SOUTHERN ILLINOIS AUDUBON
SOCIETY NEWSLETTER
September 2003 - Volume 10, No. 8
The Continuing Adventures of Lucy and Ricky in Western Scotland and on
the
Hebridean Islands of Islay, Jura, and Colonsay
Richard and
Lucinda LaSalle will share slides from their last
trip to Western Scotland in a program for SIAS on September 26th,
starting
at 7:30 p.m. Richard and Cindy invite you to travel with them to
three of
the southernmost islands of the Inner Hebrides. Roughly fifteen miles
off
the coast of western Scotland, these Islands offer the visitor absolute
serenity. Slides to be shown include some of the common birds and
other
wildlife that inhabit the coves and heathered hills of Islay, Jura, and
Colonsay as well as ancient architecture, the remote farmhouse where
"Ricky
and Lucy" stayed, and a few of the most famous whisky distilleries in
the
world. "Come to Islay and say goodbye to care."
The program will be held in the Fellowship Hall of First
United
Methodist Church, 214 W. Main St., Carbondale. The public is
invited to
attend. A parking lot is located on the west side of the church
and can be
accessed from University Avenue or Main street.
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October 24 - Potluck & program. Speaker: John Magera on The Middle
Mississippi National Wildlife Refuge.
December 5 - Nov./Dec. combined meeting. Speaker: John Schwegman on
"Birds I Have Photographed".
January 23 - Annual meeting with potluck, election of officers, silent
auction and program. Speakers: James & Eleanor Smith on
Edgewood Farms, IL
Land & Water Reserve.
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August Meeting Highlights
Jody Shimp knows
where to find kudzu in Illinois. Matter o' fact,
Jody has documented locations of all the kudzu in Illinois. As
part of his
job as a Regional Natural Heritage Administrator for the Illinois Dept.
of
Natural Resources (IDNR), Jody keeps tabs on kudzu in Illinois and
coordinates its eradication.
Kudzu, Chinese yam, oriental bittersweet, Chinese stilt
grass, and
royal princess tree are all recognized as invasive exotics. Under
the IL
Exotic Weed Act purple loosestrife, Japanese honeysuckle, multifloral
rose,
kudzu, and European buckthorn, are unlawful to buy, sell or distribute
without a permit from IDNR. Water hyacinth is considered one of
the most
problematic water plants in the world. Federal law prohibits it
from being
transported across state lines and restrictions its propagation.
Jody stated that in the past 200 years, 50,000 foreign
plants have
become established in the U.S. One in seven are considered
invasive.
Invasion by introduced species has been recognized as the second
greatest
threat to global diversity, second to the loss of habitat. Nearly
half of
federal endangered and threatened species are at risk due to invasive
exotics. Jody added that exotics can alter natural succession,
change fire
and nutrient cycles, degrade soil structure, and effect hydrological
change.
As for kudzu, evidently 85 million seedlings were
distributed by
the Soil Erosion Service in the 1930s to landowners for erosion control.
Jody said that kudzu now covers 7 million acres of land, spreading by
120,000 acres per year. Kudzu is a bean, related to soy beans.
Local
disbursal suggests it produces viable seed,.but the real problem lies in
the fact that kudzu can grow nearly 1 foot per day. It can root at
individual leaf nodes that, if severed from the leader, will grow a new
plant. The weight of its dense growth can bring down a full sized
tree.
It engulfs the canopy preventing light from getting to the understory,
choking out understory vegetation. The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture
deemed
kudzu a federal noxious weed in 1970.
According to Jody there were originally 430 acres of kudzu
identified in Illinois but that is now down to 100 and should drop to
40 by
years end. IDNR was entered into an interagency agreement to
eradicate
kudzu in IL. The IL Dept. of Transportation, U.S. Forest Service,
U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, the IL Dept. of Agriculture, and the Natural
Resources Conservation Service are working together to eradicate kudzu.
It
was determined that the use of herbicide would be the most effective and
economic method of eradication. Herbicide is being applied to all
kudzu
except kudzu on Forest Service land. Jody showed several slides
of before
and after control efforts that have taken place, exhibiting how diverse
plant life returns to areas after kudzu eradication.
