Archive for the ‘Habitat’ Category

Love on a Treetop: Courting Great Blue Herons

Monday, March 24th, 2014

Courting Great Blue Heron Pair at SouthCoast Rookery

Great Blue Herons swoop through the air with blitheful grace, so unexpected for such a large and seemingly awkward creature.  Yet, if aerial ballets amaze, their Geisha-like courtship movements atop the trees precariously balanced on teetering twigs stuns the senses. 

In this early stage of seasonal courtship as pairs return to the rookery and before preparing the nest for this year’s chicks, ritual behavior ensues each time the male returns to the aerie.  Loving tenderness is expressed in elegant poses so gentle, so sweet and so dramatically effective.

(All images can be enlarged by clicking on the picture, which will open in a separate window.)

Courting Behavior as Male Great Blue Heron Returns to Nest

When the greeting ritual ends, the mating pair begins a grooming phase with the same loving tenderness as demonstrated below.

Great Blue Heron Pair Grooming

With the courting ritual temporarily behind them, they can refocus on preparing the nest for eggs, incubation and chicks.  The next two months will be a busy time for this pair.

Great Blue Heron Pair Settle Down to Nesting

Yet, even in the busy-ness of nest preparation, there’s always time for a gentle peck to reinforce the couple’s bond.

Love’s in the Air:  Great Blue Herons at SouthCoast Rookery

Pterodactyls in Flight (Great Blue Herons)

Monday, March 24th, 2014

Pterodaytls in Flight — Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias)

Great Blue Herons in flight resemble nothing so much as the reincarnation of ancient pterodactyls.  They are magnificent creatures that cruise through the sky with lumbering grace.  Their raucous squawks and “kronks” add depth and breadth to the simulation of prehistoric mystery. 

Turtle Journal offers the following montage of Great Blue Herons in flight for your pure enjoyment.  Each image can be enlarged by clicking.

Great Blue Herons at SouthCoast  Rookery in Marion, Massachusetts

Osprey Arrives at SouthCoast Rookery; Promptly Evicts Heron Pair

Sunday, March 23rd, 2014

Osprey Arrives @ SouthCoast Rookery, March 23rd

The first osprey (Pandion haliaetus) arrived at the SouthCoast rookery in Marion on March 23rd.  Circling above the pond and swooping between the trees, the osprey evoked a riot of squawks from nesting pairs of great blue herons (Ardea herodias) who had glided into the rookery two days earlier on March 21st.

Osprey Promptly Evicts Blue Heron Pair from Prime Nest

The osprey immediately and unceremoniously evicted the early great blue heron pair from the prime nest in this rookery, repeating what had occurred in 2012 and 2013.  (See Aggressive Ospreys Evict Great Blue Heron Nesting Pair.)  Perhaps fortunately this year, the eviction happened before egg laying had begun.  The 2012 eviction took place in early May!

Ospreys and Blue Herons Do NOT Make Friendly Neighbors

As each species takes flight from its respective nest and nears the other, cacophony and chaos ensue.  Turtle Journal observes, “Isn’t Nature grandly harmonious?

Great Blue Heron Returns to SouthCoast Rookery

Friday, March 21st, 2014

Great Blue Heron Returns to SouthCoast Rookery (March 21)

Blue skies, a stiff breeze and chilly temperatures greeted the first Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) who returned to the SouthCoast rookery this morning, March 21st.  Soon followed by its mate, the pair naturally took residence in the best nest within the rookery.

SouthCoast Great Blue Heron Rookery

The Turtle Journal team has been following this major Great Blue Heron rookery on the SouthCoast since Spring 2012.  Many pairs of Great Blue Herons compete in sometimes open battle with several pairs of Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) to raise their young in this perfect, well protected nursery habitat.  (See Great Blue Heron Rookery on Massachusetts SouthCoast.)

Great Blue Heron Occupies Disputed Nest

The Great Blue Heron pair this morning assumed occupancy of the best and most disputed nest within the rookery.  For the past two seasons, ospreys have evicted Great Blue Heron pairs from this nest.  (See Aggressive Ospreys Evict Great Blue Heron Nesting Pair.)  It will be interesting to observe whether the battle continues this year.  For the nonce, though, with no ospreys in sight, Great Blue Herons are in charge.

Spring Rain Sparks Salamander Congress on Massachusetts SouthCoast

Thursday, March 20th, 2014

Yellow Spotted Salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) Heading to Congress

A bitter, seemingly interminable winter has lingered in the  Great White North.  Most ponds, creeks and bog channels remain largely iced.  Yet, after midnight, a spring rain descended on Massachusetts’ SouthCoast with gradually warming temperatures that reached into the low to mid 40s.  So, in the wee hour darkness, Sue Wieber Nourse of the Turtle Journal team ventured out to a nearby wetlands to see if these conditions would spark a salamander congress.

Yellow Spotted Salamander on First Day of Spring (March 20)

Crossing a dirt roadway separating swampy woodlands from bog channels where we have documented an annual congress in previous years, a handsome yellow spotted salamander slithered through the soaking darkness.  Sue saw this moving “twig” in the glare of her headlights and managed to snag him before he disappeared into the bog.

Ventral Side of Yellow Spotted Salamander

These are lovely creatures who, for us, create the surest mark of emerging Spring.  We returned to the bog later in the morning, but did not find any signs of spermataphores or egg masses.  Also, we found no wood frogs. which we normally observe in these same bog channels.  Still too early and too cold, I fear.

First Crocus at Turtle Journal Central Blooms on First Day of Spring

There was another Spring surprise for us this morning.  At Turtle Journal Central, our first crocus of the year bloomed on this first day of Spring.Â