01 March 2019
18 February 2019
14 February 2019
Welcome to Palmetto Electric's 2019 Osprey Season.
Our cam overlooks the nest on top of our 100’ communications tower. The resident osprey pair, Bea and Jasper, have returned for their ninth season. Bea returned to the communications tower on January 10th and Jasper arrived on January 28th. The first egg was laid February 11th and the second egg was laid February 13th. For those of you that have been following us you’ll remember that the last three years Bea and Jasper’s nest has failed. How many eggs will she have? How many chicks will fledge? We are eager for a successful season and to see juvenile ospreys take flight.
Currently, our cam refresh rate is extremely slow (5 minutes) due to recent equipment added to our network that has consumed bandwidth. We anticipate to have that corrected in the near future.
Thank you for joining us for another season and for taking part in our Osprey Blog.
Below is a close-up of Jasper, the two eggs, and Bea incubating the eggs.
Our cam overlooks the nest on top of our 100’ communications tower. The resident osprey pair, Bea and Jasper, have returned for their ninth season. Bea returned to the communications tower on January 10th and Jasper arrived on January 28th. The first egg was laid February 11th and the second egg was laid February 13th. For those of you that have been following us you’ll remember that the last three years Bea and Jasper’s nest has failed. How many eggs will she have? How many chicks will fledge? We are eager for a successful season and to see juvenile ospreys take flight.
Currently, our cam refresh rate is extremely slow (5 minutes) due to recent equipment added to our network that has consumed bandwidth. We anticipate to have that corrected in the near future.
Thank you for joining us for another season and for taking part in our Osprey Blog.
Below is a close-up of Jasper, the two eggs, and Bea incubating the eggs.
15 May 2018
Today is the first day that either Bea or Jasper has not incubated the overdue eggs. The pair continued incubation for over a month after the hatching timeframe. The chicks should have hatched the first full week of April. We believe that the eggs weren't fertile.
The pair should remain on the platform to retain ownership of the site throughout the summer.
The pair should remain on the platform to retain ownership of the site throughout the summer.
19 April 2018
Unfortunately for the pair, Bea and Jasper, they will not have any chicks to raise this summer. The chicks should have hatched the first full week of April. Today marks the 59th day since the 3rd egg was laid and the 54th day for the 4th egg. This is a first for the pair to not have any chicks hatch. The last two years the chicks and eggs fell through the nest leaving the pair with no offspring. As you may recall the first and second egg were from a different male.
So why didn't the eggs hatch? Osprey eggs fail due to it either being infertile or nonviable. Infertile eggs occur when the ovum (egg) is not fertilized before it begins its journey down the female's oviduct. Ospreys copulate frequently before and during egg laying, which helps assure that sperm is present at the right time (when the ovum arrives). Incomplete, poorly timed, or insufficient copulations can result in unfertilized eggs.
A nonviable egg occurs when an embryo fails to develop properly and dies. This can happen for many reasons:
So why didn't the eggs hatch? Osprey eggs fail due to it either being infertile or nonviable. Infertile eggs occur when the ovum (egg) is not fertilized before it begins its journey down the female's oviduct. Ospreys copulate frequently before and during egg laying, which helps assure that sperm is present at the right time (when the ovum arrives). Incomplete, poorly timed, or insufficient copulations can result in unfertilized eggs.
A nonviable egg occurs when an embryo fails to develop properly and dies. This can happen for many reasons:
- Insufficient incubation. Eggs must be kept at a proper temperature and turned often. Temperature is vital for development to begin. Eggs must be exposed to temperatures between 99 and 104 degrees°F. Turning eggs prevents the developing embryo from sticking to the side of the egg and provides fresh nutrients for proper development.
- A cracked shell. If the egg shell is pierced or cracked before the embryo is fully developed, it will die. This can be from the egg being stepped on or jostled to vigorously.
- Bacteria or chemical contamination. Contaminants can make their way into an egg and impede or kill the embyro.
10 April 2018
04 April 2018
26 March 2018
07 March 2018
Today marks the second week since the third egg was laid and eleven days for the fifth egg. We don't anticipate the third egg being viable as it was not incubated for several days. The third egg is the mostly brown one.
We believe we could see some chicks after April 11th, which begins the 35th day since the first egg being laid. We haven't had any osprey chicks the last two years so we are anxiously awaiting the month of April.
We believe we could see some chicks after April 11th, which begins the 35th day since the first egg being laid. We haven't had any osprey chicks the last two years so we are anxiously awaiting the month of April.
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