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Except for
isolated areas where native populations have survived, virtually all of
the peregrine falcons in the United States today are a result of the reintroduction
efforts.
All captive raised birds reintroduced into the wild have
been banded. Furthermore, most of the nest sites are monitored. Whenever
possible, young birds produced in the wild are also banded before they
leave the nest. As a result, approximately 80% of the peregrines in the
Midwest today can be identified by their individual leg markings.
Although different approaches have been used elsewhere,
in recent years a uniform approach to banding has been followed in the
Midwest. Bands are placed on both legs. The band on the right leg is a
traditional U.S. Fish and Wildlife (USF&W) bird band that has been
color-coded. Right leg bands on captive raised birds are gold in color.
Peregrines produced in the wild wear purple bands.
The left leg band is used for individual identification.
These bands are marked with unique combinations of letters and numbers.
To increase the number of available combinations, the characters are often
placed on their side. For example, Dakota Ace has two letters on his left
leg band. The top letter is a sideways "H". The bottom letter
is a "D" oriented in the conventional manner.
The left leg bands are also color-coded. Through 1998,
most of the bands used in the Midwest were black on top and red on the
bottom. Starting in 1999, the color combination was changed to black over
green. The colors of the bands help determine the bird's age and origin.
Individual identifications, however, require that the letters or numbers
on the left band be read.
We know from banding records that Dakota Ace was hatched
in 1997 at the South Dakota Raptor Trust breeding facility in Centerville,
South Dakota. He was released that summer in Sioux Falls, and almost immediately
disappeared. He was presumed to be lost, as most young falcons who prematurely
leave the release sites do not survive on their own. We know nothing more
about Dakota Ace's personal history until the spring of 2000, when he
first showed up in Fargo. Since then he has successfully defended his
territory, and appears to be firmly established as our resident male falcon.
Since arriving in Fargo, Dakota Ace has paired with at
least four female falcons. The first was Goldie who also arrived in 2000.
She and Dakota Ace stayed together through that September, and both returned
in the spring of 2001. That year they made history by becoming the first
pair of reintroduced falcons to successfully nest in North Dakota.
Goldie hatched in 1999 in Omaha, Nebraska. She was part
of an unusually large brood of five, and had an interesting lineage. Her
father was Zeus; a bird released in Rochester, New York in 1994, who somehow
found his way to Omaha the next year where he can still be found. Her
great-grandmother was Maud, the first falcon produced in the wild as part
of the Midwest restoration efforts. Maud was hatched in 1987 from a nest
on the Multifoods Tower in Minneapolis.
Regrettably, Goldie did not return to Fargo in the spring
of 2002. Presumably she did not survive the winter. She was replaced by
a succession of juvenile (one year old) females. The first two were unbanded,
and therefore unidentifiable. The third was our current female, whose
name is Frieda.
Frieda was hatched in the wild in 2001. She was one of
a brood of four, raised in a nest box attached to a smokestack near Alma,
Wisconsin. Her mother was killed in a hailstorm three weeks before Frieda
and her siblings were old enough to leave the nest. Nonetheless, they
were all successfully raised by the surviving male parent.
Frieda is a good example of the detailed genetic information
that is also available regarding many individual birds. Her genetic heritage
includes representatives of all three North American subspecies, as well
as a fourth subspecies that occurs naturally in southern Europe.
- Information
provided by Wick Corwin |