It never fails to occur.
At the time of year which is the most beautiful and   attracts the most people to Central Park. At the time when our abandoned   domestic ducks appear to be the most robust and contented. When the living   appears to be the easiest and food is plentiful and when weather and   temperatures are the most comfortable with few natural predators around.    
That is when the Grim Reaper seems to appear out of nowhere   and swoop up one of our flightless,   feathered friends.
Danny is the apparent victim this time.  
Danny is one of the two domestic ducks (Dennis being the   other) surviving at Central Park's boat lake for the past two and half   years. 
Danny lost his original flock mate last spring (who, like   him, simply vanished one day into thin air.)
And both male, Black Swedish ducks had previously lost   the female domestic duck who had flocked with them throughout the previous   fall and winter.
All three ducks had become friendly with and flocked with   Dennis, a male Khaki Campbell duck who had lost his female mate two springs   before. 
In the more than four years Dennis has been   (miraculously) eking out survival in Central Park's boat lake, he   has now lost three companion ducks and flock mates. All three domestic   ducks suddenly vanished one day in the spring. And all three had previously   been healthy and robust, showing no signs of stress, illness or injury   before suddenly disappearing into nothingness.  
The same, exact scenario has played out at Harlem Meer in   Central Park for a number of years. 
Of the fourteen (abandoned) domestic ducks I have   observed at the Meer over seven years, six eventually had to be rescued,   one died of illness during the summer, one is still   (supposedly) hanging in there and six suddenly vanished one day   in the spring after displaying no signs of distress. 
And yet all had survived at least one winter at Harlem   Meer -- in the cases of 2013 and 2014, particularly brutal winters in which more   than 90% of the lake was covered in ice for most of the season.   
So what could account for these sudden   disappearances -- especially at a time of year when the birds are   otherwise doing well and life is the easiest?  
It is not a matter of a domestic duck suddenly upping and   flying away. Domestic ducks are only able to fly a few feet off the ground.   Moreover, even were it possible for them to fly somewhere, they would not leave   their flockmates. These ducks are extremely bonded to one another, whether   opposite or same sex. (As previously noted, domestic ducks are extremely chatty   and obviously speak the same language -- which is what likely brings them   together in the first place.)
It also doesn't appear to be a situation of natural predation.   
There are not many natural duck predators in Central Park. The   few that might exist, (such as Redtail Hawks) are not common to the park in   the spring. (I personally haven't seen any Redtail Hawks since the end of   winter.)
Other potential animal threats -- such as unleased dogs   allowed to swim in lakes by their owners -- are more likely to injure   a duck than kill and make disappear. (One of the domestics rescued from Harlem   Meer some years ago was attacked by a dog and was left with a gaping wound.   But he survived after taken to the Wild Bird Fund and treated.)   
Raccoons live around the Central Park, but represent virtually   no threat to healthy ducks. Moreover, the ducks are well aware of raccoons and   show no fear of them.
With harsh weather, lack of food availability and   predator threat virtually eliminated as causes for domestic duck losses in   Central Park during the spring, that leaves only two other options: Sudden   illness or nefarious human action. 
In all cases of sudden disappearances of domestic   ducks in CP, none of the birds had shown any signs of being ill, weak,   lethargic or injured up to the time they vanished. 
Personally speaking, I suspect fowl play (no pun intended) on   the part of humans in all such disappearances. 
Perhaps it is no small irony that on the   very day I spent searching the entire boat lake for Danny, I also   encountered a fisherman using a sizable net to capture a large carp near   Oak Bridge -- the very area that Dennis and Danny tended to roost in the   evenings. 
The fisherman went to the edge of the lake to entrap the carp   and then dragged the fish on to the bridge in order for his friends to snap   photos. 
"Oh, this is a feisty one!" the fisherman exclaimed   as the fish frantically thrashed and struggled on the   bridge.
Watching the unpleasant scene, I finally asked the young   man when he was going to return the fish to the water as required by Central   Park rules? 
"These fish can stay out of the water an hour!" the man   angrily barked. "And what's it to you? Mind your own business!"   
I began to also take photos and it was only then that the   man finally took the fish back to the water after having it out a good five   to seven minutes. 
The fish appeared dazed when returned back to the water and   took some minutes to regain composure and swim.
"These fish don't belong in Central Park anyway!" the   man muttered while reluctantly walking away. "They are an invasive species."   
Well, I guess one could say that domestic ducks "don't belong   in Central Park" either and "are an invasive species" -- even though it is   people who put them there in the first place. 
But, it seems as people abandon and put in, they also take   out. 
While I cannot say with any certainty or proof that it was the   fishermen who took Danny from the CP boat lake, they had the   equipment to capture a domestic duck on the water (i.e. sizable net). That they   were in the same area where the two domestic ducks typically roosted at night,   can be chalked up to "coincidence."
But I felt so bad when finally leaving the boat lake and   seeing Dennis so alone and grieving once again, the loss of his very   special friend and constant companion. 
He was swimming mere feet from where the fisherman   had just snagged the carp.  -- PCA
                                                                 ***********

 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment