Information sought on fatal shooting of peregrine falcon

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  • AGarbers

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    Information sought on fatal shooting of peregrine falcon

    DNR Law Enforcement seeks information on the fatal shooting of a peregrine falcon that was found injured in Floyd County near the I-64 bridge in New Albany on Dec. 22 of last year.

    The bird, which was found to be a captive-bred injured female, was brought to the Hardy Lake Raptor Rehabilitation Center that night by Indiana Conservation Officer Gary Pennington. The center’s personnel took the falcon to a local veterinarian, whose X-ray determined the bird had been shot. The falcon died Dec. 31.

    According to John Castrale, the DNR’s nongame bird biologist, the falcon, which he banded and released in Evansville in 1994, had not been reported since 1995. The bird was named Phoenix, and may have been nesting in the New Albany/Louisville area where pairs breed on tall buildings and under bridges. Most peregrine falcons are banded as nestlings and later identification can be made if individuals can be approached. The biologist said the bird was relatively old for the species. The oldest he’s aware of in the Midwest lived to age 19.

    Peregrine falcons were removed from the federal endangered species list in 1999 but remain a state endangered species in Indiana.

    Anyone with information about this shooting should call 1-800-TIP-IDNR (847-4367) or go online to TIP.IN.gov.

    Lt. Mark Farmer, public information officer for DNR Law Enforcement, said combined federal and state penalties for a conviction could result in a fine of $15,000, six months incarceration and loss of equipment.

    Information about the Midwest peregrines (including a searchable database) can be found at http://www.midwestperegrine.org/

     

    AGarbers

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    yeah, lets waste tax money on finding who shot a dead bird. wahooooo. idiots. and the people who shot it are idiots too!

    I think the bird was probably still alive when it was shot... No point in shooting a dead one.:D

    If I had to guess, I would say it was someone tired of losing their chickens.
     

    shooter521

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    If I had to guess, I would say it was someone tired of losing their chickens.

    If someone thought a peregrine falcon was killing their chickens, they'd be wrong. Peregrines prey on small birds taken in flight, and their normal habitat preferences would keep them well away from agricultural areas and suburbs.
     

    AZ Hunter

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    Im pretty sure the game and fish guys get paid to protect game and fish....waste of money?? Not sure about that. Didn't read anything about a state wide man hunt....just asking for tips.
     

    dodgetech

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    If someone thought a peregrine falcon was killing their chickens, they'd be wrong. Peregrines prey on small birds taken in flight, and their normal habitat preferences would keep them well away from agricultural areas and suburbs.


    looks like the person that shot that bird saved alot more smaller birds what a waste of money we can spend money looking for a person that shot a bird but we are taking cuts in public education
     

    AGarbers

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    If someone thought a peregrine falcon was killing their chickens, they'd be wrong. Peregrines prey on small birds taken in flight, and their normal habitat preferences would keep them well away from agricultural areas and suburbs.

    Being the bird was so old, I didn't know if it would be like other predators and start going after easier prey. We used to keep chickens, but the last straw was owls flying into the barn at night and snatching them off the roost, one a night.:xmad: We couln't figure out what it was until we saw it happen. We got rid of the chickens after that. I think every animal wants a free chicken dinner! "Insert smily with surrender flag here..."
     

    dom1104

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    Why in the world is some yahoo shooting a hawk a black eye for gun owners?

    If he shot it with a bow and arrow would it be a black eye for archers?

    geez....
     
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