Do you rehabilitate wildlife?
CWH cares for wildlife in the wild by providing critical habitat for
them. However, we do not rehabilitate injured wildlife. If you
have an injured wild animal, keep it in a warm, dark place (a box with air holes) and contact a wildlife licensed wildlife rehabilitator. A list of rehabilitators can be found here.
Do geese mate for life?
Canada geese do mate for life. However if one mate dies, the surviving
partner may seek another mate, depending on age.
How long do bluebirds incubate?
Bluebirds incubate their eggs for about two weeks. The young take their
first flight two weeks after they hatch. Bluebirds often produce more than
one clutch in a nesting season.
What do bluebirds eat?
Eastern bluebirds are primarily insect eaters who shift towards berries
in colder months when insects are not available. They often migrate short
distances to warmer areas to ensure enough food for the winter season.
Their diet includes caterpillars, invertebrates and fruit and nuts. Bluebirds
hunt from a perch rather than on the wing and find most of their food close
to or on the ground.
How can you tell the difference between a bluebird nest and a house
sparrow nest?
The bluebird's nest is constructed of fine, dried grasses and takes
up only about a third of the box. The sparrow nest is messy, including
feathers and other debris and can fill the box completely. Bluebird eggs
are usually pale blue (although some can be almost white) and sparrow eggs
are white with brown speckles.
How long does the female osprey sit on her nest?
Ospreys incubate their eggs for 38 to 42 days. Females do the majority
of the incubating although males can incubate up to 30% of the time. The
young osprey take their flight 50 to 60 days after they hatch. Young osprey
require about 2 lbs of fish a day to survive.
When do ospreys return in the spring?
You can almost set your clock by their arrival -- March 17 (St. Patrick's
Day), although because of our recent mild winters we've had sightings a
few days and even a week earlier. Adults begin their fall migration as
soon as fledglings become independent. Juveniles normally migrate in late
August.
On average, how many Wood Ducks fledge from a nest each year?
The average clutch is 12. About 4-6 wood ducks survive until adulthood.
The young usually return to the areas where they fledged to raise their
own families.
Why do you want bats around your property?
Bats are beneficial insectivores, a natural predator of many of our
pesky night-flying insects. The most common bat found in Maryland, the
little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus) can consume up to 600 mosquitoes
in just one hour. Bats are feared only to the extent that they are misunderstood.
The fear of acquiring rabies from bats is grossly exaggerated. Less than
one half of one percent of bats ever contact rabies, a frequency much lower
than most mammals.
I've been hearing a lot of bad stuff about mute swans. How come?
Although elegant to watch as they glide along the water, mute swans
are indeed harmful to both the Bay and to other waterfowl species native
to our region, such as the tundra swan and black duck. A non-native, extremely
aggressive species, mute swans will drive away tundras as they compete
for food and nesting locations. The mute swan is also a voracious feeder
of our submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV). A cluster of swans can easily
devour an entire bed of SAV before moving on to another location.
What do kestrels eat?
The American kestrel is a predator feeding on large insects such as
grasshoppers, small mammals such as mice and moles, birds of sparrow size
and in some cases, reptiles and amphibians.
What does the Delmarva fox squirrel look like? Why is it an endangered
species?
The Delmarva fox squirrel (Sciurus niger cinereus) is distinguished
from the common gray squirrel by its larger size, bushier tail and steel-grey
coloring with a white belly. Delmarva fox squirrels were historically found
throughout the entire Delmarva peninsula, southeastern Pennsylvania and
west-central New Jersey. They now occupy less than 10% of their original
range. The listing of the Delmarva fox squirrel as an endangered species
in 1967 is largely a result of the destruction of mature mixed hardwood
forests, their preferred habitat. Human encroachment on the fox squirrel's
territory has also taken its toll. They suffer significant mortality from
being run over by automobiles. Fox squirrels are slow moving which also
makes them an easy target for pet dogs and cats. |