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Biologists study black-bellied whistling ducks in urban setting

When the sun comes up in Westwego, you can see the high rises of New Orleans across the Mississippi River. As the morning glow slowly works its way up the Big Easy skyline, Clearview Parkway, Airline Drive, the Pontchartrain Expressway and I-10 are teeming with bumper-to-bumper traffic.
In this setting, most folks aren’t thinking about wildlife. Nonetheless, in the horizon trading back and forth between Westwego and places like Lafreniere Park in Kenner and Audubon Park in New Orleans are black-bellied whistling ducks — thousands of them.
Some 9 years ago, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries biologist Paul Link became interested in the species after working with two other department biologists, Christian Winslow and Mike Pirro, who were banding them in Westwego along the Mississippi River.
What Link discovered when looking into the literature about the black-bellies was there was virtually nothing published on the ducks in Louisiana during the past 30 years and very little in Texas. In reaching out to Mexican counterparts, he learned there had been no formal survey conducted for them south of the border as well.
“Here’s this superabundant bird, right here amongst a half million people in New Orleans and we don’t know anything about them,” said Link, who is the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries’ North American Waterfowl Plan coordinator. “That’s when I got interested, and from then on, it’s just kind of grown from there to what it is now. I’ve been averaging a little over 3,000 regular banded birds a year. And, I also do several hundred color markers.”
In collecting information through the years, Link says he’s assembled kind of a hodgepodge of various types of data trying to connect the dots and put puzzle pieces together to learn more about whistling ducks. In his attempts to obtain critical information on their migration patterns, 20 black-bellied whistling ducks also were fitted with implanted platform transmitter terminals, or PTTs.
Band recoveries, for the most part, were low, Link says. As a result, what the biologist and others theorized initially was black-bellied whistling ducks were making a reverse migration, going back south in the winter. Moreover, perhaps there possibly was reporting issues, where band recoveries were concerned, or conceivably the harvest was just that low in Mexico.
“Everybody suspected that that’s where they were going,” Link said, “They were coming up here in the spring and summer to reproduce and leaving. And, of course there were places like here in the city that keep them in large numbers during the winter and year-round. But what the telemetry data showed me is that they are basically transient residents.”
Essentially, Link says the ducks pair and leave the greater New Orleans area around April and ultimately disperse throughout the state, ending up in the bottomland hardwood and cypress-tupelo swamps.
Staying away from the Westwego area to ensure the telemetry data was unbiased and in anticipation of the hunting season, Link selected 10 birds in southwest Louisiana and 10 in the southeast. One of the 20 birds left the state and nested in the oak hardwoods near Waco, Texas, spending 90 days out west and returned to Louisiana. Another bird explored the Florida gulf coastline for a few weeks and returned to the state to nest south of Alexandria.
“They redistribute quite a bit across the state,” Link said. “A bunch of them nested in the Monroe area and the Lafourche River and Beth River basins, and that was the most informative things for me to learn.”
Out of the 20 black-bellied whistling ducks Link fixed with PTTs, 17 returned within a five-mile radius of Westwego two weeks before the hunting season opened. Two of the 17 wintered in Lafreniere Park.
One of the things Link says from reading Ducks Unlimited Mexico work is there has been a lot of wetland acreage loss in Mexico, where the black-bellied whistling duck population’s trajectory is on a downhill slide. It’s also possible, he says, they’re being displaced from their native areas. However, there’s still much to learn.
Black-bellied whistling ducks, like wood ducks, are cavity nesters often in direct competition with one another for nesting sites. Black-bellies also can be a nuisance in the city. They’re noisy, defecate on buildings and knock over bird feeders.
The antiquated grain elevators where they hang out offer the birds a ready food source along the Mississippi. However, Link theorizes the bigger reason they hang out in Westwego is more for the security than food.
Black-bellied whistling ducks can be harvested during the duck season as part of a hunter’s normal bag limit, but few are killed, resulting in low-band recoveries.
It is theorized that the species could offer some additional harvest opportunities in addition to the normal bag limit, similar to that of mergansers. However, before any additional harvest can be considered, biologists will need to have better population estimates, survival rates and vital statistics.
Additionally, another whistling duck, the fulvous, not only has similar traits as black-bellied, they share the same habitat. Like the black-bellied, there is limited information.
Also, both are nocturnal-crepuscular, where in the twilight, few hunters can tell what species they are shooting at or differentiate what the call (whistle) they make.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Flores is The Daily Review’s Outdoor Writer. If you wish to make a comment or have an anecdote, recipe or story to share, you can contact Flores at 985-395-5586 or at gowiththeflo@cox.net.

Barbier tosses 1-hitter in CCHS rout; Berwick run-rules Kaplan in 5 innings

Central Catholic run-ruled Hanson Memorial 11-0 in five innings in District 7-1A action in Franklin Tuesday. Central Catholic scored six runs in the first and five more in the fifth. The game was called after the bottom of the fifth due to the 10-run mercy rule. Central Catholic’s Luke Barbier tossed a one-hitter. In five innings, he surrendered one walk and fanned 11. Carter Williams and Barbier led Central Catholic’s offense. Williams was 2-for-3 with an RBI and a run, while Barbier was 1-for-4 with three RBIs. Other top Central Catholic offensive contributors were Hunter Daigle, 1-for-3 with an RBI and a run,

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CCHS defeats Hanson Memorial 13-5 in District 7-1A action

Central Catholic High School defeated Hanson Memorial 13-5 in District 7-1A softball action in Amelia Tuesday. Central Catholic took a 4-0 lead in the bottom of the first, and while Hanson cut its deficit to 4-2 in the top of the second and 7-5 in the top of the third, Central Catholic scored six unanswered runs combined in three of its next four at bats for the win. The Lady Eagles, who out hit Hanson 18-7, overcame five errors for the win. Central Catholic had six extra-base hits — four doubles and two triples. Haley Fontenot led Central Catholic’s offense with a 3-for-5 ...

