Noisette
Master Guide
Reged: 01/14/06
Posts: 5609
Loc: Belgium
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**Updated for 2008 **
These are only a few of the many sites out there, so if you have any other favourites, please feel free to add them to this thread. Some of the locations are approximate. Live pictures may not be available all year round.
Peregrine Falcons
Peregrine falcons were almost wiped out in some areas due the use of DDT which causes the egg shells to thin and break before the eyases hatch. Numbers have now recovered, and they are no longer considered to be in danger. They have adapted to modern city life, often to be found nesting on ledges of high buildings. RSPB
Derby Cathedral | Derby Cathedral Peregrine Project | Diary | Live webcam | YouTube page - turn on the YouTube layer to see the videos in Google Earth Friday 4th April - four eggs laid.
Rochester Falconcam | Rochester Falconcam | Journal Five eggs for Mariah and Kaver.

Jersey City Peregrine Cam | Jersey City Peregrine Cam | Nestbox news | Live webcam With March 27 as the approximate start of full incubation, hatching is expected around April 28.
PG&E San Francisco | Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group | Nest diary | Live webcam The camera is running, but there doesn't seem to be a lot happening ...
San Jose City Hall | Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group | Nest diary | Live webcam Clara and Carlos have four eggs expected to hatch at the end of April.
55 Water Street, New York | 55 Water street | Falcon news | Live webcam Four eggs laid by 23 March.
University of Pittsburgh Cathedral of Learning | National Aviary live webcam | Outside my window blog Four eggs laid by 30 March.

Gulf Tower Pittsburgh | National Aviary live webcam | Outside my window blog Louie and Tasha have four eggs.
Hamilton Community Peregrine Project | Hamilton Community Peregrine Project Four eggs for Madame X and Surge.
Brussels Cathedral | Peregrine falcons 2008 | Faucons pour tous - 2008 - Valken voor iedereen | Falco peregrinus blog The fourth eyas hatched on 8 April.

Valkenhok | ValkenHok.nl | Live webcam 1 | Live webcam 2 There appears to be just one egg here so far.
Ospreys
Ospreys also suffered from the use of DDT and from the activities of egg and skin collectors. By the beginning of the 20th century, they were no longer coming to Britain to breed. Like the peregrine, numbers are now recovering. RSPB
Dennis Puleston Osprey Fund | Dennis Puleston Osprey Fund | Observations | The Future of the DPOF Ospreycam | Live webcam - amazing quality! Interesting article about Dennis Puleston - PDF file, may take a while to download. Dennis and Betty are back with one egg so far.
Loch Garten | RSPB Loch Garten | Live webcams The blog Henry hasn't arrived yet. In previous years he came late and kicked EJ's eggs out of the nest. Orange VS has been around ... read the blog for more tales of sex and violence in Abernethy Forest.
Loch of the Lowes | Osprey diary | Live webcam | The Web Broadcasting Corporation The female here laid her first egg on 11 April - her first egg of this year, and her 50th in total. Most females lay 30 eggs on average in their lifetime, so quite an achievement.
Glaslyn | RSPB Glaslyn | Live webcam | Glaslyn osprey diary A first egg for this pair on 8 April.
Rutland | Rutland ospreys | Live webcam | Manton bay diary | Site B diary Fabulous photos on this website. The birds are still building.

