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To: Red_Devil 232

A reluctant gardening ping?


9 posted on 03/02/2011 7:07:33 AM PST by tubebender (Now hiring Tag Line writers. Full time low pay)
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To: tubebender

Preppers have been storing seeds.....check out this article about the food chain and think about the impact of it.

Eagles fall out of the sky over Washington- more evidence food chain unraveling

http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2011/02/25/eagles-fall-out-of-the-sky-over-washington-more-evidence-food-chain-unraveling/

February 25, 2011 – VANCOUVER, WA – When David Hancock saw the bald-eagle count on the Chehalis River drop from more than 7,000 to fewer than 400 over a few days in December, he knew a crisis was coming. Earlier this week, news reports that starving eagles were “falling out of the sky” in the Comox Valley, on Vancouver Island, confirmed his fears. Wildlife rescue centers on the Island have reported birds growing so weak from hunger that they fall out of trees, or fly so clumsily they hit things. One crashed into a roof. Mr. Hancock said a collapse of chum salmon runs has left British Columbia’s bald-eagle population without enough food to make it through the winter, leaving them weak from hunger and forcing thousands of birds to scavenge at garbage dumps. Reports of starving eagles have been coming in from all over the Lower Mainland but seem concentrated in the Comox Valley, he said. Mr. Hancock said about 25,000 eagles flock to salmon rivers in the Pacific Northwest in the fall, to feed on the carcasses of spawning salmon. One of the biggest gatherings is on the Chehalis River, about 100 kilometres east of Vancouver, where as many as 9,000 eagles gather in November and December, drawn by what is usually a large run of chum salmon. The big fish, which average about 6 kilograms, are among the last salmon to spawn and their carcasses are usually available on gravel bars well into the winter. But Mr. Hancock said the chum didn’t arrive in any numbers on the Chehalis this year, reflecting a coast-wide collapse of the species, and then heavy rains washed away what carcasses there were. The birds were forced to disperse, to look for food where they could find it. –Globe and Mail

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/starving-eagles-falling-out-of-the-sky/article1918336/


10 posted on 03/02/2011 8:45:39 AM PST by Whenifhow
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