Jody also discussed Chinese yam, one of IL's most invasive
plants,
found in nearly ever watershed and ever nature preserve. It
produces
aerial potatoes disbursed by gravity and water, germinating along stream
banks and terraces. Herbicides are being used against Chinese
yam. Jody
added that garlic mustard has become a problem in the Shawnee Forest
were
it is being spread into the forest along equestrian trails from the
nearby
riding camps.
It was a very informative program. SIAS thanks Jody
for educating
all on the history, adverse effects and current control practices for
these
invasive exotic species.
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Time To Order Seed! - Fall Seed Sale 10/25 -
The SIAS Fall Bird Seed Sale will be held at Dillinger's
Feed
Store, 109 S. Washington St., Carbondale, on Saturday, Oct. 25.
To pre
order seed, use the form in this newsletter. Forward your order,
along
with a check payable to the Southern Illinois Audubon Society, to
Laraine
Wright, 194 Peachtree Lane, Carbondale, IL 62902. You may also
place your
order directly by either calling Laraine at 457.8769, or sending an
e-mail
to her at imabirder@earthlink.net.
Orders must be received by Monday, Oct. 20. Orders
are to be
picked up at Dillinger's the day of the sale, between 9:00 a.m. and 2:00
p.m. If you want to purchase seed but cannot pick up your order
the day of
the sale, please call Laraine to make arrangements for delivery or for
later pick-up at Dillinger's. As in the past, part of the
proceeds of the
sale will go to Free Again.
Your help is needed at Dillinger's the day of the sale.
Please
call Laraine at 457.8769 if you can help with the sale. Thanks in
advance
for your seed order! Come by Dillinger's to pick up your seed,
purchase
new bird feeders and thank Alysa Gullett, owner of Dillinger's, for
generously hosting our sale again this year.
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SIAS Donates to IAS
SIAS donated $300 to the Illinois Audubon Society (IAS)
Land
Acquisition Fund. In a thank you card from IAS, Marilyn Campbell,
Executive Director of IAS, stated that the donation would be put to good
use as IAS continues to add grassland and wetland habitat for permanent
protection.
To help support the conservation and education programs of
the
Illinois Audubon Society (IAS) consider joining. Annual dues are
$25 for
individual or $30 for family. To join, mail your name, address
and check
to The Illinois Audubon Society, P.O. Box 2418, Danville, IL 61834-2418.
Visit IAS's website at http://www.illinoisaudubon.org
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OUTINGS AND EVENTS
Thursdays
Evergreen Park, Carbondale
On Thursdays from 12 noon till l p.m., birders meet
informally to
eat lunch, watch birds, and chat at Carbondale water treatment plant off
McLafferty Road.
September 13
Max Creek Phenomenon Night Hike
Dare to venture on a 4-mile section of the River
to River Trail to explore Max Creek and the infamous vortex phenomenon
at
night, from 6:00-9:00 p.m. The hike is moderately difficult.
Bring
flashlights, walking stick and waterproof boots. Meet at the
intersection
of US Route 45 and Taylor Ridge Rd, 3.2 miles north of I-24 on US Rt.
45.
For more info phone the Cache River State Natural Area at 634.9678.
September 19-20
Illinois Audubon Society's Annual Mtg.
Illinois Audubon Society's 106th annual meeting,
Springfield.
Check http://www.illinoisaudubon.org
for registration information, field
trip sites, and programs.
September 20
Illinois Nature Preserves Anniversary
Join the IL Nature Preserves Commission (INPC) in the
celebration
of their 40th anniversary! It is to take place at the new Henry
Barkhausen-Cache River Wetlands Visitor Center, located south of
Whitehill
on IL Rt. 37. The event starts with a program at 9:30 a.m.
which will be
followed by field trips. For more info phone INPC's Judy Faulkner
Dempsey
at 687.1169.
SIAS will have an informational display set up at the
event.
Volunteers are needed to help. If you can help a few hours, phone
Vicki
Lang at 549.8390.
