T.S Roberts Bird Sanctuary Improvements Project

Similar documents
Dynamic Forest Management: Forestry for the Birds

Tualatin River NWR and Wapato Lake BCS number: 47-37

Instructor Guide: Birds in Human Landscapes

Partnerships in Action

WISCONSIN BIRD CONSERVATION INITIATIVE IMPORTANT BIRD AREAS PROGRAM

Habitat Use by Wildlife in Agricultural and Ranching Areas in the Pantanal and Everglades. Dr. Júlio Cesar de Souza and Dr. Elise V.

Mud Slough Wetland Reserve BCS number: 47-19

Measuring changes in a rapidly changing climate and landscape.

Richard A. Fischer, Ph.D. U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center Environmental Laboratory

PART FIVE: Grassland and Field Habitat Management

Birds and Water in the Arid West: Habitats in Decline

Listed Birds along the Stony Brook Corridor Impacted by BMS Zoning Change

Conservation Partners Legacy Grant Application

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. My project. IPaC Trust Resource Report. Generated May 07, :40 AM MDT

Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society

Florida Keys National Wildlife Refuge Complex. Key West NWR Great White Heron NWR National Key Deer NWR Crocodile Lake NWR

Collaboration and Planning to Implement the South San Diego Bay Restoration and Enhancement Project

CORE *REQUIRED OF ALL COMMUNITIES* CIIY TOWN COUNIY YES YES YES YES YES

HUNGRYLAND BIRD LIST

Fernhill Wetlands BCS number: 47-13

Activity #5: The Tale of Chipilo Protecting our Wildlife-Balcones Canyonlands National Wildlife Refuge

Cat Island Chain Restoration Project Brown County Port & Resource Recovery Department

Conservation Objectives

Killin Wetland (Cedar Canyon Marsh) BCS number: 47-15

Catalog of Upper Mississippi River and Great Lakes Region Joint Venture GIS Data March 2009 Version 1

Special Habitats In Greene County

Massachusetts Grassland Bird Conservation. Intro to the problem What s known Your ideas

Project Summary. Predicting waterbird nest distributions on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of Alaska

Smith River Mouth BCS number: 86-6

Tahkenitch Creek Estuary BCS number: 47-35

Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area BCS Number: 47-5

Sauvie Island Wildlife Area BCS number: 47-28

North American Wetlands Conservation Act

REVISED DRAFT - 8/21/00 BIOLOGICAL OPINION ON THE OPERATION OF THE MISSOURI RIVER MAIN STEM RESERVOIR SYSTEM,

Bird-friendly Communities

Shrubland Bird Ecology & Management. What are shrublands?

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS JUNE, 2016

Subject: Comments on FWS R5 ES , Environmental Impact Statement for Beech Ridge Energy s Habitat Conservation Plan

Hawks And Owls Of The Great Lakes Region And Eastern North America By Chris Earley READ ONLINE

Party With a Purpose: MARSTEL-DAY GREEN GALA

Black-crowned Night-heron Minnesota Conservation Summary

Bluebonnet Bird Monitoring Project 2012 Annual Report

Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund 2019 Request for Proposals (RFP)

Birds are the most vivid expression of life Roger Tory Peterson

Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge BCS number: 47-4

Humboldt Bay NWR BCS number: 86-4

USFWS Migratory Bird Program

Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund (ENRTF) M.L ENRTF Work Plan (Main Document)

I LLINI PRODUCTION NOTE. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Large-scale Digitization Project, 2007.

Title Marsh Bird Habitat Restoration and Management on Private and Public land in Arkansas Mississippi Alluvial Valley

Backcountry Management. Anne Morkill Wildlife Refuge Manager U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Washington State Park Bird Census 2017

Jackson Bottom Wetlands Preserve BCS Number: 47-14

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS FEBRUARY, 2017

BirdWalk Newsletter Walk conducted by Perry Nugent Written by Jayne J Matney

American Kestrel. Appendix A: Birds. Falco sparverius. New Hampshire Wildlife Action Plan Appendix A Birds-183

Assessing the Importance of Wetlands on DoD Installations for the Persistence of Wetland-Dependent Birds in North America (Legacy )

ASSESSING HABITAT QUALITY FOR PRIORITY WILDLIFE SPECIES IN COLORADO WETLANDS

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Executive Summary for the Bog Turtle

Buckner Preserve Shrubland Habitat Management Recommendations

Paridae: titmice Carolina Chickadee Tufted Titmouse. Sittidae: nuthatches Brown-headed Nuthatch. Certhiidae: creepers Brown Creeper

Wings N Wetlands Bird List

Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus

Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund 2019 Request for Proposals (RFP)

Watching for Whoopers in Wisconsin Wetlands

Riparian Conservation Project Monitoring and Avian Habitat in Colorado

Protecting biodiversity at Great Salt Lake. On the ground at Kennecott Utah Copper

Malheur National Wildlife Refuge BCS number: 48-18

McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge BCS number: 48-19

2017 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Fund Grant Slate

Expansion Work Has Begun The perimeter dike for Cell 7 is now visible

Catch the Citizen Science Buzz!

BirdWalk Newsletter

Ms. Robyn Thorson Director, Region 1 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 911 NE 11 th Avenue Portland, Oregon November Dear Ms.

New Jersey PRESERVING OUR WATERFOWLING TRADITION THROUGH HABITAT CONSERVATION!

