By ecoRI News staff
Rhode Island’s population of ospreys, as well as the rest of the
country’s, declined significantly after World War II because of the heavy use
of the pesticide DDT. In 1997, hopes of better managing its osprey population,
the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) began monitoring
the state’s population of fish-eating raptors to document their recovery and
breeding success.
In 2010, the Audubon Society of Rhode Island took over management
of the program. The latest osprey monitoring report shows that in 2014 a total of 186
young ospreys successfully fledged — developed feather and wing muscles for
flight — compared to eight in 1977. DDT was banned in 1972.
The Rhode
Island Osprey Monitoring Program relies
entirely on volunteers to monitor nearly 200 known nest sites around the state.
To maintain this important citizen science program, new volunteers
are needed annually. Here is the 2015 osprey monitoring program orientation
schedule:
Sunday,
March 8, 2:30-3:30 p.m., Fish & Game Kettle Pond Office, 50 Bend
Road, Charlestown, R.I.
Sunday,
March 15, 4-5 p.m., Audubon Environmental Education Center, 1401 Hope St.,
Bristol, R.I.
Sunday,
March 22, 2:30-3:30 p.m., Audubon Society of R.I. Headquarters, 12
Sanderson Road, Smithfield, R.I.
Candidates need only attend one session. To register for an
orientation, click here.