Blog reader Linda Maslin, of Blue Bell, PA, emailed me a link, above, to a picture and article about the Red-tailed Hawk which died of secondary rat poison in Madison Square Park in mid-March of this year, asking if that hawk might indeed have been Rose.
Linda, if the hawk in the photo is the hawk who was poisoned she is not Rose. Rose's belly band was more like paint dripping as opposed
to spots and she also was banded.
Fordham is in the Bronx and Madison Square Park is in
Manhattan so the distance is not impossible but unlikely, as in March as
territorial lines are hardening up by then.
But once again thanks for sending it.
Best, D
photo Donegal Browne-- Rose of Fordham in a happier season.
I'd also emailed Chris Lyons of Fordham, a major watcher of Rose and Vince, asking if he thought that their son, named Alpha Son, who joined Rose in Great Horned Owl baiting might also have met his end with Rose? If indeed, that is as suspected, she died in a battle with the Great Horned Owl Dad. Both Alpha Son and GHO Dad, are currently missing from the New York Botanical Garden.
Chris wrote-
I'm not clear about this whole Alpha Son thing, but I
doubt Junior [Great Horned Owl Dad at NYBG, DB] could take both of them out at the same time.
I haven't seen Vince in the last
week either, but that doesn't mean anything, with breeding disrupted. I
would assume I'll see him with a new mate at some point, but normally
the Fordham Hawks are well into nesting by now, so maybe it's too late
for this year.
I hope the Collins nest won't be abandoned, but that'll
be up to the new missus, whenever she comes along. Always possible, I
guess, that an established pair could show up and claim the territory.
It's too good a territory to stay vacant, that's for sure--more worried
about the owl mother finding a mate. We know a lot less about how
many unattached GHO's are in NYC.
Photo Donegal Browne
The Collins Hall Red-tailed Hawk nest at Fordham University
Chris,
I'm leaning more toward Alpha Son hitting the thermals for the RTH
adolescent migration. Though as its now been proven that Red-tails do
have a tendency to return to their natal territory for breeding, we may not
have seen the last of him. I like that thought very much.
I
would think that unattached GHO's in NYC would be rare. They
technically don't migrate. Though Central Park does tend to get a GHO visitor in
the winter, probably on a little winter vacation from another borough.
Or even from the NYBG.
The Garden's Great Horned Owl Mom and her single owlette are going to be going
it alone this season I'm afraid. I don't know that a male GHO would
pitch in like T2 did last season at the Franklin Institute. But one
never knows as no one had ever seen a Red-Tailed Hawk stepfather before either. :)
Just
got a pic from a blog reader of the hawk that was poisoned in Madison
Square Park in mid March of this year asking if it may have been Rose.
It would have been very unlikely to have been her due to distance at
this time of year but the hawk in the photo had a definite spotted belly
band as opposed to Rose's more streaked model.
As to the Collins
nest site, if things work like Pale Male and 927, and Isolde at the
Cathedral, the remaining hawk holds the territory until another mate is
chosen. In fact Vince may have "disappeared" to go looking. James
O'Brien believes he saw Isolde leave and go get Storm'n Norman not long
after Tristan's death.
Of course Vince's new mate would
technically have the choice of nest site being the female, but she'd
have to be a bit off to choose another spot.
In actuality
Collins hall is arguably the best RTH building nest site for fledging
and branching in the city. As far as I know, in no other building nest
site in NYC are the young able to move back and forth to the nest at
will, and easily do true branching in the adjacent trees as they do in
tree nests in non-urban territories.
I'm still holding out hope
for Vince finding a mate for this season. When Charlotte and Pale Male
Jr. successfully double clutched it was even later in the year.
Please do keep me updated. Fingers crossed!
Best, D
Happy Hawking
Donegal Browne