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January 2011

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Fri, 7 Jan 2011 11:53:25 -0500
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I have some old Ohio Conservaton Bulletin magazines from the 30's and 40" 
and I will have to look but i am sure I read articles in there where they 
went in to crow roosts and set off charges and killed them by the hundreds. 
Russell   Lima, Ohio
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Linda Sekura" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2011 11:17 AM
Subject: [Ohio-birds] Fwd: Arkansas bird deaths - "Illegal fireworks likely 
cause"


Jan 4 "Audubonmagagine.org" article (fwd from CT listserve --> PA-BIRDS 
listserve).  Link in forwarded email. Excerpts:

Illegal Fireworks Likely Cause of Massive Arkansas Blackbird Deaths

The loud noises, combined with birds’ poor night vision and large winter 
gathering...  led birds to crash to their deaths.  That’s the Arkansas Game 
and Fish Commission's “strong working hypothesis.”

(On New Year's Eve) At 10 p.m., residents heard several extremely loud, 
“window-shaking” noises that are believed to have come from 
professional-grade fireworks, which no one had permission to set off. The 
blasts came from an area near the birds’ winter roost.  ~15 minutes later 
several folks went outside when they heard the whooshing wings of a 
blackbird flock flying at its normal fast speed. “But instead of the birds 
being above treetop level, like they usually are, they were at rooftop 
level...  They crashed into houses, cars, trees, mailboxes, shrubbery. 
Everything around.”

Blackbirds don’t usually fly at night. The big booms apparently flushed the 
birds from their roost, and then poor eyesight and disorientation stymied 
them from making it back safely. “Necropsy report shows trauma primarily to 
the chest...  Hemorrhaging in the body cavity, bruised skulls, blood clots 
in brain. It’s consistent with crashing into something rather than falling.” 
The death toll is difficult to estimate because feral cats, raccoons, and 
other scavengers likely made a meal out of the fallen creatures.

It appears that similarly mysterious bird deaths in Louisiana around the 
same time are unrelated. “Initial findings indicate that these are isolated 
incidents that were probably caused by disturbance and disorientation,” says 
Greg Butcher, Audubon's director of bird conservation.

FULL ARTICLE, BELOW.

Linda
216-598-0113




-----Original Message-----
From: Wiltraut, Richard E <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Fri, Jan 7, 2011 9:11 am
Subject: [PABIRDS] Bird deaths


From the Connecticut list serve
Subject: Probable Cause of Death of Arkansas Birds
rom: Frank Mantlik <mantlik AT sbcglobal.net>
ate: Thu, 6 Jan 2011 18:37:28 -0800 (PST)
ere's National Audubon's analysis of the cause of death:

ttp://magblog.audubon.org/illegal-fireworks-likely-cause-massive-arkansas-blackbird-deaths


rank Mantlik
______________________________________________
his list is provided by the Connecticut Ornithological Association (COA) for
he discussion of birds and birding in Connecticut.
For subscription information visit
ttp://lists.ctbirding.org/mailman/listinfo/ctbirds_lists.ctbirding.org

Rick Wiltraut
acobsburg Environmental Education Center
35 Jacobsburg Road
ind Gap, PA 18091


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______________________________________________________________________

Ohio-birds mailing list, a service of the Ohio Ornithological Society.
Our thanks to Miami University for hosting this mailing list.
Additional discussions can be found in our forums, at www.ohiobirds.org/forum/.

You can join or leave the list, or change your options, at:
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