Activity 7 Swallow Census

Similar documents
Activity 4 Building Bird Nests

DO DIFFERENT CLUTCH SIZES OF THE TREE SWALLOW (Tachycineta bicolor)

Barn Swallow Nest Monitoring Methods

Below, we present the methods used to address these objectives, our preliminary results and next steps in this multi-year project.

CISNET San Pablo Bay Avian Monitoring. Hildie Spautz, Nadav Nur & Julian Wood Point Reyes Bird Observatory

ACTIVITY #6: TODAY S PICNIC SPECIALS ARE

BLUEBIRD NEST BOX REPORT

Yellowjacket Habitat at Home

Life Cycle of a Goose

Four Methods:Preparing to BreedChoosing the Eggs to IncubateLetting the Hen Hatch the EggsIncubating the Eggs Yourself

Purple Martin. Adult male Purple Martin

What Makes a Bird a Bird?

Lecture 9 - Avian Life Histories

Big Picture Biology Student Workbook

BLACK OYSTERCATCHER NEST MONITORING PROTOCOL

Inferring #1 This diagram shows the beak of several different species of birds. Make observations about the beaks and answer the questions.

8A READ-ALOUD. How Turtle Cracked His Shell. Lesson Objectives. Language Arts Objectives. Core Vocabulary

Arizona s Raptor Experience, LLC March 2018 ~Newsletter~

Shipping Hatching Eggs (For the First Time)

Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) are breeding earlier at Creamer s Field Migratory Waterfowl Refuge, Fairbanks, AK

Great Horned Owls. Rob & Ann Simpson

F7 RODENT AND PEST CONTROL

Lecture 9 - Avian Life Histories

7.7.1 Species. 110 minutes. 164 marks. Page 1 of 47

ì<(sk$m)=bdheec< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

The behaviour of a pair of House Sparrows while rearing young

Cam in the Classroom: Misty the Barred Owl

MISSION 2 Create a mind map for your research on ONE of your animals.

I will learn to talk about. groups of animals animal characteristics animal habitats. Unit Unit 7

THE production of turkey hatching

Our class had 2 incubators full of eggs. On day 21, our chicks began to hatch. In incubator #1, 1/3 of the eggs hatched. There were 2 chicks.

Comparing Life Cycles

DragonflyTV: GPS Activity 14

Eastern Bluebird Early Egg Viability Outcomes- A Mini- Study. By Penny Brandau and Paula Ziebarth

All You Ever Wanted to Know About Hornets and Yellowjackets

ì<(sk$m)=bdhiaa< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

1. On egg-shaped pieces of paper, ask students to write the name of an animal that hatched from an egg.

House Martin Survey 2016

Table of Contents. Grocery Store. Airport. Ice Fishing. Auto Repair Shop. Pizza Parlor. Bowling Alley. Veterinary Clinic.

Learn more at LESSON TITLE: BRINGING UP BIRDY GRADE LEVEL: 2-3. TIME ALLOTMENT: One to two 45-minute class periods OVERVIEW:

Look Who s. Flying! by Claudia Burns and Dave Horton

Western Snowy Plover Recovery and Habitat Restoration at Eden Landing Ecological Reserve

Teacher Instructions. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Reading Grade 3

Tristan Darwin Project. Monitoring Guide. A Guide to Monitoring Albatross, Penguin and Seal Plots on Tristan and Nightingale

Let s Learn About. Turkeys. With

Eggology (Grades K-2)

A QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF

Massachusetts Tern Census Form, 2012 Observers/Agency:

Adjustments In Parental Care By The European Starling (Sturnus Vulgaris): The Effect Of Female Condition

A. Write the words under the picture.

Seven Nests of Rufescent Tiger-Heron (Tigrisoma lineatum)

The Hatching, Growth, and Fledging of Nestling Purple Martins

Chickens. By: Stacey DeSimone

A Study to Determine the Preference for Nesting Box Design of Sialia sialis

Kodak Birdcam Curriculum for Teachers & Educators

The Essex County Field Naturalists' Club's BLUEBIRD COMMITTEE REPORT FOR 2017

Trunk Contents. Crane Flight Feathers (3)

Applied Information and Communication Technology. Unit 3: The Knowledge Worker January 2010 Time: 2 hours 30 minutes

M A\\ Trail Guide. Audubon Chapter of Minneapolis

Bluebirds & Des Moines City Parks

Quail CSI / Scent Station

Before and After: The Chicken and the Egg

Survivorship. Demography and Populations. Avian life history patterns. Extremes of avian life history patterns

FACT FUN! *Loggerheads are the most common species of sea turtle in the ocean off of South Carolina.

ADAPTATION IN ANIMALS. 1. Which body feature of a frog MAINLY helps it to capture a flying insect? Ans

Grade Level: 3-5. Next Generation Sunshine State Standards SC.3.L.15.1 SC.4.L.16.2; SC.4.L.17.4 SC.5.L.15.1; SC.5.L.17.1

Breeding White Storks( Ciconia ciconia at Chessington World of Adventures Paul Wexler

Component 2 - Biology: Environment, evolution and inheritance

( 142 ) NOTES ON THE GREAT NORTHERN DIVER.

