Bird Friendly Communities
Live Bird Cameras
Menunkatuck in Action
Community Programs, Field Trips, and Festivals
Once considered a wasted resource and a hazard in forest landscapes, dead trees and logs are now known to be valuable and essential parts of a healthy forest ecosystem. Join Margery Winters of the Roaring Brook Nature Center to learn how they provide habitat and food for many terrestrial and aquatic species, act as seedbeds for new trees, and serve as a source of water, energy, carbon, and nutrients for the entire forest.
For a relatively small state, Connecticut is blessed with two of the nation's largest and most biologically significant estuaries — places where salty ocean water mixes with freshwater. The Connecticut River and Long Island Sound estuaries are two of the planet's most productive ecosystems, and these are no hidden treasures. International groups have long recognized the wildlife riches of our region, as we've seen in the recent Federal designation of parts of our coast and rivers within the new National Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR).
The lower Connecticut River is the most pristine large-river tidal marsh system in the Northeast, thanks mainly to the lack of a major port at or near its mouth. Constantly shifting sandbars and sediment reefs have always made the lower Connecticut River a difficult place for larger ships. The lack of an urban, industrialized port has preserved the unspoiled rural character of the landscape around the river and protected its many brackish and freshwater environments.
In addition to hosting large populations of migratory waterfowl, the rich tidal marshes of the Connecticut are home to several rare, threatened, or endangered species, including the Bald Eagle, Shortnose Sturgeon, Puritan Tiger Beetle, and the tiny, beach-nesting Piping Plover and Least Tern. This talk will look at some of the glories of our local shore and river wildlife, and the likely impact of human activity and climate change on the Sound and the River.
Naturalist Patrick J. Lynch spent years researching the Connecticut River for his new book A Field Guide to the Connecticut River: From New Hampshire to Long Island Sound. The book offers an expansive guide to this majestic region with more than 750 original maps, photographs, and illustrations. Organized around environments rather than particular locations, the book includes geological overviews and descriptions of common plants and animals. Lynch also explains the landscape’s environmental history as well as the effects of centuries of human interventions and the growing fallout from climate change.
Join Highstead, Menunkatuck Audubon, and CPEN as they host the third All Things Pollinator with educational booths, kids’ activities, give-aways, and sale of plants from the UrbanScapes nursery.
Tentative exhibitors include:
Highstead — Ecotype Project, Sowing Seeds and Transplanting
CT-NOFA —Eco-region 59, Ecotype Project, Native ecotype seed, Food and Pollinator Connection
Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station — How to Survey a Flower Garden for Bumble Bees
Pollinator Pathways — Pollinator Pathways in CT
Wiggle Room — Worms and Healthy Soils
Menunkatuck Audubon — Bird friendly native plants
Audubon Connecticut — Bird friendly native plants
WildOnes — Landscaping with Natives
Kellogg Environmental Center — Kids Exploration Pollinators
New Haven Public Free Library — Seed library