
April 2010
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Also in this issue* Learning at 
Ohoopee Dunes* They're 
eating my flowers!
* Georgia 
herp hotspot
* 
Carters Lake whoopers* Burns yield 
longleaf boom
* 
King rail at Panola Mountain

Give wildlife a chance
* Buy a 
conservation  license plate.
* Contribute to  the 
Georgia  Wildlife Conservation Fund tax checkoff.
* 
Donate  directly to the Nongame Conservation Section.
* Use 
GoodSearch for your Internet searches (at 
www.goodsearch.com,  enter "Georgia Nongame Conservation Fund" under "Who do you GoodSearch for,"  click "Verify," and search).
All of the above support Georgia DNR's 
Nongame Conservation Section, which receives no state funds to  conserve nongame wildlife, native plants and natural habitats.  Details: (770) 761-3035.
WILD Facts
Bird nesting is in full swing! Species that normally nest in cavities may take up residence in dead trees or birdhouses in your yard. Non-cavity nesters may find your evergreen trees and shrubs particularly attractive for raising young. While some birds are very secretive about where they nest, other species don’t mind making their homes close to humans. 
Wrens often nest amidst garage clutter, 
house finches may choose hanging flowerpots, and 
phoebes and 
barn swallows like to nest on ledges. Be patient and feel privileged if a bird picks part of your living space for its nest.
In education
Georgia educators who want to learn, and teach, more about forestry and wildlife should check out the sixth annual 
Georgia Teacher Conservation Workshop. Set for June 21-25 and based at 
Charlie Elliott Wildlife Center, the program covers wildlife management and the growing cycle of trees through experts and outdoor and timber industry tours. The cost: $35. The return: four professional learning units and a weeklong education in the field. The course is for non-forestry and non-wildlife educators working with grades 5-12. The limit: 30 participants. Apply by May 1.
Under the Gold Dome
Score one for the turtles. 
House Bill 1000, which would allow the Board of Natural Resources to regulate trade in freshwater turtles, cleared the state House 156-1 in late March and was set for a possible Senate vote as of April 20, the 37th day of the 40-day General Assembly. The Wildlife Resources Division has supported legislation to regulate the commercial harvest of turtles. Demand fed by Asian markets threatens the Southeast's rich diversity of freshwater turtles.
Correction: Georgia's Legislature runs on a biennial, or two-year, cycle. 2010 is the second half of the current cycle, meaning bills not passed in this session will die -- not be shelved until 2011. The 
March Georgia Wild misstated the status of legislation that does not pass both the Senate and House this year.
Ranger reports
Making a case: A long-running investigation in Dougherty County led by Ranger 1st Class Ben Roberts resulted in 28 warrants involving three subjects. Charges ranged from hunting deer at night to hunting hawks and owls. Tipped off by a complaint in November, Roberts begin investigating a plantation manager, with the search for evidence including interviews with witnesses, deer processors and taxidermists.

Wilson's ploverCharadrius wilsoniaKey characteristics: Medium-sized shorebird – about 6-8 inches long – with short necks, flesh-colored legs and stout bills. (
Wilson’s are sometimes called thick-billed plovers). Adults have brown backs, white underparts and either a black or brown band on their chest. 
Named for: Ornithologist 
Alexander Wilson, who collected the species in New Jersey in 1813.
Range: Includes the Pacific Coast from Baja California to Peru, the Atlantic Coast from Virginia to Brazil, and the Bahamas, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Haiti. Wilson’s plover is found year-round in Georgia, but is rare here in winter and found regularly only at a few sites.
Habitat: Coastal beach habitats, from dry sand beaches and dunes to intertidal sand flats and mud flats, accretion areas and washovers.
Nesting: Along Georgia’s coast, nests primarily on outer barrier island beaches, but also on sand spits at the mouth of large rivers and on sand flats. Nesting season runs from late April through June. Most nesting occurs in May. Nests are a shallow scrape in the sand made by the male. Each nest usually contains three eggs. They hatch in 23-24 days. Young leave the nest with the adults soon after hatching, foraging on the wet beach of an outgoing tide. 
Eats: Fiddler crabs, other crustaceans, worms and insects. Wilson’s plovers often probe the sand and mud for meals.
Sounding off: 
Listen for a sharp “wheep!”
