Three chicks hatch overnight on âRichmond Falcon Camâ Three fluffy chicks appeared on the Richmond Falcon Cam overnight. (Source: Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources) By NBC12 Newsroom | May 5, 2021 at 10:33 AM EDT - Updated May 5 at 12:02 PM
RICHMOND, Va. (WWBT) - Three fluffy chicks appeared on the Richmond Falcon Cam overnight.
The first look came around 6 a.m. Monday morning after the first two hatched. Based on the fluffy, dried appearance of their downs, officials estimate the chicks hatched sometime overnight.
Just after 6:30 a.m., a third chick was seen when the adult falcon stood to inspect it. Unlike the other two chicks, this one had lots of pink skin exposed. Soon after, once it dried out, it looked just like its fluffy siblings.
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The stream is live on Ameren Missouri s website between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. each day
Credit: Missouri Department of Conservation Author: Sasha Sander (KSDK) Updated: 9:12 PM CDT March 16, 2021
VALLEY PARK, Mo. In partnership with the Missouri Department of Conservation and the World Bird Sanctuary, Ameren Missouri is launching its 10th season of Falcon Cam.
For 13 hours each day, you can watch a pair of peregrine falcons nest and hatch their chicks.
The stream is live on Ameren Missouri s website between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m. each day.
Jeff Meshach, the director of the World Bird Sanctuary, said the Falcon Cam is an educational way to teach viewers about the peregrine falcon as it continues to grow its species, which was at one point at the brink of extinction.
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) The proud Peregrine falcon mother at the UC Berkeley campus now has some new eggs to add to the tower. Annie laid her last of three new eggs Sunday night, in her nest atop the university s Campanile. The mother and her mate, Grinnell, have been seen taking turns incubating the eggs on UC Berkeley s falcon cam. The university s website has a handful of different camera angles to watch the Peregrine falcons and eggs through the hatching process.
This is the falcon parents fifth breeding season on campus. So far, they have raised ten chicks.
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) The proud Peregrine falcon mother at the UC Berkeley campus now has some new eggs to add to the tower. Annie laid her last of three new eggs Sunday night, in her nest atop the university s Campanile. The mother and her mate, Grinnell, have been seen taking turns incubating the eggs on UC Berkeley s falcon cam. The university s website has a handful of different camera angles to watch the Peregrine falcons and eggs through the hatching process.
This is the falcon parents fifth breeding season on campus. So far, they have raised ten chicks.