It’s been another very busy week on the Squam Lakes, with 5 more loon pairs going on the nest on Squam!  Unfortunately, 2 of those nests failed within days of the nests being initiated (both appeared to be predation by a mammal), but we still have 7 (yes, 7!!) active nests on Squam Lake and the nest on Little Squam is also going strong!  I continue to be astonished and thrilled that so many pairs are nesting early this year.  Thanks to everyone for your help protecting these nesting loons and reminding lake users to be respectful of the loons and of the signs and rope lines around the nests!
This week begins a new “Meet the Loons of Squam” series, our tour of the Squam Lakes introducing the loon pairs and updating you on who’s in and who’s out at the various territories.  Please see the P.S. below as we pay a visit to the incredibly productive loons at Little Squam!
Please do not hesitate to contact me with any questions, concerns, or reports, and please report any sick, injured, or dead loons to the Loon Preservation Committee at (603) 476-5666 (476-LOON).
Thank you for your interest in Squam’s loons!
Tiffany
P.S. “Meet the Loons of Squam”-Little Squam pair:  Little Squam has been on a remarkable run of cranking out loon chicks, thanks in no small part to some truly remarkable loons that have been in the territory for many years.  The success of the loons on Little Squam underscores the importance of stable, long-term, established pairs in contributing to future generations of loons.  Let’s take a look at who’s there now and who’s behind all the chicks of Little Squam!
The story of the current pair begins in 2010, when the female arrived on the lake, but it really goes back further than that when we look at who she paired up with.  Some of you may remember the “Grand Old Male” of Little Squam who, sadly, died early in 2017 while spending the winter off the coast of Massachusetts.  During his 15 year run on Little Squam, he hatched 15 chicks and 12 of them fledged-a truly remarkable number of loon chicks!  Just over halfway through his reign on Little Squam, the current female arrived after the presumed death of her predecessor, who had been seen tangled in fishing line late in the season in 2009.  The two paired up-but little did the old male know what he was getting into!
His new mate was, well, everything a loon parent shouldn’t be!  She apparently had better things to do than spend time with her new chicks.  Once the chicks had hatched from her nest that first year, she was pretty much nowhere to be found-I wouldn’t even see her out on the lake!  To this day, I don’t know where she spent all her time.  In short, the male was essentially a single parent raising those chicks that first year; but good, experienced, loon parent that he was, he pulled it off.  The following year, the female had apparently learned a little, but not a lot-the male was still more or less a single parent.  Finally, by their third year together, she had learned the ropes, and she hasn’t looked back-she is now an old pro at raising loon chicks!  I found it fascinating to watch her learn how to be a good loon parent-as well as to see just how much her mate stepped up to make up for her inexperience!
After this somewhat rocky start, the pair settled in, hatching 9 chicks and successfully raising 7 of them during their 7 years together before the male’s death.  This is a rate of 1 chick per year-nearly twice the statewide average!  So, needless to say, when the male died, not only was I sad for the death of such a wonderful loon, but I was concerned what this would mean for raising chicks on Little Squam.  But the female learned her lessons well, and she is now the experienced old hand in the territory.  An unbanded male arrived in 2017 and they nested, but a chick that hatched disappeared immediately and the second egg didn’t hatch.  But things improved from there:  she paired with an unbanded male again in 2018 and 2019-likely the same one as in 2017-and they produced a chick each year.  We were able to band the male in 2019, and he is back with her again this year.  No doubt her parenting experience has benefited them as they have raised their chicks.  At least she doesn’t have to work quite as hard to make up for the slack as her old mate did when she was a newbie-her new mate is definitely more dedicated to raising chicks than she was in her first couple years!  I hope this pair will have many years together and continue the grand tradition of cranking out lots of chicks on Little Squam!
Welcome to the 2020 Squam loon season!  I hope you are all staying safe and well.

Loon pairs have been busy settling in on their territories, and some pairs have gotten right down to business!  In fact, the past week has been a flurry of activity as pair after pair have gone on their nests!  We already have 4 pairs nesting on Squam Lake and the Little Squam pair has started nesting too.  This is a good (and fast!) start!  Loon nests initiated earlier in the season have a better chance of success, so I’m hoping this bodes well.  Please remind your friends, neighbors, and other lake users to respect the protective signs and ropes around the loon nests and to give the loons plenty of space.  There are still a few pairs that haven’t clearly settled on their territories, but hopefully it won’t be much longer before they do!