Threats: Mortality and nest losses resulting from people and their pets, plus direct predation by feral cats, are primary threats. Other predators include raccoon, mink and laughing gulls. Tides and storms can wash over nests. Erosion is undermining some nesting habitat. 
Status: Referred to in the late 1950s as “one of the most the most characteristic breeding birds of the South Atlantic and Gulf Coast beaches,” the species has declined sharply in these areas. Wilson’s plover is listed in Georgia as rare, and in some other states as threatened or endangered. Georgia’s population of about 100 nesting pairs is down from estimates of 360 in the early 1980s and 200-250 in 1986. Robust numbers are found only on 
Little St. Simons Island and 
Cumberland Island’s southern end. Georgia’s State Wildlife Action Plan, or SWAP, lists Wilson’s plover as a high-priority species. 
How to help: Avoid nesting, brood-rearing and feeding habitats. Keep pets at home or at least on a leash when visiting the beach. Support conservation efforts for shorebird habitats.
Largely from an account by Nongame Conservation Section Program Manager Brad Winn in “The Breeding Bird Atlas of Georgia,”(UGA Press). Additional sources: Cornell Lab of Ornithology, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and “Protected Animals of Georgia” (Georgia DNR).
NoteworthyBald eagle nest numbers continued to 
climb in Georgia  this year, despite the cold, wet winter and early spring. Surveys by  Nongame Conservation Section program manager Jim Ozier documented 135 occupied nesting  territories, 118 successful nests and 187 young fledged.
A Canoochee River corridor conservation  easement in the works targets habitat management for  federally threatened 
eastern indigo snakes along the edge of 
Fort  Stewart. Next month’s Georgia Wild will include more on the site and a federal $1.4 million  
Recovery  Land Acquisition Grant for the easement.
White  Nose Syndrome has been found at Great Smoky Mountains National  Park and 
in Missouri, continuing its deadly spread. The 
confirmation  in Tennessee of 
Geomyces destructans, the fungus and the  presumptive causative agent of WNS, came from White Oak Blowhole cave,   home to the state’s largest known hibernacula of federally endangered  
Indiana bats.
Wildlife Resources’ Flickr page features posters  that capture the art, and heart, of conservation. Earlier this month,  12 children were announced as 
statewide winners from among more than  4,900 K-5th-grade students who entered the Give Wildlife a Chance Poster  Contest.
The future of shad fishing in Georgia is the subject  of a 
DNR-sponsored meeting April 29 in Midway. Atlantic Coast American  shad stocks are at all-time lows and do not appear to be recovering,  leading to a Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission  moratorium on commercial and recreational shad fishing beginning in 2013 except in states  that can show the fishery is sustainable.
Townsend WMA sandhills are getting a fresh start. Extensive  logging of mostly 
sand pine – a non-native species that can shade out  native vegetation – is planned at the southeast Georgia  management area, followed by  planting 
longleaf pines. Regional Game Management  Supervisor David Mixon called logging “
the first step in converting the  sand pine and off-site loblolly into a longleaf pine ecosystem.”
SnakesKin,  a
 new 
Animal  Planet series, focuses on the Jason Clark family behind  Georgia-based 
Southeastern  Reptile Rescue. The last episode, “Rattlesnake Island,” includes  Nongame Conservation Section biologist Thomas Floyd.
The Interagency Burn Team did controlled burns on a  whopping 19,500 acres during winter, with the Student Conservation Association 
“strike  team” accounting for 4,614 acres. Due next year: more prescribed fire on  national forest lands, thanks to a recently signed agreement with the  U.S. Forest Service.
The North  Atlantic right whale season wrapped up without a wrapped up whale,  thankfully. The numbers: 19 mother-calf pairs (the average since 1991 is  21), at least 200 other non-breeding whales, zero entanglements  (compared to five last year), zero calf mortalities and one whale birth  photographed (only the second in history).
“It is possible," explained Nongame Conservation Section biologist Clay George, "that there may have been some  calves that were not reported. Research has shown that in years with  cooler weather, 
the whales tend to move farther south, out of our survey  areas. So it is possible that there will be more calves that could show  up in the breeding areas than were counted by our survey teams.” 
Quick:  What’s the nickname of the whale photographed calving? Derecha,  Spanish for “right.” George says the whale has been known to calve in  some unusual places, including the Gulf of Mexico.
