In the beginning 4.20 minutes of the video the water pump from the tower is running so you may want to turn down the audio. Then the audio is normal for the remainder of the video. ♥
The video opens with Di taking her prey off the nest to go stash it and Xavier comes in while she is gone and gets to brood his new hatchling! 🐣 Di comes right back - sees X brooding their chick and she leaves. Di then returns right away and nudges him off the chick & eggs. He reluctantly gets up and goes to the ledge and jumps off GCW 😂
Xavier will return with prey several times but Di does not get up so he flies off with it. Then on the third delivery he brings the prey right to Di and she gets up and starts to eat on the nest, X gets to brood for a few minutes but then he decides to take off. Di continues to eat and then she will fly off with the food to stash it. We have a few moments to see the cute little chick before Di returns to brood/incubate again.
As the day progresses, egg# 2 will make progress in hatching but views have been stingy by Diamond! Thank you for watching!
Video captured & edited by Lady Hawk
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1ST HATCH: Oct 4th 2024 00:24:12 🎉🎉
GENERAL INFORMATION:
This is a research project through Charles Sturt University, Orange, New South Wales Australia, studying the diet and use of a nest box of a family of peregrines living in water tower since 2007. We now have nine years' worth of diet and seven years of behaviour data The cams go right through the year and are in daily use.
HISTORY:
The birds have been observed using the tower (a working water tower) since 2007, breeding in the box since 2008, with an average of 2.8 eggs per clutch and 1.5 fledges per season.
The parents' names are Diamond (female) and Xavier (male). Diamond took over from the older Swift in 2015 and Xavier replaced Bula in 2016 (who in turn replaced our first male, Beau, in 2015). Xavier arrived just as the eggs were hatching and saved the season by providing for Diamond and her three chicks. Assuming that they were at least two years old when they arrived, Diamond is at least eleven years old and Xavier nine (in 2024).
The male is 15-20% smaller than the female, has fewer spots on the chest and has brighter yellow-orange talons and beak. The birds do not migrate and courtship rituals and some scrape (nest) building continues throughout the year, intensifying, along with food bringing by the male, in July and August.
Eggs are laid usually in late August, with chicks hatching in early October and fledging in mid-November. The youngsters often stay around as late as March being taught to hunt by their parents, and often visiting the nest in the tower, so there is much to watch even out of the main breeding season. One male juvenile stayed until August the following year when his parents blocked his entrance to the box and he took the hint.
#falconCam #OrangeCSUfalcons #OrangeAustraliaFalcons #PeregrineFalcons #CSUorangeperegrinefalcons
Courtesy of Falcon Project Orange NSW Australia. Many thanks to Cilla Kinross, principal researcher at CSU.
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Box Cam link: www.youtube.co...
Ledge Cam link: • Ledge Camera -FalconCa...
4 окт 2024