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Four
Peregrine Falcon Chicks Banded,
Two
will be Equipped with Satellite Tracking Technology Later this Month
For the last twelve years a pair of peregrine falcons have successfully nested at Pittsburgh's Gulf Tower. On May 3rd, four squawking chicks, numbers 36 through 39 to be born on that 37th floor ledge, were weighed and given a medical examination by National Aviary personnel, then banded for identification purposes by state Game Commission biologists. The birds, one female and three males, hatched in mid-April.
This is
a year of firsts. For the first time five eggs were laid in the nest, although
one did not hatch. And, later this month, two of the four falcons will be outfitted
with solar-powered satellite tracking transmitters so state biologists can follow
their movements throughout the world.
Pittsburgh's
original pair of peregrines arrived in the winter of 1989. It marked the first
time the species had nested in western Pennsylvania in more than forty years.
Both birds were less than one-year-old. They claimed the downtown area as their
territory and regularly chased away hawks and vultures.The original pair in
Pittsburgh wore coded leg bands identifying them as part of the peregrine recovery
program. The original female was identified as being released in the Shenandoah
Mountains on the Virginia-West Virginia border in June 1989. The male was released
in northeastern Tennessee in June 1989. In 1998 the original female peregrine
disappeared and an “unbanded” female took up residency and continues to nest
at the Gulf Tower. The new female peregrine
was banded in 1998 along with her chicks. Her origin will never be known. The male of the present pair is believed to
be the original bird. The Gulf Tower is the first known building nest site in
Pennsylvania.
The slide
show at right offers a glimpse of the day's activities. Special thanks to Mary
Shaw for some of the photos in our slideshow.
| Get more details on the event |
| Discover peregrine facts |
| Read the Post-Gazette article |