September 20
IOS Carlyle Lake Pelagic Trip
This trip is being lead by Dan Kassebaum and Keith
McMullen and is
open to all but there will be a $20 fee to cover the boat rental and
gas.
For more info or to place your reservation with $10
deposit,
contact Keith McMullen, 1405 DeSoto, O'Fallon, IL 62269;
warbler@intertek.net; 632.1057. Space is limited. .
September 27
Duck Banding with Dan Woolard
Dan Woolard will be banding ducks this morning and
has invited
SIAS to join in on the process. Contact Outings Chair Trevor
Hinckley at
529.0250 for details. (Carpool from Murdale Shopping Ctr. in
Carbondale.)
September 27 and 28
National Hunting And Fishing Days
John A. Logan College is sponsoring this 2-day event, from
9:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. There will be activities for the whole family,
dedicated
to teaching ethics, safety, and conservation for the outdoor experience.
As part of this event, SIAS will have an informational display set up
both
days. Volunteers are needed to help at the display booth.
If you can help
a few hours, phone Vicki Lang at 549.8390.
September 27, October 4, 11, 16 & 25
Leaf, Bark, and Seed Hikes at Giant City
Come meet the trees of the forest. Discover why
leaves change
color in the fall. Learn the ways we identify trees as their
leaves
disappear. For more info phone the Park Visitor's Center at
457.4836.
September 27, October 4, & November 8
Nature's Night-lights at Giant City
Giant City State Park hosts a fall series of astronomy
viewings.
Astronomers with the Astronomical Association of Southern Illinois will
guide all on a journey through the night sky. Join in at the
parking lot
of the Giant City Visitors Center any time between the hours listed;
viewing the moon, deep space, and more. No reservations required.
Bring a
blanket or reclining lawn chair for full viewing pleasure! All
programs
are weather permitting. 2003 program days and times:
Saturday, Sept. 27, from 7:30-9p.m. Highlights: dark sky viewing,
Mars,
constellations, and the Milky Way.
Saturday, Oct. 18, from 7-8:30p.m. Highlights: dark sky viewing,
Mars,
constellations, and the Milky Way. Saturday, Nov. 8, from 6-8p.m.
Highlights: total eclipse of the moon. For more info, call
457.4836.
October
CONWR Self-guided Auto Tours
Crab Orchard NWR will again host their self-guided auto
tours every
Sunday through October. Contact Crab Orchard NWR at 997.3344 for
more info.
October 4
SIAS Shorebirding At Rend Lake
Outings Chair Trevor Hinckley will lead a shore-birding
trip around
Rend Lake. The trip will include visits to Ward Branch and Nason
Point.
Meet under the sign at Murdale Shopping Ctr. in Carbondale
at 7:30
a.m. for carpooling. Bring water and a sack lunch. Return
home late
afternoon. For more info or to meet the group on site call Trevor
at
549.0250.
October 11
Tunnel Hill Fall Bike Ride
The Tunnel Hill Fall Bicycle Ride will begin in Harrisburg
and end
at the Cache River Wetlands Center near Karnak (45 miles). A $20
registration fee is required if you sign up before the bike ride.
A $25
registration fee will be applied on the day of the ride. For more
info or
to preregistration, phone the Cache River State Natural Area at
634.9678.
October 12
The National Big Sit!
The BIG SIT! is like a Big Day, or a Bird-a-thon in that
the
object is to tally as many bird species as can be seen or heard within
24
hours. Every circle must be registered before the event.
For more info on
the Big Sit (participate from the comfort of your home) visit the
website
at: http://members.aol.com/nhbirdclub/bigsit.htm
October 12 & 13
SIAS Hawkwatch at Giant City Park
Laraine Wright will bring a scope to the top of the Giant
City
State Park water tower from 9 a.m. to early afternoon on Sunday the 12th
and Monday the 13th to watch for migrating hawks and falcons. The
tower is
also a good place to see the last of the migrating songbirds from a
"bird's-eye" view as well as kettles of vultures and cormorants.
Rain
cancels. Call 457.8769 for more info.
