Osprey boat cruise planned for July 12
Phil Cooper/Special to the Press | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 11 years, 5 months AGO
The osprey is a fish-eating hawk common to North Idaho. At least 100 pairs nest annually in the Lake Coeur d'Alene region including the lower reaches of the St. Joe and Coeur d'Alene rivers.
Adult osprey along with the young-of-the-year birds begin their annual migration in mid-September, traveling all the way to Baja California, Central America, and many all the way to South America. The adults return in late winter-early spring to the area where they originally hatched.
The University of Idaho and the Idaho Department of Fish and Game have been studying and banding osprey at Lake Coeur d'Alene for more than 25 years. The work is done to determine survival and mortality rates and to further define the migration patterns and wintering areas of the population.
To conduct this research, young-of-the-year pre-flight osprey are briefly taken from nests just before fledging. A band with a unique number is gently applied to one leg, and the 6- to 7-week-old birds are safely placed back in the nests.
You may be wondering what the adult osprey think of the process? The adults take flight when the research boat approaches. They make their displeasure known with loud, screeching calls intended to scare the biologists away and to tell the young osprey to lie down flat in an effort to hide.
Yet, these brave biologists have more than 30 years of experience banding osprey and they can understand "osprey language." Knowing the osprey are only using scare tactics, they go about their work and get away from the nests in no time flat.
The banding process goes very quickly. After the leg bands are applied and the biologists move away, the adults immediately return to the nests to find their young safe and secure - but sporting new leg bands.
No one knows if having a leg band is a status symbol or an embarrassment in the osprey world, but the bands allow for the gathering of some remarkable information to help biologists learn about the species and to protect osprey populations.
Would you like to learn more about this bird, common to our area in the summer? How about coming along and watching osprey research?
An Osprey boat cruise has been scheduled for Saturday, July 12. The trip will run from 9-11 a.m., and boarding begins at 8:30.
The cruise will be leaving from the west end of The Coeur d'Alene Resort boardwalk. Parking is available at the new covered parking under Front Street, on nearby streets, and in the pay lot at the North Idaho Museum. The cost of the trip is $15 for adults, or $35 per family. Children under 12 are free when with a paying adult.
Space is very limited and reservations are required. Reservations can be made by calling the Coeur d'Alene Chamber of Commerce at 664-3194 or going online to www.cdachamber.com.
Wildlife biologists will be in a small boat that will travel alongside a Lake Coeur d'Alene Charter Cruise boat. Well-known wildlife biologist and renowned osprey researcher Dr. Wayne Melquist will take young-of-the-year birds from osprey nests and band them, while the passengers on the cruise boat watch and take photos.
Speakers on the cruise boat will include wildlife biologists and avian experts, including Beth Paragamian representing the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. They will be on board the cruise boat to provide fascinating biological information on osprey and other wildlife species. A limited number of binoculars will be available for loan; however, bringing your own along with a camera, sun hat and sun screen is advised.
Invited guest speakers also include the Coeur d'Alene Tribe, the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality's Lake Coeur d'Alene management team, and a Cougar Bay osprey preservation group.
The annual event is sponsored by the natural resources committee of the Coeur d'Alene Chamber of Commerce. Cooperators include the Nature Conservancy, Fish and Game, the Idaho Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the University of Idaho, the Audubon Society and The Coeur d'Alene Resort.
Phil Cooper is a wildlife conservation educator in Coeur d'Alene for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game.
ARTICLES BY PHIL COOPER/SPECIAL TO THE PRESS
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