston Toad

Come to TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day on June 19! Come visit the newly-named toads on June 19 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. as we celebrate a TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day at the Houston Zoo. This fun, family event will be filled with crafts, activities, Houston Toad info and much more! This event is FREE with your paid Zoo admission.

Bird Conservation in Saipan: Moving on (to a little island in the sea)

Posted by in Bird Conservation in Siapan,Birds,Endangered

One of the primary goals of this field work is to translocate some of the critically endangered Golden White-eyes to an uninhabited, predator-free island in the CNMI chain.  In the past phases of the MAC project translocations have been done with Bridled White-eyes as a trial to see how they would fair on a new island home.  The Bridled White-eye translocation was successful – the birds not only survived but nested and raised chicks on their new home.

This year we are translocating 24 Golden White-eyes from Saipan to Sarigan.  Sarigan is about 2 hours from Saipan via Helicopter.

The tiny uninhabited island of Sarigan.

The translocation is scheduled for Thursday – so for the 2 days before I poured over all the weight and size data for the White-eyes and have to choose 24 birds out of the 40 that we have to send for release.  While looking at the data, I try to choose birds that may not adapt well to captivity (because we are bringing 12 birds back to the US for captive breeding).  After several hours of looking at weights, wing, and tarsus measurements, I have picked out the 24 birds that will call Sarigan home – and as luck would have it, they turn out to be 12 males and 12 females.

Here's a little known fact about bird nerds--we LOVE spreadsheets!

The night before the release we put color bands on the birds – each bird will have a unique color band combination so that field researchers can identify them.  Once the birds are banded, they go into their special transport crates.

Removing a bird from its holding cage.

Banding the bird for release and future identification.

Good luck kisses are a vital part of the relocation program.

Early the next morning, project leader Herb Roberts, Curator of Birds at the Memphis Zoo, loads them up into the helicopter to take to their new island home.

At least the people in the helicopter had a very impressive view on the way to the white-eye’s new home.

After they landed on Sarigan, the crates are taken into the forest to let the white-eyes enjoy their new island paradise (although some of the white-eyes are a little more cautious than the otehrs).

Next spring, field researchers from DFW will come to Sarigan and look for unbanded Golden White-eyes.  Any birds without a leg band will be off-spring from the 24 that we moved.  We are very hopeful that they will breed and thus grow an ‘insurance’ population of this beautiful species that is protected from the dangers on their home island of Saipan. 

The DFW field researchers will keep look-out for a Golden White-eye nest like this one

After the release on Sarigan, we still had extra birds remaining in our care.  We originally caught 18 Rufous Fan-tails and 42 Golden White-eyes.  Since we are only taking 12 Fantails and 12 White-eyes back to the United States; we needed to choose the birds to return to their original trapping location.  After looking carefully at the food consumption of the birds we trapped; we chose 6 Fantails and 6 White-eyes to re-release.  Mid-day on the day after the translocation, we took these birds back out to their original trap location.  Most of the fantails flew out of the crate with hast… however, the White-eyes, always curious, usually eyed their surroundings prior to flying out of their crate.

A Golden White-eye, cautiously examining its surroundings before flying free.

A Rufous Fantail takes flight back at its original home.

 

While we were back at our netting sites, we were able to see check-up on the Bridled White-eye nest that was near trap 1… and we were very pleased to see that one chick had hatched and the 2nd egg was in the hatching process.  It looks like it will be another successful spring for the birds on Saipan.

A Bridled White-eye chick, and a second on the way!

Make sure you haven’t missed out! Read the rest of the series HERE!

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