Rare Falcons Showcase Wilderness Research Opportunities on Urban Campus
Stop by Calvin鈥檚 campus and you may notice that people are looking to the skies a bit more often than usual. A pair of rare merlin falcons and their three now fledged babies have taken residence on Calvin鈥檚 campus, and they are captivating both community birders and researchers alike.
Biology professor William Miller and his team of student researchers first noticed the pair of merlins in June and realized that this was a unique opportunity to observe and gather data on their behaviors. Merlins, a medium-sized falcon roughly the size of a blue jay, are rarely found south of the Upper Peninsula in the summer months.
鈥淚t surprised us,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 expect to find a bird like that on campus鈥攕o far south of their typical summer range. Merlins usually breed up north in Canada and northern Michigan. Many field guides list them as 鈥榮carce sightings鈥 in the Grand Rapids area. To see them here during the summer months is rare, and to have a residential pair on campus is really special!鈥
The environmental health and conservation student researchers, Andre Kapteyn, Abigail Liebetreu, Emilia Shokoohi, and Andrew Vander Tuig, have enjoyed being able to directly apply the skills they have learned in their courses to this project.聽
鈥淲e go out and we observe the birds for about 30 minutes after the first spotting,鈥 said Shokoohi of their observation process. 鈥淚f we see it or hear its call, we start the timer. We then watch the movements, listen for its call, and see how it interacts with other birds. We take notes on its behavior like if it is perched, flying, or calling. How dispersed are the calls? How many do we see?鈥
A wildlife goldmine in an urban setting
Studying wildlife on an urban campus may seem limiting at first thought, but Miller argues that it actually is quite the opposite.
鈥淲e have a gem of natural spaces in an urban matrix at Calvin. It鈥檚 really one of the things that drew me here as a professor,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淭he Ecosystem Preserve alone is a really cool natural lab for environmental health and conservation students and other biology programs.鈥
Every semester, Miller takes his animal ecology class out for a night lab at the Ecosystem Preserve and Native Gardens. Deer, frogs, owls, racoons, salamanders, and squirrels are just a sampling of the wildlife that is available for students to study at Calvin.
鈥淲e have a number of vernal pools, little ephemeral wetlands that dry up at certain times of the year that breeding salamanders use,鈥 said Miller, 鈥淭hey breed in these explosive breeding events. If you take your spotlights out on the right night, you can see all these surface-active salamanders that are about a couple inches long just crawling across the ground. You can see things that you don鈥檛 usually get to see and experience in an urban environment. Or hundreds and hundreds of wood frogs and chorus frogs making all kinds of a racket in the middle of the night.鈥
Interconnections Among Creation
From firsthand study of creatures like frogs, salamanders, and merlins, environmental health and conservation students at Calvin quickly learn about the interconnectedness among all of God鈥檚 creations.
鈥淭he more I learned about the natural environment, the more I understood the idea of how everything is connected. Each ecosystem is so interconnected that the smallest creatures have an impact on the largest creatures,鈥 said Vander Tuig.
鈥淎s Christians, we want to learn more about God鈥檚 creation and the relationships with its parts,鈥 continued Vander Tuig. 鈥淲e want to take care of God鈥檚 creation, but we also want to problem solve out of curiosity鈥攚hy are these birds here? For me, it is satisfying to learn about these relationships. There are a lot of benefits to following your curiosity and to fulfill our calling of taking care of God鈥檚 creations.鈥
Calvin鈥檚 students and professors are not the only ones following their curiosity about the merlins. Real-time data reported on eBird, an online database of bird observations, indicates that many community bird watchers are visiting Calvin鈥檚 campus to spy the merlins themselves.聽
鈥淚t has brought me so much joy to see this bird bringing happiness to people,鈥 said Shokoohi. 鈥淚t makes people鈥檚 days to see it. It鈥檚 really cool to witness that.鈥
And it鈥檚 in her own backyard.