.
Feedback

First Signs of Spring: Feathers and Amphibians

My choice for the first harbinger of spring is not the robin but other species of birds and amphibians.

If birds have publicists, the American Robin, Connecticut's State Bird, must have the greatest flack of them all. Since the time of our forefathers, the robin has received accolades from winter-weary humans as the "first sign of spring." The honor is unearned. Throughout most of the lower 48, robins — at least, some of them — hang around all winter. In Connecticut, for my money, birds other than the robin signal that spring is upon us.

I start breaking out spring clothing when the dull red winter plumage of male House Finches, a species introduced hereabouts from the western United States, brightens in preparation for breeding. Similarly, yellow begins to tinge the feathers of male goldfinches. Spring is in the offing when immense gangs of Common Grackles, reminiscent of the hordes in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, blacken the trees and ground around my bird-feeders, emptying them of sunflower seeds as they gorge, making the man who sells me bird seed happy and wealthy. With the grackles are Red-winged Blackbirds. A few may be present in winter but when I hear their creaky calls, I know they have spring nesting on their minds. Spring is in the offing when Wood Ducks, tree nesters that flee the north for the southeastern states before fall is past, appear on tree-fringed ponds.

Some of those same ponds and puddles harbor amphibians that are among the first to reappear in the spring. Among them is a frog — and it is not the Spring Peeper. By and large, the first frog to mass for spring breeding is the Wood Frog, a bronzy creature with a black burglar's mask that is the only North American frog living north of the Arctic Circle. The Wood Frog gathers in swamps and small ponds, even ditches, to mate so early that, at times, it must halt its reproduction while ice reforms over the water. Wood frog breeding assemblages are frenzied scenes, with males clambering after females and fighting one another. Their raspy, quacking call is such that when people hear a bunch of them are calling, they often start looking for ducks. Only the ducks are never there.

About the time the wood frogs appear, another type of amphibian also appears in the same waters. it is the Yellow-spotted Salamander, jet black flecked with incredibly bright yellow dots. Breeding at night, spotted salamanders perform an elaborate mating dance, with males swimming around females in graceful circles. To reach their breeding waters, spotted salamanders must often cross roads, a migration usually performed on rainy or foggy nights, which is why I drive with extra caution if abroad at such times in early spring.

Invasive Plants Council Releases Annual Report

Connecticut’s Invasive Plants Council has released its Annual Report, highlighting many actions undertaken during 2011 to address problems caused by invasive plants. Accomplishments highlighted in the annual report include:

  • Hosting an all-day training workshop for municipal staff and conservation organizations, about invasive plant control and the use of native plants to improve wildlife habitat.
  • Continuing ongoing efforts to inform the public about threats from mile-a-minute vine and to gather information on new infestations.  Removal efforts were undertaken in Bridgewater, Greenwich, New Milford, Newtown, Roxbury, Sprague, and Westport.
  • Developing “Guidelines for the Disposal of Terrestrial Invasive Plants” to provide the public with information that will help prevent the unintentional spread of invasive plants. These guidelines are available to the public in hardcopy and through www.hort.uconn.edu/cipwg.
  • Highlighting an ambitious effort by the green industry (led by the Connecticut Nursery and Landscape Association) to phase out 25 of the most high seed producing varieties of Japanese barberry by 2013.
  • Conducting a survey of aquarium plant retailers (done by the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station) which found that 29% of stores were selling prohibited invasive plants.  All retailers were revisited and given information on State laws and an aquatic plant identification guide.
  • Coordinating water chestnut control and removal throughout the Connecticut River.
  • Updating the CT Invasive Plants List and evaluating new species for listing.

The Council is a nine-member partnership established under state statute in 2003 between state agencies, non-governmental organizations, academia, and industry.  Its membership includes representatives from the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, the Department of Agriculture, University of Connecticut College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Invasive Plant Atlas of New England, The Nature Conservancy, Connecticut Federation of Lakes, Connecticut Nursery and Landscape Association, and Connecticut Green Industries.  Primary functions include developing the state invasive and potentially invasive species lists, developing and providing educational materials and programs about invasive plants and supporting state agencies in invasive plant efforts.

Additional accomplishments of the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station and associated organizations, including the Connecticut Nursery and Landscape Association and the Connecticut Invasive Plant Working Group are also included in the report.

To view the full annual report, visit www.hort.uconn.edu/cipwg/ipc.html and click “2011 Annual Report”.  For a list of members of the Invasive Plants Council, visit the above website and click “List of Members”.

Upcoming Events

Just in time for spring birding, a Fieldcraft for Birders program is on tap March 20, 7:30 p.m. at the Kellog Environmental Center, 500 Hawthorne Avenue, Derby. It is sponsored by Naugatuck Valley Audubon, Audubon CT and the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP). Attendees will learn how to handle themselves in birding situations, including the skills necessary to get close enough to birds for a satisfying view. A donation of $4.00 per adult and $2.00 per child is asked. For further information, contact the center at (203) 734-2513.

Volunteer instructors from DEEP's wildlife bureau will conduct a free wild turkey hunting safety seminar at Fairfield County Fish and Game, 310 Hammertown Road, Monroe, March 10, 8 a.m. To register, contact the division's Sessions Woods Office at 860-675-8130.

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Tolland Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
q May 21, 2013 at 01:25 pm
"Minimal impact" means some. Retiring debts over the next few years is a good thing andRead More doesn't mean you should borrow more. Perhaps when those debts are paid off there will be a little more money available to meet the basic needs of the schools and the town departments. As wonderful as the expansion sounds, it is not an immediate need - it is a "want". We know the potential benefits of the expansion. Please give specifics as to the cost per taxpayer per year and for how long to pay off this specific project. Thank you.
Betty-Lou Griffin May 21, 2013 at 11:48 am
The "complete reworking of the library" only included HVAC renovations being done on theRead More whole building, repair of the leaking roof and skylight that was ruining the library, and replacement of the circulation desk. No space was added. I am glad to hear that you recognize the benefits of expanded library space. Town Manager Steven Werbner has indicated that Tolland will be retiring several debts over the next several years, and this expansion would therefore have minimal impact on Tolland's debt burden or tax level. If we wait, multiple existing grant opportunities may disappear. Let's NOT wait another decade to address this problem. Let's at least send it to public hearing and referendum so that we can have a sincere and wide-reaching community discussion on this important issue, and allow our citizens the OPPORTUNITY TO VOTE.
q May 21, 2013 at 09:33 am
Love the idea of an expanded library space, but is the time really now? We couldn't even afford toRead More fully fund our school and town budgets for next year. We will be experiencing a lower quality of education and reduced town services and until we can bring that back up to par we should not be taking on new debt. Just a quick look at next year's budget shows we are still paying on the new High School, the Geothermal project, bonding for roads improvement, sewers, open space bonds, Cross Farms development, the new Library roof, and now the artificial turf/lights project at THS. Even if some grants are available to help with the cost, the Library Expansion Project will add more debt for the town (taxpayers). Is this really the time to do that?
q May 21, 2013 at 10:10 am
Love the idea of an expanded library, but we saw with this latest school/town budget that this townRead More cannot afford to maintain the level of education and town services we now have. How much will this library extension cost per year per taxpayer? Perhaps we should pay off some of our existing debt (including all the new debt incurred in just the past 3 years) before taking on new. Also, you mention the need for quiet tutoring rooms. Are these paid tutors you're referring to? If so, will they be charged rental fees for using the spaces paid for by the taxpayers? Aren't there spaces available at the new Rec Center at Parker? How about space at the schools? With fewer teachers and fewer students there are now empty classrooms.