|
HISTORIC
VIRGINIA POPULATION
The
historic status and distribution of peregrine falcons in Virginia
is not completely known. No systematic survey of the species was
completed prior to the loss of the population. Our understanding
of the historic population is based on breeding sites documented
by falconers, egg collectors, and the bird watching community. These
documented locations are biased toward human population centers
and areas that were accessible. Consequently, there is very little
known about the status of peregrines in the more remote portions
of the state.
There
have been 24 historical peregrine eyries documented in the Appalachians
of Virginia. Mountain nest sites were open rock faces. These nesting
areas are particularly skewed to the upper portions of Shenandoah
National Park and Blue Ridge Mountains. Seven locations were clustered
in Shenandoah National Park. In addition to the mountain eyries,
two nesting sites were documented on old osprey nests on the Delmarva
Peninsula.
POPULATION
DECLINE
The
historic population of peregrine falcons was impacted by a host
of factors. Great-horned owls are known to be a natural enemy of
peregrines and prey on chicks. Humans collected eggs from eyries,
hunted both adults and young, and destroyed many nesting sites.
However, prior to the 1940's, the breeding population appears to
have been relatively stable. It was not until the post World War
II period that peregrine populations began to show signs of a precipitous
decline.
The
widespread use of organochlorine pesticides that began in the 1940's
was the principal factor causing population declines in peregrine
falcons and many other birds of prey. Organochlorines and their
metabolites, including DDT, DDE, aldrin, dieldrin, and others are
stable, persistent compounds that are stored in the fatty tissues
of animals feeding on contaminated food. Use of these chemicals
peaked in the 1950's and early 1960's and continued through the
early 1970's. Although these compounds may cause direct mortality
of adults, they are also responsible for reproductive failures.
Egg-shell thinning, egg breakage, addling, and hatching failure
have all been attributed to elevated contaminant levels in females.
During the period of highest pesticide use, nesting failures were
widespread and successful reproduction in heavily contaminated areas
ceased entirely.
The
broad reduction in breeding success resulted in a steady decline
for many peregrine falcon populations in North America. The degree
of exposure to pesticides varied among regions, such that numbers
in more heavily contaminated areas suffered greater declines. Peregrines
nesting in the agricultural and forested areas east of the Mississippi
River were the most heavily contaminated and were essentially extirpated.
The peregrine falcon was believed to be extinct in Virginia as a
breeding species by the early 1960's.
POPULATION
RECOVERY
There
were no peregrine falcons known to nest in Virginia between the
early 1960's and the early 1980's. Following the ban of DDT and
similar compounds in the 1970's and an intense reintroduction effort
conducted by Center for Conservation Biology personnel and other
partner organizations, the peregrine falcon population in Virginia
has made a slow but steady recovery. From a single breeding pair
in 1981, the breeding population is now approaching 20 pairs. However,
productivity remains somewhat erratic and patchy. A U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service analysis of addled eggs collected in Virginia in
the early 1990's showed levels of DDE, Dieldrin, and egg-shell thinning
that have been shown previously to have an adverse impact on reproduction.
In addition, turnover rates of adults within monitored breeding
sites appear abnormally high. At present, the long-term viability
of the Virginia population remains questionable. Continued monitoring
and management of this population is needed to ensure that the population
will continue to recover. See figure below.
CURRENT
VIRGINIA BREEDING POPULATION
The
population of peregrine falcons known to breed in Virginia is currently
centered on the Coastal Plain. All known pairs nest on artificial
structures. Breeding sites include 7 bridges and numerous towers
erected specifically for peregrines. Although it seems highly likely
that pairs do breed in the mountains of Virginia on natural cliff
sites, none are currently known.
Search
breeding data for Virginia peregrines (1980-2009)
|