The Georgia  Aquarium contributed $11,000 for loggerhead sea turtle conservation as part of a  new 
Coastal America Partnership alliance with the U.S. Fish and  Wildlife Service. The money goes to the Savannah-based 
Caretta Research  Project, a nonprofit that protects loggerheads on Georgia's 
Wassaw National  Wildlife Refuge.
Along with loggerhead hatchlings, Nongame senior  wildlife biologist Mark Dodd had a hand, and a credit, in the Miley  Cyrus movie “The Last Song.” 
Read  more.
An  Important Bird Areas group banding birds  at Panola Mountain State Park April 11 heard a 
king rail in the reeds of  a grassland/wetland restoration area. Nathan Klaus, a Nongame  Conservation Section senior wildlife biologist, said he flushed a 
black  rail – the Holy Grail of birding – from the same area last fall, a  sighting that highlights these secretive, high-priority birds and the  successful habitat work at 
Panola.
The Cornell Lab of Ornithology  is 
calling  it quits in the search for 
ivory-billed woodpeckers. “The  preliminary conclusion we’ve come up with at this point is that it’s  unlikely that there are recoverable populations of ivory-billed  woodpeckers in those places that have received significant search  efforts over the past five years,” said Ron Rohrbaugh, director of the  Lab’s Ivory-billed Woodpecker Research Project. Sightings and video  prompted Cornell’s assertion in 2005 that the species was alive.

 Watch  this 
2009  video of the search.
Panola Mountain plays host to a  
Mountain Top Owl Prowl on May 8. Other wild programs at Georgia state  parks include 
Birding by Ear and 
Common Birds of Georgia May 22 at  Smithgall Woods Conservation Park near Helen, and a 
Frog Slog – warning:  be prepared to get wet – at 6 p.m. each Tuesday until Aug. 31 at Panola  in Stockbridge.
Wildlife, fun and education rule the Charlie  Elliott Wildlife Center 
J.A.K.E.S. Day  celebration, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. May 15. Admission is free, as is lunch  for the kids.
Fitzgerald’s Wild Chicken Festival in March drew  about 8,000 people and 100 vendors. “Great day, great turnout,”  co-chairman Barry Peavey said of the 
community event going strong 10  years after abandoning a rattlesnake roundup format.
The latest  Junior Ranger e-newsletter from the Georgia State Parks & Historic Sites Division features a 
Q&A  with botanist Tom Patrick of the Nongame Conservation Section.
The  climate invasion has begun. Or so says a National Wildlife  Federation report and 
intentionally  cheesy B-movie 
 
trailer called “They Came from Climate Change.”
Nongame in the news
The (Kings Bay) Periscope: “
Bird house,” about Trident Training Facility's Lt. Antone Eliasen, the Bird Man of Kings Bay. (April 15) 
Florida Times-Union: “
Dolphin makes rare visit to Satilla, 51 miles upriver,” about bottlenose dolphin spotted near Tarboro. (April 14)
Barrow County News: “
Help nongame wildlife by finishing taxes with a checkoff for conservation,” DNR release about Georgia Wildlife Conservation Fund checkoff. (April 14)
Columbus Ledger-Enquirer:
 “
Yellow anaconda wins Hiss America Pageant,” about a contest during an annual Reptile Fest at Columbus’ Oxbow Meadows Environmental Learning Center. (April 11)
The (Dalton) Daily Citizen: “
Wild Facts: tigers of spring,” Linda May brief about eastern tiger swallowtails. (April 8)
The Outdoor Wire: “
Winners announced in Georgia ‘Give Wildlife a Chance’ poster competition,” DNR release about statewide winners in annual contest. (April 8)
Athens Banner-Herald: “
Native plants -- Gotta have 'em,” column about what native plants are, and why plant them. (April 8)    
Fly Rod and Reel Online: “
First ever photograph confirms Colombian hummingbird,” about image of a living Santa Marta Sabrewing in northern Colombia, the first confirmation in 60-plus years of the species’ existence. (April 7)  
The Associated Press: “
Condor egg successfully hatches in California,” about first hatching of a California condor chick at Pinnacles National Monument. (April 7)
The Augusta Chronicle: “
Towering champions,” about Georgia’s Champion Tree List and what’s on it. (April 3)    
Athens Banner-Herald: “
Endangered plantlife added at area WMA,” DNR release about planting mat-forming quillwort at Oconee WMA’s Eatonton Outcrop. (March 31)
Savannah Morning News: “
Early migrants showing up across Georgia,” DNR release about return of chimney swifts, hummingbirds and purple martins. (March 31)
MSNBC: "
Mysterious whale die-off is largest on record," about more than 300 southern right whales, mostly calves, found dead off Argentina. (March 31)
The Augusta Chronicle: “
Phinizy research could uncover rare species,”  about Southeastern Natural Sciences Academy herpetological assessment if Phinizy Swamp. (March 29)
Savannah Morning News: “
After baby boom, whales have an average year,” about right whale calving season off Georgia/Florida coast. (March 27)
The (Dalton) Daily Citizen: “
Time short; register now for youth birding competition,” DNR release about signing up for annual event. (March 25)
Savannah Morning News: “
Striped newt could get more protection,” about U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposing striped newt for listing. (March 25) 
RealEstateRama: “
Spring planting is for the birds, and butterflies!” DNR release about planting and landscaping for wildlife. (March 23)
New York Times: “
Are aquariums getting too lifelike?” about impact of growing aquarium trade on reef invertebrates. (March 22)
Florida Times-Union: "
Chemical causes high contamination levels in Atlantic dolphins," about PCB levels in dolphins linked to closed factory in Brunswick, results from sampling last summer near Brunswick and Sapelo Island. (March 1).
