Sunday, January 20, 2019

BLACKWATER CANADA GEESE

DORCHESTER'S BLACKWATER REFUGE

CANADA GEESE FROM UNGAVA, CANADA

In recent years more Canada geese are wintering on the Eastern Shore
than any other locality of North America. Most of these geese had been
wintering farther south, along the Outer Coastal Plain of North Carolina.

One recognized reason for this is 'food'. The modern harvesting of grain
corn leaves near 10% of the farmers crop in the field, thus 'food' for the
geese.

The Eastern Shore geese come from the Ungava Peninsula of far north
Canada. This Ungava Peninsula of Nunavik, Quebec, Canada is bounded by Hudson Bay to the west, Hudson Strait to the north and Ungava Bay
on the east, and is part of the Labrador Peninsula covering 97,000
square miles. The capes of Cape Wolstenholme are it's northernmost
point. The peninsula is a treeless tundra with a large number of rivers and
lakes which flow east to west. Here it is extremely cold.

Banded bird records show that our Eastern Shore birds nest and breed
along east James Bay and Hudson Bay. Band recoveries come from the
Cree Indian and Eskimo villages which depend on the geese as part of
their food source.

The migration corridor begins at James and Hudson Bays east side, south
through Quebec, across Lake Ontario, through central New York state,
eastern Pennsylvania to the Chesapeake. In migrating these birds cruise
around 40 mph and cover 50 mile each day at the height of 2000 to 4000
feet. They try to arrive at Hudson Bay by May 1st.

Abstract: The 1978 “Blackwater” , National Wildlife Refuge, Dorchester,
Maryland, by Brooke Meanley. By Harrison H, 01/20/19, for Facebook
readers and www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com . My abstracts are brief
quotatios of interesting reviews.

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