October 12-18
National Wildlife Refuge Week
Celebrate National Wildlife Refuge Week!. Contact
Crab Orchard NWR
at 997.3344 or Cypress Creek NWR at 634.9678 for their schedules of
events.
October 13
Cache River Guided Hikes
Wrap up a long weekend with a relaxing hike through the
Cache River
State Natural Area. A morning hike at 9:00 a.m. to Heron Pond
highlights
the natural and cultural history of the area, and features a boardwalk
that
winds through a pure stand of bald cypress trees.
At 1:00 p.m. a hike to Wildcat Bluff and Little Black
Slough will
meander along an exposed sandstone shelter bluff and continue to Boss
Island, the site of a cypress cabin that dates back to 1853. For
more info
phone the Cache River State Natural Area at 634.9678.
October 25
SIAS's Annual Fall Seed Sale
Feed the birds this winter by stocking up at the annual
SIAS fall
bird seed sale, our biggest fund-raising event of the year.
Please use the
order form enclosed in this newsletter. Pick up seed at
Dillinger's in
Carbondale on Saturday, 10/25, from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
November 8
Geology Of So. IL, Jackson & Union Counties
John Utgaard, Professor Emeritus in Geology
at SIUC will
lead with stops at Kinkaid Lake Spillway, Fountain Bluff, Grand Tower,
La
Rue - Pine Hills, Trail of Tears, Alto Pass, and Cobden to examine the
Paleozoic sandstones, shales, and limestones and modern depositional
environments. The outing will look at the rocks for evidence of
the
paleoenvironmental conditions under which they were deposited.
Meet under the sign at Murdale Shopping Ctr. in Carbondale
at 8:30
a.m. for carpooling.
November 8-9
15th Annual Cache Acorn Round-Up
The Fifteenth Annual Acorn Round-Up is planned for 11/8-9
at
Horseshoe Lake Conservation Area. Seed collected during previous
events
has provided much of the plant material used to plant over 21,000 acres
of
trees in the Cache River Watershed in recent years. Maps of the
watershed
conservation effort will be available at the event.
Patches will be provided and tee-shirts will be available
for sale
at the collection site. More info to follow. Phone
Conservation
Technologies at 201.1694.
January 4 -> 11
2004, A Costa Rican Odyssey
Reserve your spot on the 2004 John A. Logan College
Central
American Adventure and spend eight January days in a tropical paradise.
This trip will start at the Talamanca Highlands and Cerro de la Muerte
for
Volcano Junco, Timberline Wren, Quetzals and Guans. Other stops
include
Las Cruces OTS Station, Wilson Botanical Garden, and the rain forest of
the
Osa Peninsula. Expert Costa Rican naturalist/guide Raphael Campos
will
accompany the group on field trips.
This trip is a must! The price of $2650, includes
airfare,
lodging, all meals, and field trips. Contact Nelda Hinckley,
Professor of
Biology, John A. Logan College, Carterville, at 457.7676 ex. 8323 or
549.5588.
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What's In A Name?
Did you ever wonder how birds like the Tennessee and
Nashville
warblers and the Mississippi kite got their names? If you guessed
that the
person who named them first saw them in those places, you would be
right.
All three were named by Alexander Wilson, who listed them in his
nine-volume American Ornithology, published from 1808 to 1814. He
is
sometimes called "the Father of American Ornithology," and he applied
geographic proper names to a number of other birds in his travels
throughout the eastern United States. They include the Kentucky,
Connecticut, and Cape May warblers and the Savannah sparrow, the last
named
not for the tree-studded prairie we call savannah but for Savannah,
Georgia, where Wilson first saw the bird.
Most of the other birds with geographic place names got
them
because they breed or migrate through or winter in those places.
Among
these, moving from north to south, are the Arctic loon, Iceland gull,
Hudsonian godwit (named for the bay), Canada goose and warbler,
Philadelphia vireo, Oregon junco (now a subspecies of the dark-eyed),
California gull, and Louisiana waterthrush and heron (now called
tricolored
heron). The Carolina wren and chickadee are so named because
Carolina was
in colonial days a loose name for "south" in the language of
naturalists.
