HomeMy WebLinkAboutAPA4170SUSTINA VALLEY BALD EAGLE SURVEY
1988
Jill Parker
Ecological Services, Anchorage
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Anchorage, Alaska
July 1988
INTRODUCTION
SUSITNA VALLEY BALD EAGLE SURVEY
1988
River and stream corridors in the Susitna Valley may be subject to timber
leasing, as proposed in the Susitna Area Plan (Alaska Department Natural
Resources 1985) and the Alaska Department of Natural Resources' more recent
Susitna/Tyonek Forest Management Report (Alaska Department Natural Resources
1987). Because most of the riparian corridors are known to be used by nesting
bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) and because of US Fish and Wildlife
responsibilities under the Bald Eagle Protection Act, the Anchorage Ecological
Services field office, in cooperation with the Anchorage Migratory Bird
Management, conducted eagle surveys in the proposed lease areas in May 1988.
The area has not been systematically surveyed since the Migratory Bird
Management office flew most of it in 1980 for the Susitna Dam project (King
1980). Additional data on nest locations were collected in 1980 by Dan Timm
(Timm 1980); in 1980-83 by Ron Modafferi during winter moose surveys (Alaska
Department Fish and Game 1985b); in 1981 by Terrestrial Environmental
Specialists (Terrestrial Environmental Services 1982); and in 1982 by the
University of Alaska, Fairbanks (Kessel et al. 1982). These nest locations,
with a few exceptions (e.g., recent Alaska Department Fish and Game
discoveries) are on file on 1:250,000 topographic maps at the Juneau Migratory
Bird Management office.
METHODS
Bill Butler of the Anchorage Migratory Bird Management office was the pilot on
all surveys. The plane (Cessna 206) was flown at an altitude of 300 feet, at
approximately 100 miles per hour. A primary observer (Michael Amaral or Bill
Eldridge) sat in front on the right side of the plane and took notes on
1:63,360 topographic maps. On 3 of the 4 survey days, an additional spotter
sat in the back of the plane on the right side and made notes on a 1:250,000
map or called out to the front observer. Rivers were usually flown along one
bank in one direction and along the other bank on the return trip. Islands in
large floodplains were circled.
Table 1 identifies which rivers were surveyed this year and in what
stretches. Not all the streams were examined in their entirety; some were
surveyed only in the sections within proposed timber sale boundaries. Kroto
Creek and Alexander Creek, 2 streams within the proposed timber sale area,
were not surveyed due to lack of time. They received low priority because of
their protected status under the 1988 Recreational Rivers legislation.
Susitna Flats, Beluga Flats and the Theodore River were examined incidentally
on the way to other areas and were not systematically surveyed. Approximately
500 river miles were flown during 4 days (total 18 hours).
Table 1. Rivers flown during bald eagle survey, May 1988.
River Start End River Miles Observers* Date
Flown
Susitna mouth Talkeetna 89 BB MA JP 5/10
Susitna Flats BB MA JP 5/10
Little Susitna mouth Parks Highway 45 BB MA RM 5/11
Willow Creek mouth headwaters 27 BB MA RM 5/11
Kashwitna mouth headwaters 51 BB MA RM 5/11
Skwentna mouth Talachulitna River 16 BB BE 5/13
Yentna mouth Skwentna River 47 BB BE 5/13
Lake Creek mouth Chelatna Lake 47 BB BE 5/13
Sunflower Creek mouth tractor trail crossing 7 BB BE 5/13
Kahiltna mouth Kahiltna Glacier 65 BB BE 5/13
Peters Creek mouth Petersville 30 BB BE 5/13
Beluga mouth Triumvirate Glacier 52 BB MA TJ 5/20
Beluga Flats BB MA TJ 5/20
Theodore BB MA TJ 5/20
Chuitna mouth Wolverine Fork 23 BB MA TJ 5/20
*Observers: MA ~ Michael Amaral
BB ~ Bill Butler, pilot
BE ~ Bill Eldridge
TJ ~ Tom Jennings
RM~ Rosa Meehan
JP = Jill Parker
Nest locations were transferred to 1:63,360 maps, on file at the Anchorage
Ecological Services field office, and to 1:250,000 maps, on file at Anchorage
Ecological Services and at the Juneau Migratory Bird Management office. Nests
are numbered by sequential river mile, calculated with a K&R map measurer,
using the headwaters as Mile 0.
RESULTS
Nest trees were primarily black cottonwood (Populus balsamifera, Hulten
1968). Two nests on Susitna Flats were in white spruce (Picea glauca). All
nest trees were over 50 feet tall, with dbh's of approximately 3 feet, and
with nests situated in or near the crown. Nest trees were not isolated trees
but were usually situated in stands of cottonwoods. Nest trees were generally
the largest trees in the stands, and were usually within 20 yards of the river
bank.
Table 2 depicts the number of nests found on each river. No nests were found
on either the Kashwitna River nor on Willow Creek, both of which were flown in
their entirety. The Kashwitna did not contain trees of sufficient size and
Willow Creek has been extensively settled.
Active nests were those that contained either an incubating adult or had a
pair perched nearby. Inactive nests appeared unoccupied, with no sign of
adults. A total of 69 nests were found on this survey, 71% (n=49) of which
were active.
Historic nests refer to those documented by King (1980) and others and on file
at the Juneau office of Migratory Bird Managment. New nests were those not
previously seen. The total number of possible nests takes into account
historic nests that, although not seen during this survey, may simply have
been missed and may still be present. Even if the nests are gone, their
locations represent viable nesting territories. Table 3 lists nest locations
by river mile, current nest status and known history. King's 1980 survey was
the only source of previous nesting activity.
DISCUSSION
Approximately 125 nesting territories exist in the river corridors proposed
for the Susitna/Tyonek timber sale; 69 of these, or over half, have been used
recently or are visible today (Table 2). In 1980, King found 76 nests in
roughly the same area. Nest densities by river (Table 2) ranged from 0 to
0.29 nests/mile, with an average of 0.14 nests/mile over the 500 miles flown.
Densities were particularly high on the Susitna (0.29), Beluga (0.23), Yentna
(0.21) and Chuitna (0.17) rivers). Other nesting densities in Alaska have
been (in nests/mile): 0.07 along the upper reaches of the Susitna River, 0.08
on the southern Kenai coast, 0.14 in the Tanana Valley, 0.14 on the Gulkana
River, 0.23 on the Copper River, and 0.8 in southeastern Alaska (Amaral 1988;
Kessel et al. 1982, Bailey 1976, Roseneau et al. 1981, Ludlow 1973, and Hodges
and Robards-1982 in Alaska Department Fish-an~Game 1985a).
Table 2. Results by river of bald eagle survey flown in May 1988.
River Number Number Number Density Number Number Total
Nests Active Inactive (nests/ Historic New Nests
Found mile) Nests Nests Found
1988 Not Found 80-88
Susitna 26 20 6 0.29 32 8 58
Susitna Flats 4 4 0 1 2 5
Little Susitna 1 1 0 0.02 0 1 1
Willow Creek 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
Kashwitna 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Skwentna 1 1 0 0.06 4 0 5
Yentna 10 6 4 0.21 6 7 16
Lake Creek 2 2 0 0.04 1 2 3
Sunflower Creek 1 1 0 0.14 0 0 1
Kahiltna 3 1 2 0.05 0 2 3
Peters Creek 3 2 1 0.10 3 3 6
Beluga 12 9 3 0.23 5 6 17
Beluga Flats 1 1 0 1 1 2
Theodore 1 1 0 0 0 1
Chuitna 4 0 4 0.17 2 1 6
TOTAL: 69 49 20 0.14 56 33 125
(71%) (29%)
Table 3. Results of bald eagle surveys flown in May 1988.
River Nest Number Nest Reported in
(by river mile) Status * Earlier Surveys
Susitna 195 Active King 1980, inactive
196 Active Kessel 1982, active
198 Active King 1980, active
209 Active King 1980, inactive
214 Inactive No
223 Active King 1980, active
225 Active King 1980, inactive
232 Inactive No
234 Active No
237 Active King 1980, inactive
240 Active King 1980, inactive
241 Inactive No
242 Active ADFG 198G-83
248 Active ADFG 1980-83
249 Active King 1980, inactive
254 Inactive No
257 Active King 1980, inactive
261 Inactive No
262 Active ADFG 1980-83
262.1 Active No
267 Active TES 1981, active
268 Active TES 1981, active
271 Active King 1980, inactive
277 Active ADFG 1980-83
279 Active ADFG 1980-83
283 Inactive No
Susitna Flats 1 Active King 1980, active
2 Active, spruce No
3 Active Timm 1980
4 Active, spruce No
Little Susitna 80 Active No
Skwentna 93 Active King 1980
Yentna 73 Active No
75 Active No
76 Inactive King 1980, inactive
80 Inactive King 1980, active
83 Active No
88 Inactive No
93 Active King 1980, inactive
94 Inactive King 1980, inactive
103 Active No
106 Active No
*Unless otherwise noted, nest trees were black cottonwood.
Table 3 (cont.).
River Nest Number Nest Reported in
(by river mile) Status * Earlier Surveys
Lake Creek 40 Active No
56 Active No
Sunflower Creek 23 Active King 1980, inactive
Kahiltna 21 Active No
29 Inactive King 1980, inactive
41 Inactive No
Peters Creek 31 Active No
35 Active No
36 Inactive No
Beluga 7 Active No
16 Active King 1980, active
19 Active No
20 Inactive King 1980, active
23 Active King 1980, inactive
29 Inactive King 1980, inactive
33 Active No
41 Active No
42 Active King 1980, inactive
43 Active King 1980, inactive
45 Inactive No
46 Active No
Beluga Flats 1 Active No
Theodore 28 Active Timm 1980
Chuitna 26 Inactive Timm 1980
27 Inactive No
29 Inactive Timm 1980
30 Inactive Timm 1980
Nests were not concentated in particular areas on the Susitna River, as they
appeared to be in 1982 (Kessel~ al. 1982), but were uniformly distributed
from the mouth to Talkeetna. Large streams such as the Susitna and the Yenta
rivers appeared to support a greater number of nesting eagles than did smaller
streams, although the Beluga River was a notable exception, with more nests
(n=l2) than expected for its size.
