Showing posts with label Queen Bess Island rebuilding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen Bess Island rebuilding. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 05, 2020

Queen Bess Island

Meet A04! This Brown Pelican is the first confirmed pelican on Queen Bess Island that experienced the DWH oil spill. A04 was captured in Mississippi on August 3rd, 2010 then released 12 days later. This bird & mate are raising young in a nest built with sticks from

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Monday, February 03, 2020

QUEEN BESS ISLAND

”Before we started this restoration last August, only five of the island’s 36 acres were usable for nesting. Now all 36 acres are available, and we have plans to keep it that way for years to come.”
Governor John Bel Edwards
#LongLiveTheQueen👑
 — at Queen Bess.

I posted about the rebuilding of Queen Bess Island in December 2011 at this link:  
https://thanks-katrina.blogspot.com/2011/12/good-news-for-queen-bess-island.html

Monday, December 12, 2011

Good News for Queen Bess Island

THIBODAUX, La. - A $1 million donation is expected to help rebuild a cluster of small islands in Barataria Bay to provide nesting grounds for thousands of Louisiana birds.

Representatives from Shell oil company presented the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary Program with the money at its management conference meeting Wednesday in Thibodaux.

The islands are unnamed spits of land in Barataria Bay east of East Grand Terre island. Richard DeMay, a scientist with the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary Program, tells The Courier ( http://bit.ly/sS3nBh they are as small as 3 to 6 acres apiece.

But small as they are, the islands are home to thousands of birds during nesting season, including brown pelicans, gulls, egrets and roseate spoonbills, which pack in beak to beak to roost and raise their young in the spring and summer.

The islands are too small to support predators, which makes them more appealing to birds.

At one time, the islands were as big as 200 acres each. But shoreline erosion from waves and storms has caused them to nearly disappear, DeMay said.

"We should begin this now. These islands are in real jeopardy," said DeMay.

The plan is to build a shield of rocks around the islands to protect them from waves and erosion and then fill in the islands with dredged material to beef them up.

Similar projects have been done on Wine Island in Terrebonne Parish and Queen Bess Island near Grand Isle, DeMay said.

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Information from: The Courier, http://www.houmatoday.com

SOMEBODY STOP THIS

 wearing sunglasses inside and following an event where he at times had a hard time speaking coherently, Elon Musk walks off the CPAC stage ...