Bald Eagle
Migration Update: February 2, 2005
Today's
Report Includes:
Welcome
Back to Bald Eagle Biologist Peter Nye
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Peter
Nye with E63 |
We’re
proud to welcome the return of "Eagle Eye" Nye who's back for
the 11th season! His agency, the New York State Dept. of Environmental Conservation,
has been studying eagles in New York for about 30 years (oddly enough, the
same amount of time Nye has been working there!). Nye is one of the top
eagle biologists in North America, and we're grateful for the chance to
look over his shoulder each year as he conducts his important work.
Take a minute to meet Eagle Eye Nye and to learn about his research.
Field
Notes from Eagleye Nye Greetings
Young Journey North-ers!
Welcome to the 2005 study season for New York State eagles. For those
of you not familiar with this site or what we do, let me begin with a
few specifics.
Our long-term research into migration patterns of both bald and golden
eagles into and from New York continue. Each winter, we capture a few
eagles at different wintering locations, outfit them with small radio-transmitters
that allow us to track them, using satellites, to find out as much as
we can about their life and movements. We want to answer basic biological
questions about these species, primarily to obtain information we believe
is critical to protecting them for you and future generations; yes, your
children and grandchildren! More on that as we go on this season.
As you'll see when you explore the Journey North archives, we have tracked
many eagles over the past years. Currently, only two of our radio transmitters
(called Ptt's) are still operating (what do you suppose happened to the
other radios?) and so we are currently only tracking two migrant eagles,
A20, immature golden eagle, and V98 an adult female bald eagle. What can
you tell about golden eagle A20 from the Journey
North archives?
We hope to capture at least one, but maybe more, bald eagles along the
Upper Delaware River in southern New York this winter. I also want to
quickly mention that we are now also satellite tracking four juvenile
eagles that fledged (look this term up!) from New York State nests this
summer; more on that later!
Thank you
for joining us in our eagle studies this year! I hope you find this both
interesting and informative!
Signing off for now.
Eagleye Nye
New York State Dept. Environmental
Conservation
Delmar, NY
Printable
Nonfiction Booklet Introducing the Bald Eagle Migration Study
This year
learn about the eagle study using our new "just for kids" booklet
in your classroom. Created as an easy entry to Journey North through reading,
this printable tool will introduce students to the eagle study as they
read along. View the same material with a slide show on the web. A Teacher
Guide with links to in-depth lessons also available.
Meet
our Eagles!
Kathy Mitchell with A20 on capture day.
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Eagle
V98 with backpack satellite unit |
Just what do
we know about the eagles we will be tracking this season? A20 is a Golden
eagle, a young male when it was captured February 16, 2002. V96 is a female
Bald eagle captured less than a year ago, March 9, 2004, along the Upper
Delaware River.
Read the exciting stories about these birds and how they were captured:
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Can you locate the 73 mile streatch of Delaware R. at the Pennsylvania/NewYork
border? Don't peek yet! Locate the river in your atlas, then click
on the map. The Upper Delaware River. (Photo courtesy of National
Park Service.) |
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Delaware
River Eagle Habitat
The word is out in the eagle population about a great place to hang
out during the New York winter. The Upper Delaware River watershed hosts
the largest population of wintering bald eagles in the Northeast. What is
a watershed? A watershed is an area of land that drains ultimately to a
particular watercourse or body of water. In this case the waters would drain
into the Upper Delaware.
Biologists studying the eagles in the Northeast keep count of the numbers
of eagles who find food and shelter in the Delaware and other smaller rivers
that feed into it. How do they take the count? In addition to sighters on
the ground, one day each year in January Pete Nye himself soars over the
countryside like an eagle in a small plane to count all the eagles he and
his crew can find. Here
are the results of a few year's aerial surveys along the Upper Delaware
River:
Bald
Eagle Aerial Surveys |
Year
|
#Eagles |
2004 |
28 |
2003 |
41 |
2002 |
109 |
2001 |
27 |
2000 |
145 |
1999 |
77 |
1998 |
28 |
What can
you tell about the data from these surveys? Study the numbers to answer
these:
Challenge
Question #1:
"Identify these landmarks from the aerial survey results: minimum,
maximum, mode, range and mean. What conclusions can you make from the
information presented?"
