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Winter
1999
[TEXT ARCHIVE WEB-PUBLISHED MARCH 2002.
ORIGINAL PRINT PUBLICATION DATE: WINTER 1999.]

Here's
what's debuting this season
on nature's stage in Chicago Wilderness
By
Jack MacRae
Winter
Into Early Spring
Great
Fecundity
A warm blanket of snow sounds oxymoronic. But to the meadow
voles in my backyard, a six-inch layer of snow is cause
for a terrific increase in comfort level. Not only does
the air temperature rarely fall below 30°F under the
snow, the white covering allows direct, yet concealed, passage
from my lilacs to the compost heap. Voles are warmer and
safer under the snow than on the bare ground. Two species
of voles are found in the Chicago Wilderness, the meadow
vole and the superficially similar but more rare prairie
vole. Both are known for their amazing fecundity and reproductive
abilities.
Voles
breed throughout the year, with litters of up to eight young
born every six to eight weeks. The young females are sexually
mature at the age of one month. Explosive, cyclical population
booms may raise the vole density to over 400 individuals
per acre every few years, thus making them an important
source of energy in a grassland food web. Thank goodness
for predators. Meadow voles are found almost anywhere there
is long grass. You can locate their intricate maze of runways
by parting the thick grass in a vacant lot.
Feeding
Wild Animals
I know some people who think if you start feeding birds
in the winter, you had better continue or the birds will
starve. Not necessarily true. During most winters, the survival
rate of birds does not drop when feeders are neglected.
The feeding stations generously provided by humans are usually
used only to supplement a bird's diet. A study in Wisconsin
found that chickadees obtain only 20-25 percent of their
daily energy requirement from a feeder, picking up the rest
from their foraging trips through the woods and fields.
Feeders DO help birds survive when temperatures dip below
0°F, when the energy requirements for our feathered
friends increase by 50 percent over their normal winter
intake.
Animal Holiday
There are plenty of similarities between groundhogs and
badgers. They both live in holes in the ground. They're
roughly the same size and shape. Groundhogs have a holiday
named in their honor; badgers are the mascot for the premier
party school in the country. But that's where the similarities
end. Their behavior, habits, and habitats are entirely different.
Groundhogs abound in our area. Originally an animal of savannas
and forest edges, they have adjusted well to life to in
our parks, yards and roadsides. Their food of choice (emerging
grasses, flowers, bok choy from my garden) is found everywhere.
Groundhogs like most members of the squirrel family
are active during daylight hours.
Badgers
are rare in our area, though they turn up regularly. Originally
an animal of sand prairies, they have been unable to adapt
to the innumerable changes in the Chicago Wilderness landscape.
Badgers are excellent hunters, preying extensively on mice,
voles, groundhogs, ground squirrels, and rabbits. They are
basically nocturnal. Due to the progressive restoration
and management practices in our area's prairies, the future
for our badger populations may be promising. The Braidwood
Dunes and Savanna in Will County provides many acres of
suitable habitat, as does the Midewin National Tallgrass
Prairie.
Woodpeckers
Winter is a great time to observe our resident woodpeckers.
They are colorful and conspicuous as they dash among the
trees. They're also loud. This is the time of year when
woodpeckers drum, where they bang their heads against trees
to attract a mate and announce their territory. I had a
roommate at Southern Illinois University who did the same
thing. There are several different species of woodpeckers
found within Chicago Wilderness habitats. The elegant looking
red-headed woodpecker is found in our open oak woodlands.
Pilcher Park in Joliet is a terrific place to spot red-heads
as well as the closely related red-bellied woodpecker.
The
pileated woodpecker the largest of our local woodpeckers
is uncommon in our region. They require large tracts
of timber. There are a few pileateds that reside in Warren
Woods in Indiana, and one used to live along Hickory Creek
in Will County, but has not been seen for several years.
Hairy woodpeckers, and the similar in appearance (but smaller)
downy woodpecker, also live in our forest preserves and
older neighborhoods. They can be attracted to feeding stations
with suet feeders.
Downtown
Foxes
Fox couples throughout suburbia are currently busy checking
out real estate. They will use several shelters during the
course of the spring as they move their family frequently.
Their ideal home is under the root of an overturned tree,
but they're not too choosey. A pile of concrete rubble will
be suitable. They'll den almost anywhere, especially when
the local vole population is booming. In downtown Naperville,
a couple of blocks from the Cock Robin Restaurant, lives
a red fox. The neighbors see her scamper through the backyards
and across the school playground. You can track her through
the snow by following her straight line of foot prints.
She used to live in a small tangled plot of box elder, until
it was recently cut down for the new River Walk expansion.
Wood
Ducks
I'd like to propose a toast to Mr. A.C. White of Connecticut.
In the early years of this century, it was feared wood ducks
had become extinct in the wild. Their habitat had been devastated
through development and forestry practices, and they were
a favorite target of market hunters. In 1914 there were
certainly fewer wood ducks in the wild than in captivity.
Mr. White came to the rescue. He set up a captive, breeding
colony of wood ducks and, for 17 consecutive years, raised
and released thousands of ducks into the wilds of North
America. Thanks A.C.
Many
wood ducks return to the Chicago Wilderness to nest in the
early spring. All along the Des Plaines River and its tributaries
you can find these beautiful birds, who exhibit their most
colorful plumage at this time of year. In the early morning
hours at Fullersburg Woods in DuPage County, there's a pair
of wood ducks who sit on a low branch of an oak, watching
me prepare the kettle of maple sap for boiling over a fire.
Tora!
Tora! Tora! I don't want to sound overly macho or uncaring,
but for those of us who like our nature "red in fang
and tooth", the sight of a cooper's hawk attacking
a bird feeder is a beautiful thing. Swooping in with a low
approach, this medium-sized bird of prey slams into its
victim feet first, sending an explosion of feathers into
the air. Way cool! Cooper's Hawks, and the closely related
sharp-shinned hawk, specialize in a diet of song birds.
With long tails and rather stubby wings, these accipiters
are designed for maneuverability and quick aerial movements.
Both
birds favor open woodlands for nesting sites and have benefitted
from the removal of buckthorn from our natural areas. A
true success story is that Cooper's hawks have so increased
in population that they have been removed from the endangered
list in Illinois. Way to go! The Old School Grove in Lake
County, Illinois, with its stands of mature oaks along the
Des Plaines River, provides perfect habitat for these feathered
hunters.
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