Ponderosa Pine Forest

Species of Greatest Conservation Need Priority Species for NYC Audubon. May 12, Susan Elbin Director of Conservation and Science

I. Biodiversity in Korea National Parks. A status of globally vulnerable species Saunders gulls in South Korea

R. Griswold Snowy Plover/Least Tern Monitoring Project 2009

Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship on Oak Openings Preserve PROGRESS REPORT-2015 BSBO-16-3

Wendy Webber Regional Director Northeast Regional Office U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 300 Westgate Center Drive Hadley, MA

Course 1- Salt Marsh Exploration

BirdWalk Newsletter

Egg Dates for Species that Breed in the SAAS Chapter Area

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Executive Summary for the American Oystercatcher Business Plan

BirdWalk Newsletter. Lisa Wingate, excerpt from Lesson from a River, When You Pass Through Waters, Waters Books Publishing, 2015.

Wildlife Habitat Management on State Forest and Wildlife Lands

Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship on Oak Openings Preserve PROGRESS REPORT-2017 BSBO-18-3

Lecture 15 Ornithology Conservation biology. Emphasis on Minnesota and the upper Midwest

Habitat Stewardship Series N E W H A M P S H I R E W I L D L I F E A C T I O N P L A N

Hogg Bird Sanctuary Public Update Meeting. May 9, 2016

Update on American Oystercatcher Reseach and Conservation in New Jersey

Boreal Owl Minnesota Conservation Summary

Plumas Audubon Society Plumas Environmental Education Program (PEEP) Strategic Plan

Grey County Natural Heritage System Study

Lake St. Clair Coastal Wetlands in 2050: Modelling Wetland Community Responses to Climate Change Water Level Scenarios

2010 Ornithology (B/C) - Training Handout

American Bittern Minnesota Conservation Summary

Avian Project Guidance

Making Informed Decisions

Transcription:

T.S Roberts Bird Sanctuary Improvements Project Dr. David Zumeta Ornithology and Forest Habitat Expert Jason Aune Landscape Architect, AFLA Tyler Pederson Project Manager Michael Schroeder Assistant Superintendent of Planning

Introduction to the Project The project looks at the how the site can best support avian habitat, while providing education and low impact access to park goers. It will result in a preferred concept that will be approved by the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board. The preferred concept will outline key improvements that will be constructed in 2016.

Past Projects Within The Sanctuary MCES Sewer Rehabilitation Relining 100 year old 60 sewer pipe and manholes in the Sanctuary. Installation of over 700 native trees and shrubs along the MCES sewer line (Bossen Lane) Management Plan

Community Engagement Public meetings for the MCES Sewer Rehabilitation Project (2013 2014) On site public meeting to discuss native plant installation along Bossen Lane (9/11/2014) Today: Kicking off the Improvements Project

Bird Habitat Assessment Report and Recommendations for the T. S. Roberts Bird Sanctuary David Zumeta, PhD Ornithology and Forest Habitat Consultant to Aune and Fernandez, Landscape Architects, and the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board

Project Goals Assess avian habitat on the T. S. Roberts Bird Sanctuary Identify implementation tasks to improve avian habitat Outline an ongoing habitat preservation strategy

2014 Roberts Sanctuary Management Plan Includes historical and baseline natural resource inventory information Includes management goals, list of needs, and vision statement developed collaboratively with Audubon Chapter of Minneapolis and the public Current report includes a 2014 plan summary

Report Contents Roberts Sanctuary history History of birding in the Sanctuary Sanctuary bird habitat Sanctuary designations as bird habitat Bird list (220 species + 3 extinct/extirpated) State of Minnesota listed bird species Habitat restoration recommendations

Hooded Warbler

Roberts Sanctuary Bird Habitats Semi permanently flooded wetland (15 acres) Saturated wetland (2 acres) Upland forest (6 acres) Lowland forest (8 acres)

Sanctuary Bird Habitat Designations 2009 National Audubon Society Important Bird Area 2011 Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board signs U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service Urban Migratory Bird Treaty

Birds of the Sanctuary 220 species observed in or flying over 3 hypothetical species, 2 hybrids 90% have occurred in spring (197 species) 71% in fall (157 species) 28% in summer (62 species) 19% in winter (42 species)

Birds of the Sanctuary 66% forest or forest edge (145 species) 25% only or mostly in flight (55 species) 21% marsh (47 species) 52 species have nested or probably nested 38 species currently nest or probably nest Some species less common than previously A few species more common

Pileated Woodpecker

Red-headed Woodpecker

Cooper s Hawk

Blue-gray Gnatcatcher

State Listed Bird Species No Federal Threatened or Endangered Species 1 State Endangered Species on Lake Harriet, but probably not in Sanctuary (Horned Grebe) 1 State Threatened Species (Common Tern) 12 State Special Concern Species 37 State Species of Greatest Conservation Need

Former Nesting Species that Potentially Could Breed in Roberts Sanctuary Red headed Woodpecker Yellow billed Cuckoo Black billed Cuckoo Wood Thrush

Species that Could Potentially Breed in Roberts Sanctuary Several species that are likely to expand their breeding ranges because of climate change could nest in the Sanctuary in future decades: Tufted Titmouse (may have bred in past) Carolina Wren Blue gray Gnatcatcher (may breed already) Hooded Warbler

General Questions for the Team?

The Bird List

Engagement Session Please look at each of the boards, ask questions, and fill out a comment card. Leave the comment cards with Tyler. You may leave a note on a post it and place it directly on the boards.