(To
respond to these questions, please follow the instructions below.)
Fall 2004 Migration Map Clues
Each February we eagerly await the unveiling of our fall map. With satellite
tracking we can “see” where our birds have been from late summer
until now. Technology makes it easy to imagine we’re riding the eagles’
backs as they soar across the land searching for food and nesting sites.
Put on your aviator goggles and look closely for what the map can teach
us. Try
This
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Fall
2004 Migration Map |
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Fall
2003 Migration Map |
Let’s
begin the spring season with a simple map showing the fall 2004 migration
of some of our satellite tagged eagles. Study the map for its hidden meanings.
Look carefully- what statements can you make from looking at the map?
See if you can accurately answer these questions:
- What do
the dots (symbols) represent?
- How often
is the transmitter sending a signal?
- What
do the green lines on the map represent?
- What
might be happening when there is a cluster of data points in one location?
- How far
are the eagles traveling between data points?
- How many
miles/kilometers did each travel back to New York?
- What
else do you wish the map could tell us?
AND FINALLY:
- What
general statements can you make based on these maps?
Extra
Credit: Compare
and contrast A20’s travels in fall 2004 and fall 2003.
High, High Tech: The Science of Satellite Tracking
In order to track an eagle by satellite, a transmitter must be fitted
on the eagle's back. The transmitter fits like the backpack you might
wear to school. EagleEye Nye programs the transmitters to emit signals
once every 2 days. The straps of these lightweight backpacks are hand
sewn onto each eagle with a thread that will decompose in about 2 years-
the approximate lifetime of a transmitter battery.
Eagle
with satellite backpack. |
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The
satellite, orbiting high above Earth’s atmosphere becomes a tool
in the complex transfer of data across the miles of space to show us where
we can find our eagles.
Carefully read and learn more about this technology:
Now sharpen
your pencils and calculate this:
Challenge
Question #2:
"How many miles above the earth do the polar-orbiting satellites
travel?"
(To
respond to this question, please follow the instructions below.)
Teacher Tips: Assessment Strategies
Students
who participate in Journey North are engaged in real-life investigations.
They observe, gather, and analyze authentic data; grapple with problem-solving
challenges; eavesdrop on scientists engaged in inquiry; and discuss
ideas and theories. These experiences offer rich opportunities for
both you and students to explore how their thinking and reasoning,
grasp of concepts, and abilities develop and become more sophisticated
over time.
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Student
Portfolio Organizers for Assessment
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Eagle
migration study portfolio |
A new Journey
North season brings lots of excitement. Students gather information, send
in field observations, study maps, calculate migration distances and spend
time researching topics of special interest. All of these activities promote
rich learning experiences. The challenge is how to organize this vast amount
information for assessment purposes. A creative project portfolio is one
answer!
Try
This
Easy-to-make Project Portfolio
This
lesson shows how to create a 9 X 12 project portfolio where students collect,
record and display qualitative and quantitative observations, life cycle
studies, weather and mapping information, research findings, and more
all in one convenient, creative, easy-to-handle package beginning from
day one of a new season of Journey North.
Build
Your Own Eagle Glossary
Build your vocabulary with terms used in our reports as we study eagles
this season. Start this week with some words you may be unfamiliar with.
Find the following terms and define them in your eagle journals or portfolios:
migration, eaglet, transmitter, fledge, hacking, watershed, habitat.
How
to Respond to Today's Challenge Questions:
IMPORTANT:
Answer only ONE question in each e-mail message.
1. Address
an e-mail message to: jn-challenge-eagle@learner.org
2. In the Subject Line of your message write: Challenge Question #1 (or
#2).
3. In the body of EACH message, answer ONE of the questions above.
The Next Bald Eagle Migration Update Will Be Posted on February 9, 2005.
Copyright
1997-2005 Journey North. All Rights Reserved.
Please send all questions, comments, and suggestions to jn-help@learner.org
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