Crotophaga major (Greater Ani)

Babs Bat Science Day 1

Focus Lesson: Mystery Eggs. Materials: Books in reading list (multiple copies if possible) Mystery Egg cards (attached)

Balmandir Bhavnagar, 13 April, 1936

Your web browser (Safari 7) is out of date. For more security, comfort and the best experience on this site: Update your browser Ignore

AVIAN HAVEN Wild Bird Rehabilitation Center

Prince of Central Park

Arctic Tern Migration Simulation

BREEDING ECOLOGY OF THE LITTLE TERN, STERNA ALBIFRONS PALLAS, 1764 IN SINGAPORE

Bird Species Fact Sheets

Wonderful World I I Vocabulary and Structure. h-l-copt-r dra-ing p-n

Sparrowhawks & Goshawks and the Gymnogene

Monitoring colonial gulls & terns and waders on the French Mediterranean coast

MOR CHANGE TEACHERS. TRICERATOPS GROWTH Activity Overview BIG IDEA

The Leisure Isle Spotted Eagle Owls

Prairie Warbler Survival

Yellowjackets and Other Wasps Ecology Publication #97-427

Egyptian vulture (Neophron percnopterus) 2010 Breeding Season Report- Beypazarı, Turkey

Falcons and Kestrels

St Eustatius Country Report

Social Story (Part III) Visiting KidZooU

SEA TU RTL ES AND THE GU L F O F MEXICO O IL SPIL L

State birds. A comparison of the Northern Mockingbird and the Western Meadowlark. By Shaden Jensen

Research Thesis. by Nathaniel J. Sackinger. The Ohio State University June 2013

Education. ESL-Advance

Lecture 9 - Avian Life Histories

SEALANT, WATERPROOFING & RESTORATION INSTITUTE SPRING PEREGRINE FALCONS: DIS RAPTORS OF WORK AT HEIGHT

Great Science Adventures Lesson 12

Lesson at a Glance Students piece together clues to learn more about introduced stream animals in Hawaiÿi.

David and Goliath. Ontario. The Science Behind. Algonquin's Animals

Parameter: Productivity (black-legged and red-legged kittiwakes); populations (marine mammals)

Transcription:

Swallow Census Created By Point Reyes Bird Observatory Education Program

Monitoring Swallow Nests Activity 7 Objective: To make students aware of swallows nesting at their school, teach them about the process of monitoring bird nests, and learn about bird behaviors. Materials: Sample Map of Swallow Census at the Palomarin Field Station Map of census area (your school) Clipboard Pens, pencils Duration: Monitor swallow nests once a week Background: Each year, Barn Swallows (BARS), Cliff Swallows (CLSW) and Tree Swallows (TRES), return from their wintering grounds in the tropics to North America to breed. The breeding season is typically March through July and at PRBO s Palomarin Field Station the swallows that return build their nests under the eaves of our buildings. Barn and Cliff Swallows build nests made out of mud and Tree Swallows use hollowed-out cavities in trees or nest boxes placed around the Palomarin Field Station. Swallow nests at the field station are monitored weekly during the breeding season starting on April 1 and going through July. This type of nest monitoring can also be done at schools where many swallows tend to build their nests. It is an excellent way for students to learn about bird behavior, how birds build nests, and how to monitor a nest. Procedure: Monitoring Swallow Nests 1. Begin monitoring nests weekly in the beginning of April and continue through the end of the school year.

2. As a class, research Barn and Cliff Swallows. Generate a discussion about the types of nest each swallow builds (for Barn and Cliff Swallows) and how they build them. Ask students if they have seen any of these nests around the school. Other questions to research: How many eggs do Barn and Cliff Swallows lay (clutch size)? How long do the eggs need to be incubated before they hatch? How long will the nestlings (babies) stay in the nest before they are ready to fledge (leave the nest)? These are great questions to get students thinking about swallow nests and the swallows they have observed around their school. 3. After the discussion, have students draw a map of the school or provide one for them. This only needs to be a simple outline drawing of the layout of the school for this activity. Pass out a copy to each student of the example Swallow Census map from the Palomarin Field Station included with this activity. 4. Have students place their single blank map of the school onto a clipboard. Next locate the Barn and Cliff Swallow nests under the eaves of the school buildings. Find an area to observe the swallows and their nests where they will not be bothered by the students and your presence. When monitoring nests you want to prevent high levels of stress in the parents. 4. Draw the nests onto the maps and label them either Barn (BARS) or Cliff Swallow (CLSW). Then observe specific nests to determine whether they are still being built, have eggs, or nestlings. Determining if the nests have eggs will be the most difficult to do because you will not be able to see inside the nests. Although, the parents behavior may give you clues to whether they have eggs or nestlings. If the parents are acting upset, flying around you and making a lot of noise, then they probably have eggs or nestlings. This also should tell you that you are too close to the nests and should move your

If the parents have food (insects) in their mouths while flying to the nest and then leave the nest without food, this is a sure sign that they have nestlings. Other signs that a pair has nestlings are bird feces and egg shell fragments beneath the nest. 5. Once the nests are drawn on the maps and labeled, write whether they are building or what the contents of the nest may be (i.e., if you think they have eggs or nestlings) and any evidence of this. 6. Discuss what was observed with the students following your time outside each time the swallow nests are monitored. Extension Activities One problem that students have faced when trying to monitor swallow nests was that the nests were knocked down by school maintenance workers when cleaning the school grounds. One solution to this problem is to make the school aware of the nests. There are nests being built, eggs being laid and hatched, and babies fledging all within a month right outside of the classrooms and offices! This is an exciting thing to see and be a part of. Have students make informational posters about the swallows and their nests and why their nests should not be knocked down. Place them around the school. If the students are ambitious, they could place posters around their neighborhoods to educate even more of the public about swallows and their nests. This project can be continued each year. Future classes will be able to compare number of pairs nesting at the school. Percent of change and graphs can be created and will be interesting for students to interpret.