The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Utica welcomes two newest residents

- By The Dispatch Staff newsroom@oneidadisp­atch.com @OneidaDisp­atch on Twitter

One of New York’s endangered species can add two to its roster following Tuesday morning hatchings.

At approximat­ely 1:30 a.m., Tuesday, May 9, the first peregrine falcon chick of the 2017 season hatched at the Downtown Utica nest site.

A second egg hatched at approximat­ely 11:25 a.m., and there are two more eggs in the nest which are likely to hatch in the next few days.

The Utica Peregrine Falcon Project (UPFP), which monitors the progress of the Utica nest via web cameras, predicted Tuesday’s hatch based on when the parent birds began incubating the eggs. A further indication that May 9 would be the hatch day came late Monday morning when a hole appeared in one of the eggs. The hole, called a “pip”, was created by the chick within the egg when it used its egg-tooth to break through the eggshell. By noon on Monday, the chick’s calls could be heard from within the pipped egg and a second egg in the nest developed a pip.

This season the first egg was laid in the nest box on April 1 and incubation of the clutch began on April 6. Peregrine falcon eggs typically hatch after 28 to 33 days of incubation. Based on past experience­s with Utica’s resident pair of falcons (named Astrid & Ares), it was predicted that the eggs would start hatching at 32 to 33 days. Assuming all proceeds normally with the nesting, the UPFP will be soliciting the public’s help in naming the chicks.

The naming contest will be announced by UPFP later in the month.

This is the fourth consecutiv­e year that Astrid and Ares have produced young in Utica. In 2014 this pair became the first of their species ever known to successful­ly raise young in Utica or Oneida County.

Peregrine falcons remain listed as an endangered spe- cies in New York State.

In 2013, in an effort to assist in the falcons’ recovery, a specially designed nest box was installed on the 15th floor of the Adirondack Bank Building in Downtown Utica. The Utica Peregrine Falcon Project (UPFP) was formed to safeguard and monitor the birds and their nest site.

There are currently over 70 pairs of Peregrines known to be nesting in New York State. About half of those nests are in cities.

Updates on what is occurring with the falcons as well as Streaming video from the Utica nest site is available from the UPFP’s website: www.uticapereg­rinefalcon­s.com

Link to Astrid feeding the new falcon chick: https://www. youtube . com/ watch? v= 0_ p5kJHo5eE

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 ??  ?? Astrid feeds her newest hatchling on Tuesday, May 9.
Astrid feeds her newest hatchling on Tuesday, May 9.
 ??  ?? Astrid feeds her newest hatchling on Tuesday, May 9.
Astrid feeds her newest hatchling on Tuesday, May 9.

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