Tag: Maine Audubon

  • Common Loon Hatch

    MassWildlife reports the first common loon hatched in southeastern Massachusetts in over a century.

    In early July, the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife) and the Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI) confirmed that a common loon chick hatched in Fall River this spring. Until this year, loons had not hatched in southeastern Massachusetts in over a century! BRI, a non-profit ecological research group based in Maine, has been partnering with MassWildlife to restore common loons to Massachusetts. This historic hatchling is an exciting result of a multi-year loon restoration initiative.  

    In 2015, in partnership with MassWildlife, the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife, Maine Audubon, the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, and the Ricketts Foundation, BRI relocated loon chicks from Maine and New York (where loons have a robust population) to the Assawompset Pond Complex in Lakeville, Massachusetts. Historically, loons nested in this area before the species was extirpated as a breeding bird in Massachusetts in the late 1800s. The hope was that translocated loon chicks successfully fledging in southeastern Massachusetts would return to that region to breed as adults in 4–6 years, thereby establishing a new breeding population in the state. The male in the Fall River nesting pair, one of the chicks originally translocated from NY, did just that.  

    Common loons (Gavia immer) are currently listed as a species of special concern under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act. Once loons fledge from freshwater lakes, they migrate to wintering grounds on the ocean. As young adults, they return to the area where they hatched to join the breeding population. The loons that were translocated from Maine and New York as chicks are now beginning to return to their release sites in Massachusetts as breeding adults. For more on endangered species conservation in Massachusetts, click here to learn about MassWildlife’s Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program.

  • Saturday, August 27 – Birding and Botanizing at the Hamilton Sanctuary, West Bath, Maine

    The New England Botanical Club has planned a Day field trip on Saturday, August 27 – please contact the group leader no later than August 19 if you would like to join the group.
    Gather for a fun-filled expedition to Maine Audubon’s Hamilton Sanctuary in beautiful mid-coast Maine. Together, we’ll help Maine Audubon by documenting the birds and plants of the sanctuary, using iNaturalist to compile and share our observations. Pack your smart phone or tablet, alongside your hand lens and binoculars – and we’ll have fun birding and botanizing in the digital age!  Level of Difficulty – 2.75 mile trail with easy to moderate walking.  Trip leader: Melissa Cullina (mcullina@mainegardens.org). Melissa will send meeting time, location and directions to those who register for the trip.