CalendarApril 24-May 5: 
2010  Pine Tree
 Festival and Southeast Timber EXPO, Swainsboro.
April  27-28: 
Georgia  DNR Board of Natural Resources committee meetings (1 p.m. April 27), monthly  meeting (9 a.m. April 28), DNR board room, Atlanta.
May 8: 
International  Migratory Bird Day, officially May 8, though dates of events can differ by  state, region.
May 15: 
J.A.K.E.S.  Day Festival, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at Charlie Elliott Wildlife Center, Mansfield.
June 19-25: 
Paddle   Georgia 2010July 25-29: 
Bat Blitz, Fort Mountain State Park. 
Family education night, 6:30 p.m. July 25.
Submit  events
Photo credits (
from top):
* Division 2 (1st-2nd grades) winning poster in Give Wildlife a Chance poster competition. 
Poster by Jordan Sullivan, Dacula Academy in Dacula.
* Coosa Valley prairie. 
Marc Del Santro
* DNR's Jason Wisniewski (left) and Deb Weiler, along with researcher Jason Meador (center), record mussels on the Altamaha River. 
Rick Lavender/Ga. DNR
* Wilson's plover. 
Brad Winn/Ga. DNR
* DNR's Mincy Moffett and youth from the Highly Intensive Team Supervision Program inspect a scarlet kingsnake found at Ohoopee Dunes Natural Area.
 Maurice McNeal/Department of Juvenile Justice
* Cardinal eating redbud blooms. 
Terry Johnson
* Montage of herps -- (top left) 
gopher frog; (top right) wood frog; (bottom left) spring salamander; eastern diamondback rattlesnake -- found within the four-county region of Talbot, Taylor, Marion and Schley. 
Sean Graham/Auburn University * Whooping cranes at Carters Lake. 
Joshua Spence* Longleaf pine seedling and cone. 
Nathan Klaus/Ga. DNR* Florida panther with kittens. 
Darrell Land/Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission
Georgia Wildvolume 3, issue 4
Georgia Wild is produced by the Georgia DNR 
Wildlife  Resources Division and focused on conserving nongame species, those not  legally trapped, fished for or hunted. The newsletter is delivered free to  subscribers. 
Subscribe  or see previous issues.
Wildlife Resources' 
Nongame  Conservation Section conserves and protects Georgia's diversity of native  animals and plants and their habitats through research, management and  education. The section depends for funding on grants, 
donations  and fundraisers such as 
nongame  license plate sales,  the 
Georgia  Wildlife Conservation Fund state income tax checkoff and 
Weekend  for Wildlife. Call (770) 761-3035 for details on direct donations. The  nongame plates -- the bald eagle and ruby-throated hummingbird -- are available  for a one-time $25 fee at all county tag offices, by checking the wildlife  license plate box on mail-in registration forms or through online renewal. Also,  
check  here for information on TERN, the friends group of the Nongame Conservation  Section.
Read more in "
Conserving Nongame Wildlife: 2008-2009," a report on the Nongame Conservation Section's work.
Looking back
Three previous issues ...
Georgia Wild archives.
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