Virginia Tech would be a good place to start. Suggest you call your
local extension agent. If you don't get response, write to me and I
will talk to my agent and see if can get a specialist contact from
Tech for you. Sounds like a good idea and some of the data may
already be available.
On Jul 15, 2010, at 10:01 PM, steveyoung@xxxxxxx wrote:
I hope the Cornell Lab folks won't mind my mentioning this... Years ago, I visited them and talked with them quite a bit about the eBird project, of which I'm a big fan. At some point we also shifted to my own worries about possible pesticide poisoning incidents affecting birds, and how modern technology could be used to help. Years ago there was a wildlife pesticide poisoning hotline, but I believe it was discontinued way back. The Cornell guys said they had thought about this too and even conceived of an application that they with morbid humor called "D-bird", but had not had resources to pursue.
Maybe in our modern email, Web, Twitter, Facebook, etc.age we could find "free" ways to track possible incidents so that experts could note possible patterns and perhaps begin to correlate them with possible causes... I sure know that there's a lot more I can do now to map, photograph, etc. than I imagined 20 years ago.
Cheers,
Steve, Arlington
(I'm glad to be able to report that all my local Catbirds seem to be fine. I have noticed that we have a Northern Cardinal that seems to be singing in a new dialect with a really cool trill in the song.)
-----Original Message-----
From: Paula Sullivan <paula.sullivan2@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: VA-BIRD <va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thu, Jul 15, 2010 9:15 pm
Subject: Re: [Va-bird] Dying Catbirds
I, too, found a Catbird in my yard dead of a mysterious cause. It was about 9-10
days ago. It was uninjured and intact and not under a window. I am providing no
food, only water, in my yard at the moment. I use no pesticides, but one of my
adjacent neighbors had a lawn service application recently. I find this very
strange. Perhaps, if others on this list report similar incidents of dead birds
of any species in their yards or on birding trails, some pattern might emerge
that could suggest a cause.
Paula Sullivan
Alexandria
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