I've saved several others for special mention.
Ernest Choate, in
his Dictionary of American Bird Names, says of the Virginia rail, "its
range does not justify its name," this in spite of the fact that it
probably migrates through the state and may winter along its Atlantic
coast, but as dedicated birders know, it is extremely rare everywhere.
Of
the Baltimore oriole Choate says, "Mark Catesby, in his The Natural
History
of Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands published in 1731, made a
plate
of the bird which he called the Baltimore-Bird. He so named the
bird
because its colors were the same as those of the Baltimores, the
colonial
proprietors of Maryland. It is interesting that Catesby did not
call the
bird an oriole in either the common or scientific names he gave it...
It
is now a subspecies of the Northern Oriole."
How the Bohemian waxwing, a northern cousin of our cedar
waxwing,
got its name is a mystery to Choate since the bird's range comes nowhere
close to Bohemia. Could it be that its erratic wanderings led
someone to
apply the name to its lifestyle, as we do with human bohemians of Paris
and
Carbondale? Finally, there is the Manx shearwater, a seabird that
visits
our eastern coastline but breeds in the north Atlantic and at one time
(before 1800) on the Isle of Man, from which it gets its name, as does
that
odd, short-tailed cat we call the Manx. -David Kvernes
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SEEING BIRDS
Carmen Arendt reported seeing 7 or 8 kites (4 juveniles
and 3/4
adults) hunting from quite near Cedar Lake down through Echo valley to
my
house southwest of Carbondale during the week of 08/25.
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On 08/30 Steve Juhlin, Don Mullison and Rhonda Rothrock
visited
Rend Lake in search of the Marbled Godwit seen there previously by Don.
At
Ward Branch the threesome spotted the Godwit at as it flew away but were
lucky enough to have it fly directly over-head as it returned.
Other
species they found included Stilt Sandpipers and Caspian and Black
Terns.
At Nason Point among the shorebirds they found were American Golden and
Black-bellied Plovers, Buff-breasted Sandpipers, and a Wilson's
Phalarope.
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David Kvernes, Mike McNerney and Don Mullison visited Rend
Lake on
09/06 locating some of the same species as Don (et.al.) had on 08/30.
Marbled Godwit was the bird of the day but also noteworthy were
Sanderling,
Northern Pintails, and Sora Rail.
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This from Frank Bennett on 09/07, "The latest weather
front finally
brought cooler temperatures and migrating passerine to Southern
Illinois.
Yesterday I located a couple small pockets of warblers around my
property,
mainly Black-throated Green Warblers, Redstarts, and Black & White
Warblers. This morning (Sunday) I encountered three separate
migrating
groups of mixed species while walking around about 15 acres of various
habitats. The first group I encountered was the largest in number
of birds
and species. It took over a hour to pick through everything in
the first
grouping which contained; 1 Yellow-throated Vireo, 2 Warbling
Vireos, 1
Red-eyed Vireo, 6 White-eyed Vireo, and 8 Golden-winged Warblers
(highest
number I have ever observed in one day, much less one spot).
Highlight of
the warblers was a beautifully plumaged Lawrence's Warbler, I got some
really close looks, the bird could actually be identified by eye.
No
binocs needed. It had a Blue-winged Warbler's body and a
Golden-winged
Warbler head. The white stripes on the face/head were yellow,
except for a
fine line a white above the eye."
Other warbler species Frank spotted: Magnolia, Nashville,
Blackburnian, Chestnut-sided, Northern Parula, Black-throated Green,
Black
& White, and Kentucky. Frank also saw: American Redstarts,
Ovenbirds,
Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Baltimore Orioles, Common Yellow-throats, Summer
Tanager and Red-eyed, Yellow-throated and Warbling Vireos. Frank
added,
"Carolina Chickadees, Tufted Titmice, Carolina Wrens, Yellow-billed
Cuckoos, Indigo Buntings, Hairy, Pileated, and Red-bellied Woodpeckers,
Blue Jay, Blue and Gray Gnatcathers, and Northern Cardinals were also
seen
or heard in the general area. Definitely my best morning of fall
migration
warblers and vireos on my property."
