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Ask Maine Audubon: Herons are equal-opportunity hunters Your wildlife questions are answered by Maine Audubon Staff Naturalist Doug Hitchcox. Share AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall My property borders a freshwater marsh so the sighting of great blue herons is an almost daily occurrence. This spring, however, I’ve been seeing them walking around my yard at times and appearing to be in a hunting mode. Last week, I happened to look out at just the right moment to see one heron stealthily walk behind a fence and then grab an unknowing chipmunk. Since there are many chipmunks on my property, I wondered if this is what might be attracting the herons onto the grounds. Are chipmunks a regular part of their diet? I wasn’t aware that herons catch prey that aren’t aquatic. Thank you for your insight about this. ....
Portland City Council limits when dogs can be off leash in Baxter Woods pressherald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pressherald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Birding: One good sighting does not necessarily deserve another Birders will always flock with news of a rare sighting, but based on science that doesn t increase chances of another rare sighting. By HERB WILSON Share Birders gather to watch a rare redwing, also known as a European thrush, at Capisic Pond Park in Portland on Jan. 30. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer In the last column, I discussed a birding phenomenon that has been termed the Patagonia Picnic Table Effect or PPTE. The effect is basically a positive feedback loop. A birder finds a rare bird, other birders come to see the rarity and find other rare birds, drawing yet more birders who find yet more rare birds. ....
A glimpse to the future: Birding as a lifetime pursuit sunjournal.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sunjournal.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Princeton University Press, 2020, 642 pages; $40 It is certainly a fitting monument to its author. Peter Vickery was one of Maine’s leading ornithologists. Although he and his wife Barbara lived in Richmond, Peter worked as an avian ecologist at Massachusetts Audubon Society (where we first became friends) for over 20 years. Nonetheless, he had put down roots in Maine, and Ralph Palmer’s classic “Maine Birds” became “his Bible,” according to Barbara. Written in 1949, it was the standard reference on Maine’s avifauna. Nature, however, does not stand still, and as the twentieth century progressed from its midpoint into the next, the book’s findings were being overtaken. ....