Personal tools
Skip to content. Skip to navigation

neighborhood

neighborhood

Black Bears in Florida

         Many people in Florida are aware of the variety wildlife that surrounds and live among us. Most though, are not aware of the Black Bear. Black Bears can be found in the Florida wild; more so in southwest Florida. Unfortunately, as humans are sprawling more and more, we are infringing onto the Black Bear habitat. This leads to new backyard visitors. You might be used to raccoons foraging through your garbage at night. Some are seeing Black bears coming into their homes. One incident resulted in a "nuisance bear" having to be euthanized because it was going into people's homes foraging for food. It was pushed out of its natural habitat and was trying to simply survive.
         The Naples Zoo has created a Black Bear Hammock. Its purpose is to educate visitors on who their neighbors are and how to keep them out of their backyards safely. They set up two different style habitats. One shows them living life in the wild normally in their natural habitat. The other has them living in a backyard showing how they are able to adapt to man-made products and their garbage. The habitats are set up to try and show how easily it is for a Black Bear to be among humans and to tell you how to prevent that in a way that is good for both parties. They are a species that we pushed out of their homes to make room for ours. Now, you have to help them stay adapted to what little wildlife they may have left in the area that they are in.
Black Bear

Sources:

http://www.zandavisitor.com/newsarticle-1434-Black_Bear_Hammock_at__Naples_Zoo_Features_a_Natural_and_a_Backyard_Habitat

http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20090516/NEWS01/905160315/+Nuisance+bear++is+euthanized

Parrot Cove to the Rescue!

This is a speech given by a citizen, Phil Weinrich, from the Lake Worth neighborhood called Parrot Cove. The neighborhood recently gave away nearly 800 native trees to be planted in yards throughout the neighborhood. Money for the trees was raised through annual "Holiday Home Tours". Guidance was given on how and where to plant for those who wished to plant them themselves and volunteers helped plant the trees for those who needed it.

PARROT COVE TO THE RESCUE!

You’re going to have visitors this fall. Lots of them! Some will stop briefly on their way through town. Others will stay for the entire winter. They’ll be tired and hungry and desperate for your hospitality.
You won’t have to cook or clean for them, or show them the sights. In fact, the only demand they’ll make on your time is if you choose to sit at your window and watch them.
They’re not mineral or vegetable; they’re smaller than a breadbox. They’re birds.
And you live right on their flyway . . . their migratory pathway between where they raise their families and where they go to spend the winter. They funnel through Florida by the hundreds of thousands, and a great many of them follow ancient, instinctive, patterns of travel utilizing the coast as a navigational aid, right through our Parrot Cove Neighborhood.
Many of the warblers, thrushes, orioles, tanagers, grosbeaks, hummingbirds, and other miniature migrants that pass through your yard have come from points as far north as Canada and the Arctic Circle, and the vast majority won’t settle in for the winter until they reach South America.
Up until just a hundred years ago or so, coastal Florida was a garden landscape of mangrove swamps and hammock forests that provided everything a weary traveler could as for . . . food, water, shelter. Parrot Cove is still a garden landscape with lovely trees and plantings and lawns. But without knowing the consequences, many of us have chosen trees, shrubs, and grasses for our yards that hail from beautiful, tropical lands in other parts of the world. The fact that they are not well adapted to our Florida soils and climate is an inconvenience that we know how to overcome by just applying some fertilizers and irrigation.
The fact that they are totally foreign to a native songbird’s digestive system is NOT something the birds can overcome. Just like a koala, whose digestive system can only derive nourishment from eucalyptus leaves, our tiny migrants can digest only those proteins for which they have matching digestive enzymes. They are unable to extract nutrients from the leaves, buds and berries of scarcely any of the plants we have chosen to grow in our yards (their flyway).
Imagine trying to take a long road trip, and all they provided at any gas station was bales of hay! Good fuel, but not for what you’re driving! Your yard is probably just the same . . .full of the plants that provide fuel for birds migrating through Polynesia or Southeast Asia, but not for the ones that live HERE!
To compound the problem, our choice of non-native landscape plants has also impacted the populations of insects the birds are equipped to digest. Bugs are high-protein foods for migrating birds, but the species the birds target are not to be found in non-native vegetation.
Now try to imagine a tiny Magnolia Warbler heading for the Tropics. He’s so tiny, you could mail him and his mate to California for the price of one stamp . . .and he’s got to put on enough fat to fuel his trip across the entire Caribbean Sea to South America. He finds endless acres of parking lots and rooftops and asphalt all along his traditional migratory route, and when he does find trees and shrubs, they are mostly ones he can’t eat, with bugs he can’t digest.
So who should come to the rescue? The good folks of Parrot Cove Neighborhood, that’s who! At our last Neighborhood gathering, the membership voted to establish a special tree-planting program to rebuild our hurricane-battered tree canopy . . .and the Tree Committee decided to place 100% of our emphasis on native species that are of special value to migratory birds!
In a nutshell, the Committee is working with a local native plant arborist, Carl Terwilliger, of Meadow Beauty Nursery, to obtain a varied selection of migratory bird-friendly trees for planting in Parrot Cove Neighborhood. Funds from the PCN treasury will pay for the trees, which will then be distributed to members to plant in their yards! Tree Committee members and the arborist will provide information about selecting and planting and caring for your tree(s), and neighbors will be on hand to help get the trees in the ground.
Not only will we be on the way to restoring our battered canopy, but at the same time we will be replacing it with the very trees our migratory birds count on for their survival! Yard by yard, our entire neighborhood will become a sanctuary (and re-fueling station) for wildlife in desperate need of our help. As we make our neighborhood a more beautiful place for ourselves, we will be embarking on a project with truly global conservation implications!
You are here: Home Blog: Creature of Habitat neighborhood
Log in


Forgot your password?
Syndication
Atom
RDF
RSS 2.0
Tag cloud
Beach Mouse neighborhood Corridor Warship Scrub Jay Ecological Design Parrot Cove Threatened Species Pocket Gopher Transportation Planning Playboy Bunnies PD&E Florida Panther birds native Wild Hogs Florida Wildlife Federation common species Scrub Florida's Future panther migratory Red Fox Wildlife Permeability conservation Upper Kissimmee River Basin ETDM National Estuary Program News Channeled Apple Snail Lake Worth 1000 Friends of Florida Whooping Crane Power line BMP conservation easements Climate Change TAC Greenprint Wildlife Education trees coast Reptile Crested Caracara restoration Protection Ordinance coyote conservation easement Right Whales WHIP volunteer Lake Wales Ridge Wetlands land trust Eco-Tourism England wildlife friendly ecopassage Wildlife permability snook islands EQIP Grey Fox Black Bear owls CERP Endangered Species Roads mammal Green Infrastructure Population Florida Wildlife
Archives