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Beach-nesting birds need your help
May 21, 2008
Contact: Amanda Sigman, 352-732-1225
Beach-goers in St. Johns County have probably
seen signs recently that say ”Protected Bird Site, Area Closed”
or “Keep Out, Bird Nesting Area.” These signs surround an
area on the beach, often associated with sand dunes, and are
meant to help protect beach-nesting birds, including the
threatened least tern.
Biologists and volunteers are asking people to
help these small birds, their eggs and their chicks by staying
out of the posted areas until the nesting season is over and the
signs are removed.
The St. Johns County Beach-nesting Bird Network
(a partnership of federal, state, and local agencies and the St.
Johns Audubon Society) have posted these signs in four areas:
Porpoise Point, Matanzas Inlet, Guana Tolomato Matanzas National
Estuarine Research Reserve and Anastasia State Park. When you
visit the beach, you may also see volunteers wearing yellow
vests with “Bird Steward” printed on the back. These friendly
folks are monitoring nesting activities and providing
information about the birds to beach-goers.
In early spring, least terns return to Florida
from wintering grounds in Central and South America. They soon
pair up, using courtship rituals in which hopeful males offer
small fish to prospective mates. The seabirds nest in shallow
“scrapes” they make on broad expanses of bare sand. Peak nesting
season is from mid-May through July in Central Florida, though
nesting may continue through August. Adults incubate the eggs
for about 21 days. The young leave the nest in a few days,
but don't begin to fly until about three weeks later.
Nesting least terns are extremely susceptible to
disturbance. The sandy color of the eggs and young birds
blends in perfectly with the surrounding sand. This
camouflage is a good defense against many natural predators such
as crows and laughing gulls. Unfortunately, this strategy
backfires when beach-goers unknowingly walk or drive through
nesting areas destroying eggs and killing young birds without
even knowing it.
Even if colonies are not directly impacted,
disturbance near nesting areas can cause adult terns to leave
their nests and young to chase away the source of disturbance.
If this happens too often, without the shading from an adult,
eggs and chicks can overheat and perish in the hot mid-day sun.
Least terns are “colonial” nesters, meaning they
nest together in groups. Colonies can range in size from
just a handful of birds to hundreds of nests. Colonial
nesting provides safety in numbers from aerial predators and may
aid birds in finding food in constantly shifting food resources
(mainly schools of small fish such as sardines and menhaden).
Adult and juvenile least terns likely follow successful foragers
back to areas where they are catching fish.
In the past couple of decades, due to habitat
loss and disturbance on natural beach-nesting areas, least terns
have taken to nesting on flat, gravel roofs. Scientists
think perhaps 70 percent of least tern colonies are now on
rooftops in Florida. However, these nesting opportunities
are disappearing fast as older, flat-roofed buildings are
demolished or reconstructed, creating more modern roofs
unsuitable for tern nesting. This makes natural mainland
beach and barrier island habitats all that more important to
least terns.
The beaches in St. Johns County are the most
important nesting areas for least terns along the state’s
Atlantic Coast.
Least terns are listed as a threatened species
and need our help to successfully overcome the many natural and
man-made challenges they face.
Beach-goers can help by staying out of posted
areas and leaving dogs at home or keeping them on leashes well
away from posted areas. Dogs should not be allowed to chase
birds. Building owners near the beach can help by accommodating
roof-nesting terns rather than getting rid of them. Doing so may
help these areas continue to be important breeding sites for
least terns for years to come.
Call the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission (FWC) at 352-732-1225 to report nesting birds in
areas where colonies have not yet been posted. Brochures are
available from the FWC by calling 352-732-1225 or downloading
one at
MyFWC.com/wildlife/BNBBrochure.pdf.
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