It’s a success story for the birds! An increasing number of Osprey are spending their summers in Connecticut after migrating from as far away as Florida and Sou...

It’s a success story for the birds! An increasing number of Osprey are spending their summers in Connecticut after migrating from as far away as Florida and South America, and the surging numbers are partially due to human help.

The masked raptor’s numbers were not always as strong in the 1950s and 60s. Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, also known as DDT, was sprayed over wide areas of the northeast as a pest control. Unfortunately, the chemicals ended up in the water and worked their way up the food chain to the fish that the osprey survive on.

Once in the bird’s system, DDT had the devastating outcome of causing eggshell thinning. Melina Giantomidis, the coordinator of Osprey Nation, told us why that’s a problem. “It causes a lack of calcium in the shells, so whenever an osprey would sit on their egg, it would crack.”

She chatted with us at the Connecticut Audubon Society’s Milford Point Coastal Center recently, telling us how far these birds have come.

“In 1969 there were about 16 active nests, and in 2018 (last year) we had about 416 active nests”

After DDT was banned in 1972, the osprey numbers slowly began to soar.

These birds are flourishing now along the Connecticut shoreline and even inland, but the Audubon Society needed a little bit of help to gather all this data.

Osprey nation was created in 2014, and it brings in the community to get a bird’s eye view of the data. Anyone can sign up to volunteer.

“It’s a citizen science program strictly based off observations to monitor the osprey’s populations,” Giantomidis told us.