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Don't It Always Seem To Go That You Don't Know What You've Got Till It's
Gone.....
...Tell The USFWS Not To "Cook Our Geese"
"Build it and they will come". But evidently that is
not a good
thing in suburbia where the manicured lawns, landscaped golf courses,
and
open lake shorelines have lured flocks of Canada geese into planting
roots
in these areas. Canada geese are now taking up permanent
residence in
suburban areas were the landscaped rolling lawns provide perfect goose
grazing and the lawns and open shorelines offer clear areas for nesting,
landing and watching for predators. Suburbanites and other are
complaining
to the USFWS. The USFWS is currently accepting comments on a
resident (non
migratory) Canada Geese management plan. See USFWS article that
follows in
this newsletter or visit: http://news.fws.gov
Ironically, as folks in northern IL and other locations
across the
U.S. are trying to rid their areas of resident Canada geese, a local
southern IL goose hunting constituency is working to acquire permits to
establish local resident populations of Canada geese. These
resident geese
would provide hunters with quarry in years where good weather up north
(and
all the good habitat in suburbia) keeps geese from needing to migrate
this
far south for open water and food.
...Sugar Creek, The Saga Continues
The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has
recommended
that Marion be permitted to dam Sugar Creek for a 1,172-acre reservoir
to
serve as the city's water source. As part of their report the EPA
states
that a dam and reservoir on Sugar Creek plus a 16 mile pipeline is the
economical option for Marion. They have opened an antidegradation
comment
period for the case with the deadline for comments being 09/22.
Comments
should be sent to: Mr. Bruce Yurdin, Manager, Watershed Management
Section,
Illinois EPA, Div. Of Water Pollution Control, Permit Section 15, 1021
North Grand Ave., P.O. Box 19276, Springfield, IL 62794-9276.
The Sierra club is questioning how a dam on Sugar Creek,
and
related pipeline construction, could cost less than the option of
connecting to Rend Lake, requiring only a 2 mile pipeline. They
are
requesting that the comment period be extended on the bases that that
the
EPA and the City of Marion have not been very forthcoming in sharing the
information the public needs to be able to make comments and are
encouraging that others do the same.
http://illinois.sierraclub.org/shawnee/index.htm
...Impurrrfect Legislation
Legislation in South Dakota just removed mountain lions
from the
state's endangered species list and has identified them as big game.
A new
organization, the Black Hills Mountain Lion Foundation, believes that
removing these cats from the endangered species list is premature as not
enough long-term research has been conducted to identify trends in lion
population. For more info visit http://www.blackhillslions.org.
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...Relevant News.....................
US Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) News Clips
SERVICE SELECTS RULE FOR RESIDENT (NON MIGRATORY) CANADA GEESE
MANAGEMENT,
THOUGH SEEKS FURTHER COMMENT ON DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT
On 08/21, the Service proposed providing State wildlife
agencies more flexibility in controlling resident Canada goose
populations.
Under a proposed rule, the Service would hand over much of the
day-to-day
management responsibility to States while maintaining primary authority
to
manage these populations. The proposed rule would authorize
population
control strategies such as aggressive harassment, nest destruction,
gosling
and adult trapping and culling programs, increased hunter harvest, or
other
general population reduction strategies. The rule will also offer
guidelines for other activities such as special take authorization
during a
portion of the closed hunting season; control for the protection of
airport
safety, agriculture, and public health; and the take of nests and eggs
without permits.
The rapid rise of resident (non migratory) Canada goose
populations
has been attributed to a number of factors. Most resident Canada
geese
live in temperate climates with relatively stable breeding habitat
conditions and low numbers of predators. They tolerate human and
other
disturbances, have a relative abundance of pre-ferred habitat (such as
mowed grass in urban/suburban areas), and fly relatively short distances
for winter compared with other Canada goose populations. The
virtual
absence of waterfowl hunting in urban areas provides additional
protection
to those portions of the resident Canada goose population.