More pictures in the placemarks
Related posts: Live peregrine falcon cam on the 33rd floor Live cams Columbus, Ohio De Mortel, Netherlands Jamestown, RI Cumbrian Osprey webcam Oberhausen falcon eyrie
More sites from Margaret and Paul Kiener Falco Peregrinus - a blog about peregrine falcon nests around the world
Edited by Noisette (04/14/08 05:14 AM)
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okm1888
Tourist
Reged: 04/03/07
Posts: 3
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i was on one of those sites before :P
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Noel_B
Master Gamer
Reged: 07/27/05
Posts: 1509
Loc: Sligo, Ireland
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Nice post Noisette, This link should keep you busy.
from me
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Delta102
Master Guide
Reged: 07/07/05
Posts: 4553
Loc: California,Montana,Virgina
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I've been following George and Gracy for the pass few years,I was bumbed when they picked the bridge for nesting this year.........Thanks for the other links.
Edit :Heres Neon's Post on them
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JosieNorden
Collection Editor
Reged: 03/03/07
Posts: 1731
Loc: UK
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I though you may also be interested that there’s a pair and more than possibly more, ospreys living in Glaslyn North Wales. During a trip there I had the luck of actually seeing an osprey, must say it was an awesome sight...
They have a live cam on the nest.
Links http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/northwest/sites/webcams/pages/ospreys.shtml http://www.rspb.org.uk/brilliant/sites/glaslyn/index.asp
Nice thread ~Josie~
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Noisette
Master Guide
Reged: 01/14/06
Posts: 5609
Loc: Belgium
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Thank you for all your links and comments. 
I added the Glaslyn and Rutland sites to the file.
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Noisette
Master Guide
Reged: 01/14/06
Posts: 5609
Loc: Belgium
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I updated this for 2008, some links had changed, some sites no longer available. Of course, it's only a small fraction of the sites available ...
-------------------- Forum "Do"s and "Don't"s - How to add a placemark - How to use folders to group your placemarks - How to add paragraphs to your placemarks - How to add pictures to your placemarks and posts - How to make your post more interesting - Useful tools
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Groovy23
Environmentalist
Reged: 09/08/06
Posts: 480
Loc: Central London, UK.
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Watch Worcester’s Peregrines
The Peregrines are back for 2008!
Following last year’s really successful “Aren’t birds brilliant!” bird watch in St Andrew’s gardens, with RSPB staff on hand, this year a camera has been installed providing spectacular views of the birds as they approach what we hope will be another successful breeding season.
Last year over 500 people had a close - up view of the peregrine falcons now resident in the city centre. This year there is another chance for everyone to see these impressive birds of prey over the weeks during spring and early summer. The action isn’t on a Scottish sea cliff or Welsh mountainside, but our own St. Andrew’s Spire right in the city centre. Click here to see the Perigrine Falcon (updated every 10 seconds)
Worcester City Council
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Edited by Groovy23 (05/16/08 12:10 PM)
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Hill
Master Guide
Reged: 10/31/04
Posts: 8364
Loc: Los Angeles
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Quote:
Peregrine falcons were almost wiped out in some areas due the use of DDT which causes the egg shells to thin and break before the eyases hatch. Numbers have now recovered, and they are no longer considered to be in danger. They have adapted to modern city life, often to be found nesting on ledges of high buildings.
Once again, the law of unintended consequences has raised its ugly head. The Peregrines adapted to raising their families on the cliff-like towers of big city office buildings. The DDT contaminated places were not the cities. The cities were full of lots of great Peregrine food - millions of pigeons. Seemingly a good solution all around. But....
Quote:
California's peregrine falcons, once driven to the edge of extinction by the pesticide DDT, now are contaminated with record-high levels of other toxic chemicals that may threaten them again.
State scientists have found that peregrines in Long Beach, Los Angeles and San Francisco contain the highest levels of flame retardants found in any living organism worldwide.
The findings parallel studies that have detected high concentrations of the chemicals, known as polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs, in human breast milk, particularly in California women.
The compounds, which mimic thyroid hormones and can damage developing nervous systems, have spread to wildlife and people worldwide, working their way up food webs.
The concentrations found in California's urban peregrines are similar to those that cause neurological damage in lab mice and rats, resulting in reduced motor skills and altered behavior.
Scientists said the peregrines, the fastest and most agile birds, are being contaminated with the industrial chemicals from eating urban pigeons that scavenge on city streets.
The chemicals are used as flame retardants on electronics and furniture cushions. They begin as indoor pollutants, building up in household dust, then migrate outdoors, where they pollute urban environments.
www.latimes.com
Quote:
Kim Hooper, a scientist with the state Department of Toxic Substances Control's environmental chemistry laboratory who led the study, said the PBDE levels in the peregrines have doubled every 10 years, and might still be increasing.
Hooper and his colleagues suspected that because household dust contains PBDEs, top predators in big cities would have the worst contamination, so they tested the eggs of peregrines in 42 locations, including Los Angeles, Long Beach, Newport Beach, Coronado and the San Francisco Bay Area.
Their hunch was right. The eggs in rural inland and coastal areas had only trace amounts of PBDEs, but the urban eggs contained up to 52 parts per million, and one dead chick contained 95 ppm. Scientists consider those concentrations extremely high -- substantially higher than nearly any chemical measured in any species worldwide in recent years.
"We think urban wildlife are sentinels for exposure to indoor pollutants in big cities," Hooper said.
Hooper said a PBDE compound called deca is largely responsible for the birds' contamination. Deca, used in electronics since the 1970s, is produced in large amounts in the United States -- about 80 million pounds a year.
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bullet_time
Tourist
Reged: 06/24/08
Posts: 30
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It's not a big step from 52 to 95 ppm...
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