OBJECTIVES:

More than 20 years after the first releases of peregrine falcons in the southern Appalachians we still know very little about the success of this program and the status of the mountain breeding population. The objectives of this project were 1) to survey, map and characterize exposed cliff surfaces within a significant portion of the southern Appalachians and 2) to survey the use of cliffs by breeding birds with a particular emphasis on Peregrine Falcons. The project was conducted in the hope that results would lead to new insight regarding the current status of the peregrine falcon population in the southern Appalachians and the development of new strategies for its recovery.


PROJECT DESCRIPTION

The peregrine falcon was believed to be extinct in the southern Appalachians as a breeding species by the early 1960s. Despite extensive recovery efforts made over the past 30 years, the status of breeding peregrines within this portion of the historic range remains virtually unknown. The primary objective of this study was to conduct a survey of cliffs within the southern Appalachians for bird species with an emphasis on the peregrine falcon. A systematic aerial survey of cliffs and cliff use by birds was conducted throughout a significant portion of the southern Appalachian Mountains covering nearly all of the mountains of Virginia a small portion of Kentucky, and the spine of the Appalachians in West Virginia. During the course of helicopter flights, 242 exposed rock surfaces were mapped, characterized, and surveyed for bird use. Cliffs had a combined length of 122.4 km and a combined area of 470 ha. More than 25% (118 ha) of the collective rock surface that was mapped was occluded by vegetation. The surface area of 75 (31%) cliffs was estimated to be occluded by at least 50%. There was a relationship between cliff height and the level of occlusion. Cliffs that are greater than 30 m high are significantly less likely to be occluded by more than 30% corresponding to the maximum height of local tree species. A total of 97 (40%) of the surfaces mapped were estimated to be higher than 30 m with 13 (5.4%) exceeding 100 m. Eleven bird species were observed using cliff faces during aerial surveys. Birds were either roosting/loafing (941, 92.6%) or nesting (75, 7.4%). Cliffs appear to represent prominent roosting sites within the landscape for several bird species. Vultures were observed roosting on 124 (51.2%) of the 242 cliffs surveyed with an additional 54 (22.3%) cliffs with characteristic whitewash. Nests of 5 species were detected on cliffs including common ravens (35), turkey vulture (2), peregrine falcon (1), red-tailed hawk (1), and great horned owl (1). Common ravens and red-tailed hawks built stick nests on the cliff surface or within overhangs while turkey vultures, peregrine falcons and great horned owls were nesting within crevices or overhangs. Given the distribution of historic breeding sites, the release of nearly 250 young falcons in the mountains, the growth of the population in coastal Virginia, and the recovery of breeding populations within the northern Appalachians, the near absence of peregrines from the study area was surprising. Close examination of historic eyries suggests that the re-growth of vegetation around cliffs may have played a role in the lack of activity. Intense recreational use of the most prominent formations may have also played a role. It is also possible that the previous approach to hacking in the study area may have been inadequate to establish breeding pairs within this landscape. One of the benefits of the systematic approach used in this survey is the documentation that exposed rock surfaces are not evenly or randomly distributed throughout the study area. The survey allowed for the delineation of 6 geographic areas that contain dominant rock formations that will not be degraded over time by vegetation and multiple surfaces that appear appropriate for nesting. Because of their qualities, these areas should represent priorities in the reintroduction, management, and monitoring of the peregrine falcon population. Over the next decade, efforts should be made to re-establish nesting pairs within all 6 of these sites so that they may serve as “nuclei” for re-colonization of this portion of the southern Appalachians.


Year: 2005 – 2009
Status: Complete
Project Partners: United States Fish and Wildlife Service
CCB Staff: Bryan Watts, Shawn Padgett, Bart Paxton
Project Contact: Bryan Watts bdwatt@wm.edu (757) 221-2247