I’m sure many of you heard about the new fish consumption guidelines that NH Department of Environmental Services announced in late March for the Squam Lakes as a result of finding elevated levels of PCBs in the fish.  Their investigation was a follow up to the research of the Loon Preservation Committee documenting elevated levels of contaminants (including PCBs) in unhatched loon eggs from failed nests on Squam Lake and our subsequent identification of areas with contaminated sediments in the watershed, including a site with elevated levels of PCBs.  This certainly demonstrates how loons are sensitive indicators of the health of aquatic ecosystems and potentially, as in this case, threats to human health as well.  For more information on the fish consumption guidelines, please visit https://www.des.nh.gov/media/pr/2020/20200330-squam-lake-fish.htm.

I hope many of you were able to attend the virtual public forum highlighting research into the contaminants issue on Squam in April.  Presenters included representatives from Loon Preservation Committee, Plymouth State University, NH Department of Environmental Services, and Squam Lakes Association.  If you were unable to attend, you can catch up by visiting https://loon.org/lpc-work/squam-lake-study/ and clicking on the red button titled “Squam Contaminants Public Forum” below the banner.

As always, please do not hesitate to contact me with any questions, concerns, or reports, and please report any sick, injured, or dead loons to the Loon Preservation Committee (603-476-5666). 

Thank you for your interest in Squam’s loons, and be well!
Tiffany

Frequently-asked Questions About the Decline of Squam’s Loons

Could these contaminants be coming from the ocean, rather than from Squam?

LPC’s data indicates that ocean contaminants and pathogens, while present, are unlikely to be the driving force behind the decline of loons on Squam. Data from banding done by LPC and the Biodiversity Research Institute in Gorham, Maine, indicates that Squam’s loons do not migrate or overwinter as a group. Loons breeding on Squam probably overwinter over a large stretch of the Atlantic, from Maine to Rhode Island. Therefore, any contaminants or pathogens picked up on the ocean would affect loons on many lakes and not be specifically focused on Squam as these declines seem to be. Research also indicates that the materials in eggs primarily come from recent (within three week) dietary sources, an additional fact pointing to Squam as the source of contaminants in loon eggs.  Stable isotope testing conducted by LPC on these eggs indicated that, while there may be some mix of freshwater and ocean sources supplying nutrients to the egg, the majority of the material deposited in the egg comes from freshwater sources.

Could Squam’s loons simply be migrating to nearby lakes rather than expiring?

LPC’s research and monitoring indicate that emigration of loons cannot explain the drop in Squam’s loon population. We know from tracking the movements of banded loons that few loons disperse farther than 10 miles after they have lost a territory. LPC has not recorded an increase in the loon population of neighboring lakes, and banded loons that have disappeared from Squam have not been sighted on other lakes. These findings suggest that the territories vacated on Squam during the decline are a result of mortality, rather than emigration of loons.

Could the Squam eagles be contributing to the decline? 

Like recreational use of Squam, eagles are more likely to contribute to reduced productivity of loons than to mortality of adult loons. There have been a few cases of eagles predating adult loons in the Midwest, but these loons are only half to two-thirds the size of our large New England loons. Eagles established themselves on Squam in 2002 and first bred successfully in 2003, and Squam loons fledged 26 chicks over those two years. It is possible that Squam’s eagles might have developed a taste for loon chicks over the past several years, but LPC has not heard of any eye-witness accounts of eagles predating loon eggs, chicks or adults on Squam.

Could density dependence (i.e., too many loons) on Squam have contributed to the decline?

Data collected by LPC since 1975 does not indicate that density dependence is a factor on Squam Lake.  Although loon chicks have been killed on Squam by intruding loons, there is no clear relationship between the number of loons recorded on the lake and the rate of chick survival on Squam. If density dependence was impacting adult loons, we would expect to find carcasses of adults killed by other loons. Since 2004, only one adult loon has been collected on Squam that was killed by another loon.

What are the next steps for the Squam Lake Loon Initiative?

Click here for the latest report to learn more about what has been happening on Squam recently.