King's surveys, done in mid-April 1980, found only a 22% occupancy rate (out
of 76 nests, 17 were occupied). The 1988 survey, done in mid-May, found an
occupancy rate of 71% (49 out of 69 nests). For the 23 nests found in 1988
whose status was known in 1980, 4 were active both years; 4 were inactive both
years; 2 were active in 1980 and inactive in 1988; and 13 were inactive in
1980 and active in 1988 (Table 3). The timing of the earlier survey possibly
contributed to the apparently low occupancy in 1980 -particularly given the
high number of nests inactive in 1980 but active in 1988. Possibly many of
the nests empty in April 1980 were occupied in May 1980 and in May 1988 as
well. In any event, over half (n=36) of the 69 nests discovered in 1988 were
present on the surveys of 5-8 years earlier, a significant demonstration of
site fidelity by eagles.
Bald eagles are using the largest cottonwood trees available to them in the
Susitna River valley. Trees that are not sufficiently large today serve as a
reservoir of future nest sites. To conserve a supply of nest trees during
logging operations and to prevent current nests from being windthrown will
require the establishment of a 0.25-0.5 mile buffer of trees along each river
corridor (i.e., 0.25 or 0.5 miles on either side of the stream). The 0.5-mile
buffer would pertain more to the mainstem Susitna River, the Yentna, Skwentna,
Beluga and Chuitna rivers, where eagles are or have been particularly
abundant (Table 2); smaller buffers may suffice for some of the smaller
streams.
Three items -1) the similarity in counts between 1980 and 1988; 2) the
evenness of nest distribution; and 3) the uniformly large size of nest trees
relative to what else is available -would all indicate that the Susitna
Valley bald eagle population is stable. This implies that the eagle
population is in balance with the supply of food and nest trees currently
available. A reduction in food supply (or degradation of water supply or
quality) or the loss of nest trees will reduce the Susitna bald eagle
population from current levels.
LITERATURE CITED
Alaska Department of Fish and Game. 1985a. Habitat management guide.
Southcentral region, Vol II: Distribution, abundance, and human use of
fish and wildlife. Division of Habitat. Juneau, AK. 1012 pp.
Alaska Department of Fish and Game. 1985b. Habitat management guide
reference maps. Southcentral region, Vol II: Distribution and human use
of birds and fish. Division of Habitat. Juneau, AK.
Alaska Department of Natural Resources. 1985. Susitna Area Plan. Anchorage,
AK. 440 pp.
Alaska Department of Natural Resources. 1987. Forest management report and
preliminary decision for the Susitna Valley/Tyonek sale SC1306M.
Anchorage, AK.
Amaral, M.J. 1988. A survey for nesting birds of prey along the Copper
River, Alaska, 1987. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services
files. Anchorage, AK. In prep.
Hulten, E. 1968. Flora of Alaska and neighboring territories. Stanford
University Press, Stanford, CA. 1008 pp.
Kessel, B., D.D. Gibson, s.o. MacDonald, B.A. Cooper, and K,C, Cooper. 1982.
Avifauna of the lower Susitna River floodplain, Alaska. University of
Alaska Museum, Fairbanks. Prepared for LGL Alaska Environmental Research
Associates, Ltd.
King, R. 1980, Bald eagle survey maps. US Fish and Wildlife Service,
Migratory Bird Management files. Fairbanks, AK.
Terrestrial Environmental Specialists. 1982. Susitna hydroelectric project,
environmental studies. Phase I report.
Timm, D. 1980, Eagle survey, May 6, 1980. Unpublished report, Alaska
Department of fish and Game files. Anchorage, AK.
Jill Parker
July 1988
US Fish & Wildlife Service, Ecological Services -Anchorage
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United States Department of the Interior
IN REPLY REFER TO:
FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE
Raptor Management Studies
P. 0. Box 021287
Juneau, AJaska 99802-1287
(907) 586-7243
'!0: Jill Parker, Ecological Service, Anchorage
July 26, 1988
FRI:M: Mike Jacobson, Raptor Management Studies, Juneau
SUBJEcr: Susitna Valley Bald Eagle SUrvey
'Ihank you for sending your excellent report (with naps) of the Susitna
Valley Bald Eagle Survey. I know this survey required quite a lot of
effort ... the timely report is appreciated.
'!he infornation gathered from this survey will be even more valuable as
tilne goes by.
JUL 2 81988