Early in the morning on February 9 In the Lake Wales Ridge State Forest: Biological Scientist Hanna Rosner-Katz briefs Ridge Rangers and Forestry Staff on the day’s work plan to remove brush to give rare plants sunlight and space to grow.
February 26: Ridge Ranger Julie Haviland re-pots scrub oak sprouts from tray cells into one-gallon containers with fertilizer and organic material. The scrub oaks started as acorns at an FWC site, which were gathered by Ridge Rangers and first potted last fall by attendees at the CCC Days Festival at Highlands Hammock State Park. The oaks will grow around 10 inches before summer and then be planted in a scrub restoration area.
Kestrel Nest Box Maintenance – Photo 1: A Screech Owl squatting in a Kestrel Nest Box suddenly flies out as Ridge Rangers insert a peeper cam to check box status. February 16 at FWC Silver Lake.
Kestrel Nest Box Maintenance – Photo 2: February 23 at FWC Platt Branch -- Ridge Ranger Harry Ressler cleans old debris out of a Kestrel Nest Box prior to adding new nesting material. Harry was part of a team preparing all nest boxes for the upcoming nesting season for the endangered Southeastern American Kestrel.
Kestrel Nest Box Surveys Coming
The annual nest box surveys on the threatened Southeastern American Kestrel start in April, and we’re looking for help!
For details, please see “Kestrel Nest Box Survey Training” in the March Ridge Rangers events below.
We’ll be removing several hundred feet of plastic barrier screening used in monitoring Gopher Tortoise activity, which will help return the site to a natural state. We'll be moving along the barrier with an off-road vehicle, rolling it up and pulling the small posts, and placing the removed material in the vehicle
This is a great chance to see the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Hatchineha site!
The Hatchineha Unit is part of the US FWS’s Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. The unit is publicly accessible and is also a FWC Wildlife Management Unit. Hatchineha consists of 1,460 acres of pine flatwoods, scrub, and marshes adjacent to Allen David Broussard Catfish Creek Preserve State Park in Haines City.
Highly invasive cogan grass was recently discovered at Jack Creek, and the extent of the problem needs to be quickly understood (FWC will separately eliminate the invasive plant). We’ll be walking through the problem areas with GPS units and recording any additional locations of cogan grass we find.
The problem area underwent a wildfire last year and has uneven terrain with downed trees and limbs.You’ll want to wear good footwear, long pants, and of course a shirt and hat for sun protection.
The unique habitat found on FWC Jack Creek includes bay swamp, cutthroat grass seeps, sand pine scrub, hardwood hammock and pine flatwoods. These habitats are rich in natural beauty. The bay swamp habitat dominates the property with abundant red bay, sweet bay and red maple trees. The Jack Creek tract is significant because it protects a large stand of Lake Wales Ridge scrub. This rare community provides habitat for one of the densest concentrations of endangered communities in the world. Cutthroat grass seep communities are also endangered and are restricted almost exclusively to Polk and Highlands counties.
Help Restore Prairie Habitat for Rare Species at Avon Park Air Force Range
Avon Park Air Force Range is requesting assistance from the Ridge Rangers to help restore both native wet grasslands, scrub and rare plant habitat on the base. We would like the Ridge Ranger volunteers to assist with the removal of woody encroachment, including slash pines, sand pines and myrtles, that have invaded into some of our otherwise intact wet grassland and scrub habitats. Removal of the young pines and shrubs in rare plant habitat will enhance and ensure the long term viability of some of our rarest orchids and other plants in the region.
We’ll be using hand tools to cut down small slash pines and myrtles to help restore the original prairie habitat to help rare and endangered species.
The Avon Park Air Force Range’s extensive natural and cultural resources are managed to maintain their unique ecological characteristics and to ensure the long term sustainability of the Range’s military training mission. The program is one of the most extensive in the Air Force and encompasses protecting wetland and endangered species habitats as well as utilizing these resources for numerous benefits.
Looking for help for FWC’s annual Kestrel Nest Box Surveys! The surveys are done once per month April through June at six different sites in the Lake Placid/Avon Park area, and are done with another trained person at the team’s convenience.
This is the training for the surveys, where you’ll learn about:
The threatened Southeastern American Kestrel and how this survey helps
Survey Protocol
Use of the Peeper Scope Camera System (we don't use ladders).
The Southeastern American Kestrel (Falco sparverius paulus) is a non-migratory subspecies of kestrel found in open pine savannahs, sandhills, prairies, and pastures in Florida and the southeastern United States. It is listed as threatened in Florida due to a decline in nesting and foraging habitat. In the training you'll learn how biologists are using nest box programs to increase populations of this rare bird.
2 0 1 9 is t h e 2 5 t h A n n i v e r s a r y o f t h e R i d g e R a n g e r s
Want to participate in the Ridge Rangers program? Apply here, or just look on our calendar, sign up for a workday and come on out! There are no dues and no commitments in the Ridge Ranger program.