Presently,
State Fish and Wildlife agencies or their authorized agents, such as the
USDA's Wildlife Services division, need a Federal permit issued by the
Service to control resident Canada geese. This new rule would
provide for
opportunities to eliminate the need for most individual permits for
resident (non migratory) Canada goose control activities.
The Service has also reopened the
public comment period for 60
days. The public may inspect comments during normal business
hours in Room
4107, 4501 N. Fairfax Dr., Arlington, Virginia. You may obtain
copies of
the draft environmental impact statement from the above address or from
the
Division of Migratory Bird Management web site at
<http://migratorybirds.fws.gov>.
Comments should be sent by October 20, 2003, to Chief, Division of
Migratory Bird Management, USFWS, Dept. of the Interior, 4401 North
Fairfax
Drive, MBSP-4107, Arlington, VA 22203 or canada_goose_eis@fws.gov.
For more info on this and other USFWS news releases visit their website
at:
http://news.fws.gov OR phone 202.208.5634.
America's Most Wanted Bird
Griggsville, IL is lauding the Purple Martin as America's
Most
Wanted Bird. Griggsvillians have painted a giant likeness of the
bird on a
building, proclaiming the bird to be the most wanted and stating that
martins, "can eat 2,000 mosquitoes a day." Townsfolk have also
erected a
towering Purple Martin housing complex made up of over 32 multi-unit
martin
houses.
Thanks to John Utgaard for providing the tip on this story.
Kudos To Blagojevich For Pro-Park Vetoes
Governor Blagojevich, in August, used his amendatory veto
power to
protect IL State Parks and other public lands from the threat and
destruction caused by dirt-bikes and all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).
As passed by the General Assembly, SB 1521 limited the
Off-Highway
Vehicle Trails Fund dollars to be spent on enforcement, safety, and
administration to 15% annually. Governor Blagojevich proposed
allowing up
to 30% of the funds to be spent on enforcement of safety laws as well as
administration of the Trails program. SB 1804 would have allowed
state
funds to be used to build tracks for ATVs in existing state parks.
Governor
Blagojevich vetoed this dangerous proposal, and instead proposed that
funds
could be used only in newly acquired "recreation areas." Thanks
Governor!!
Please write your Senator and Representative and urge them
to
uphold the Governor's amendatory veto of SB 1521 and SB 1804.
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We Want You On The SIAS Board
In January SIAS will be electing new
officers and the Board is
looking for volunteers for the Nominating Committee. If you can
serve,
please contact Richard LaSalle, SIAS President, at 687.3023. AND
if you
have the time and interest to be on the Board, please speak up.
To Join The Society: Contact Vicki Devenport, Membership Chair.
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SIAS Board of Directors
Officers
President Richard LaSalle
687.3023
Vice-President Rhonda Rothrock 684.6605
Secretary John Utgaard
549.3412
Treasurer Open
Committee Chairs
Education/Conservation
Vicki Lang 549.8390
Finance (& Acting
Treasurer) Laraine Wright 457.8769
Hospitality Lew Hendrix 529.2022
Membership Vicki Devenport 549.5625
Outings Trevor Hinckley 549.0250
Newsletter Editor Rhonda Rothrock
684.6605
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SIAS homepage: http://www.siaudubon.org
Contributions to the newsletter are always welcome!!
Contact Rhonda Rothrock, 7398 Hickory Ridge Rd., Pomona IL 62975;
E-mail:
woodthrusheola8@netscape.net
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Southern Illinois Audubon Society
P.O. Box 222
Carbondale, IL 62903-0222
Affiliate of the Illinois Audubon Society
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Written and printed on used equipment.
Are you using recycled paper?
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Always leave 'em laughing... :-)
Gardening Rule: When weeding, the best way to make sure you are
removing a
weed and not a valuable plant is to pull on it. If it comes out
of the
ground easily, it is a valuable plant.
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Rhonda Rothrock
Pomona, Illinois 62975
a.k.a. woodthrusheola8@netscape.net
Kick I-66! Nix I-66!
Say no to I-66, isolating southernmost IL from the rest of the state,
destroying natural areas, wetlands and forest land in its wake!