Natural Connections
Sharpies at Hawk Ridge
Emily Stone
Naturalist/Educator at the Cable
Natural History Museum
A blustery northwest wind cut right
through two layers of wool as I stepped out of the car at Hawk Ridge in Duluth,
MN. Binoculars, bird books, hot tea, and windbreakers in hand, my parents and I
set up our watch with about fifty other birders and volunteers. Bright sunshine
alternated with shadows cast by hurried gray clouds. Up on a wooden platform,
several experts peered through spotting scopes, intently searching the sky.
Their quarry: hawks.
Each fall, about 82,000 raptors pass
over Hawk Ridge on their southern migration. Understandably reluctant to cross a
large body of water, the birds funnel southwest along the shore of Lake Superior.
The high, rocky outcrop of Hawk Ridge Nature Reserve makes a great viewing
platform, and people from all over (like my parents from Iowa) come to watch
the migration here.
Under some conditions, hawks will fly
low over the ridge, zooming just above the heads of excited birders. Today,
most of the raptors were tiny black specks in the distance, only visible by
scanning the wild blue yonder with our binoculars.
Raptor biologists here have a special
trick for getting close-up views of the hawks – bait. Using a technique a lot
like fishing, researchers pull the string on a lure to make it look like an
injured bird. When a raptor swoops down for an easy meal, it becomes tangled in
one of a series of nets. Researchers carefully extricate it from the net, take
a variety of measurements, and attach a numbered band to its leg. About three
percent of birds banded here are recaptured. Based on the data collected from
recapturing banded birds, sharp-shinned hawks migrating over Hawk Ridge
generally head southeast to Illinois, and then southwest toward east Texas and
Mexico, following the prevailing wind pattern.
Sometimes naturalists bring a recent
captive down from the remote banding station so that folks on the overlook can
get a better view. Moments after we arrived, two naturalists called everyone
over to see a couple “sharpies” in hand. To prevent the hawks from hurting the
humans or themselves, the naturalists held their wings, tail, and legs gently
but firmly in the fist of one hand. The birds, both hatch-year females, looked
quite calm.
Sharp-shinned hawks are the smallest
hawks in North America, and have the biggest size difference between males and
females. Females are up to one-third bigger than males, and this size
difference means that they focus on different sizes of prey. Males tend to hunt
smaller birds, such as sparrows, while females can concentrate on larger prey,
like robins. This has two big advantages: males and females do not compete for
the same food source, and chicks can get appropriately sized food as they grow.
During the first few weeks after
hatching, the female sharp-shin broods the chicks while the male hunts and
brings in small songbirds. He typically removes and eats the head before
delivering the meal. As the chicks mature, the female joins in the hunting and
brings larger prey for the hungry fledglings.
Sharp-shinned hawks are agile and
acrobatic fliers, navigating dense woods at high speeds by using their long
tail as a rudder. Short, rounded wings help them zip through tight spaces after
small birds. During migration, they leave the dense forests of their northern nesting
grounds and take to the open sky.
To help make the journey easier, these
and other hawks will ride thermals, which are rising pockets of warmer air,
formed by the uneven heating of the surface of the Earth. Thunderheads are
visible thermals, where clouds of water droplets show just how high the warm
air is climbing. When you see turkey vultures or other birds soaring in lazy
circles without flapping, they are riding thermals. The energy in thermals
comes from the Sun. You can learn more about them at our current exhibit: STAR
POWER: Energy from the Sun.
For every mile a bird rises on this
avian elevator, it can coast downwind seven miles without flapping. Still, sharp-shinned
hawk’ migration from the top of this continent to the bottom takes strength,
endurance, and stored energy. In order to be ready for the journey, these small
hawks grow furiously—going from egg to adult size in just over 7 weeks.
The Hawk Ridge naturalists spent a few
minute answering questions, and then asked someone to adopt the birds. For a
small donation to support the research, the adopter’s name is linked with the
band number of the bird, and if it is ever recaptured, the adopter will be
notified. In addition, the adopter gets to release the bird. What a thrill!
In a flurry of feathers, the hawk left
the adopter’s hand. It swooped below the cliff for a moment, giving us a
spectacular “birds-eye view.” With a series of graceful circles, the sharpie
gained altitude. Soon the little hawk was a mere speck in the sky, one of the
many birds on an incredible journey, visible only through our scanning
binoculars.
If you would like more information on the
migration at Hawk Ridge, visit their website: www.hawkridge.org.
You can also join Museum Naturalist, Katie Connolly on a Hawk Ridge field trip
on October 18. Call 715-798-3890 for the details and to register.
For over 44 years, the Museum has
served as a guide and mentor to generations of visitors and residents
interested in learning to better appreciate and care for the extraordinary
natural resources of the region. The Museum invites you to visit its facility
in Cable at 13470 County Highway M. The new exhibit, STAR POWER: Energy from
the Sun, opened in May 2012 and will remain open until April, 2013.
Find us on the web at www.cablemuseum.org
to learn more about our exhibits and programs. Discover us on Facebook, or at
our blogspot, http://cablemuseumnaturalconnections.blogspot.com/
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