What Are Those Fish? Might Be Migrating Menhaden!

What Are Those Fish? Might Be Migrating Menhaden!

If you’ve looked in the waters around Greenwich lately, you may have noticed massive schools of fish swimming in slow circles near the surface of the water. Commonly seen near bridges and in harbors around this time of year, these foot-long fish are called Atlantic menhaden, or bunker, and they are a very important part of Long Island Sound ecology.

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Local Wildlife Weekly #10: Black Skimmer

Local Wildlife Weekly #10: Black Skimmer

The black skimmer is a truly remarkable animal and, while it remains unusual on the Sound, its numbers seem to be increasing— excellent news for committed birders and amateur nature-lovers alike. So, what makes the skimmer so special? If only there was one reason: the skimmer is visually and audibly enchanting, unique in behavior and ecology, and it’s always found in excellent habitat. What’s not to love? Also, as is typical of the species profiled in this series, the skimmers’ natural history is a gateway to some interesting and contested topics. Let’s explore why!

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Local Wildlife Weekly #9: Common Buckeye

Local Wildlife Weekly #9: Common Buckeye

With summer winding down, many animals are on the move. The days are getting shorter, asters are beginning to bloom, and the bink-bink of migrating bobolinks floats down from overhead. To quote a notable house, “winter is coming.” The common buckeye is a distinctive migratory species that, while unusual most of the year, becomes hyper-abundant along the shores of the Sound in late summer.

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Local Wildlife Weekly #6: Semipalmated Sandpiper

Local Wildlife Weekly #6: Semipalmated Sandpiper

Over the past week I’ve watched (and photographed) hundreds and hundreds of restless semipalmated sandpipers take rest along the beaches of the Long Island Sound. I don’t know where exactly they’ve come from, nor do I know where they’re going. I can’t help but wonder — do they? I wonder what they’d tell us if we were able to listen.

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