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Berwick, Morgan City Junior High schools take team titles at Lumberjack Relays

Berwick Junior High School’s boys and Morgan City Junior High School’s girls won the team titles at the Lumberjack Relays recently at Patterson High School. Berwick scored 161 points for the boys’ title, while Morgan City Junior High scored 177 points for the girls’ team title. Morgan City swept the individual girls’ awards as Arion Calloway was named Field Most Valuable Performer and Guadalupe Ramirez was Track Most Valuable Performer. On the boys’ side, Patterson Junior High’s Kendall Francois was named Field Most Valuable Performer, and Benjamin Case was the Track Most Valuable Performer. Below are the East St. Mary Parish results from ...

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Berwick's Carline earns LSWA Class 3A All-State Girls Hoops Team honorable mention honors

Berwick High School’s Madison Carline was named a Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class 3A Honorable Mention All-State honoree this postseason.
Carline, a senior, had per-game averages of 19 points, 5.8 rebounds, 6 steals and 3.1 assists.
“It’s a great honor for her to be recognized because she is one of the few athletes who plays basketball at Berwick High,” Berwick High School Assistant Girls Basketball Coach Derek Ribardi said. “She was our floor general. When we needed a score, she was our go-to. Just wish I could have had her for more than one year. Loved the kid’s competitiveness. That’s something either you got or you don’t, and she hated to lose. People overlook her defensively. She is one of the leaders in the state in steals. … I’m very proud she got recognized. I’m going to miss her.”
Loranger swept the individual honors as Jamya Mingo-Young was named the Outstanding Player, while Sean Shields is the Coach of the Year.
Other representatives from District 8-3A, which Berwick competes in, that earned honorable mention recognition, were Kaplan’s Alyia Broussard and David Thibodaux’s Amani Barrow.
Additional reporting by www.theadvocate.com/sports

'Jacks Schexnayder earns LSWA Class 3A Honorable Mention All-State recognition

Patterson’s High School’s Kai Schexnayder earned honorable mention Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class 3A All-State recognition this season. Schexnayder, a junior, had per-game averages of 12.1 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.6 steals. “I felt Kai was deserving of this honor,” Patterson Boys Basketball Head Coach Ryan Taylor said “He has worked hard on his game over the last couple of years. He handled the constant attention from defenses very well. He played hard and in return was able to accomplish a lot of things this season.” Madison Prep swept the individual awards as Jahiem Spencer is the Outstanding Player and Jeff Jones is ...

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Patterson Lumberjacks shut out Kaplan 6-0 in district play

The Patterson Lumberjacks shut out Kaplan 6-0 in District 8-3A action at Patterson Friday. Patterson scored three runs apiece in the third and fifth innings. Reid Perkins earned the win. In seven innings, he surrendered six hits, two walks and fanned eight. Offensively, Randy Paul and Don Diaz led Patterson’s offense. Paul was 2-for-3 with two RBIs, three stolen bases and two runs, while Diaz was 1-for-2 with a double, two RBIs, a stolen base and a run. Other top Patterson offensive contributors were Amarea Christopher, 1-for-3 with an RBI, and Kaden Samuels, 2-for-3. Patterson (13-8 overall, 3-3 in district) will return to action ...

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CCHS finishes 2-0 at South Terrebonne's tournament

Central Catholic fell to Lafayette Christian 8-5 in District 7-1A action in Carencro Monday. No individual stats were available. Saturday, Central Catholic finished 2-0 at South Terrebonne’s tournament, defeating St. James 17-5 in five innings and Central Lafourche 8-7. Against St. James, the game was tied at 2 after an inning, and St. James led 5-4 after two innings. However, Central Catholic scored 10 runs in the third and added three in the fourth. The game was called after the top of the fifth inning due to the 10-run mercy rule. Bailee Lipari led Central Catholic as she was a single shy of ...

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Berwick, Morgan City Junior highs earn Tommy Bourgeois Relays team titles

The Berwick Junior High School boys’ and the Morgan City Junior High School girls’ track and field teams dominated team scoring at the Tommy Bourgeois Relays recently as each earned first-place finishes during the meet March 12 at Geisler Stadium in Berwick. Berwick won the boys title with 174 points, 98 points better than second-place finisher Patterson Junior High. On the girls’ side, Morgan City Junior High won the team title with 168 points, 78 points better than Berwick Junior High. The girls’ Field Most Valuable Performer was Berwick’s Ella Hover, while Morgan City’s Sarah Daniels was the Track Most Valuable Performer. The boys’ ...

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Morgan City girls, Berwick boys win Morgan City Junior High Tiger Relays titles

The Berwick and Morgan City Junior High track and field teams won the boys’ and girls’ team titles at the Morgan City Junior High Tiger Relays last month. In boys’ action, Berwick totaled 170 points for a 96-point advantage over second-place Patterson Junior High, while Morgan City had 191 points for a 101-point lead over Berwick in girls’ team scoring. Morgan City swept the girls’ individual awards as Arian Calloway was the Field Most Valuable Performer, while Guadalupe Ramirez was the Track Most Valuable Performer. On the boys’ side, Patterson’s Kendall Francois was the Field Most Valuable Performer, while Berwick’s Brennan Laurent ...

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Franklin Banner-Tribune
P.O. Box 566, Franklin, LA 70538
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