October 2015

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Giving Monarchs a Boost in Virginia

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Tagged monarch butterfly. Photo by David Mellor.

The peak monarch butterfly migration recently reached northern Mexico, just 500 miles from their final winter destination in the transvolcanic mountain range of central Mexico.  Monarch aficionados worried that Hurricane Patricia would decimate the migrating butterfly population, but the storm weakened and the butterflies detoured into ravines for protection.  There has been a lot of worry about monarchs this year, with new reports that the number of overwintering monarchs in Mexico has dropped 90% over the past two decades.  The US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) is reviewing a petition to list monarchs as an endangered species.   
 
Positive steps to conserve monarch breeding habitat and increase monarch populations are underway.  In May, a federal inter-agency task force released its strategy to promote pollinator health; increasing monarch butterfly populations is one of its three major goals.  The USFWS has launched a campaign to support planting of new monarch habitat across their breeding range.  Virginia Master Naturalists have been doing their part as well, using their volunteer time to educate youth and adults about monarchs, to contribute data on monarchs to several large-scale citizen science studies, and to plan and plant milkweed habitat for monarchs and other pollinators in their communities.  Here we highlight just a few of the many monarch projects underway in our VMN chapters.

PictureOne of several milkweed patches a VMN helped to protect. Photo by Susan Walton.

Making Use of Roadsides
-Submitted by Susan Walton, VMN-Peninsula Chapter
Virginia Master Naturalists and other partners are working with the Virginia Department of Transportation to identify suitable roadside areas that could support pollinator habitat.  In one example, Susan Walton (VMN volunteer – Peninsula Chapter) partnered with Gloucester VDOT Superintendent Kevin Sears to protect three patches of milkweed along Route 17.  Thanks to advice and education provided by Susan, Mr. Sears changed the mowing pattern so that the milkweed patches were not mowed in the summer.  While one patch was accidently mowed, in the other two areas the milkweed bloomed and provided nectar and homes for pollinators throughout the summer. The mowed patch grew back to provide young milkweed for the fall monarch migration.  VDOT has a Pollinator Habitat Program that they are working to implement statewide, starting with a new planting of more than 8,000 pollinator-friendly plants at the Dale City Rest Area on I-95.  Leaders for the project are interested in receiving suggestions for locations where roadside pollinator plants could be located and in recruiting volunteers to help with future efforts.

PictureMonarch release at York High School. Photo by Amber LeMonte.

Schoolyard Milkweed Gardens and Youth Education
-Submitted by Barb Dunbar, VMN-Historic Rivers Chapter
In 2013 the Historic Rivers and Peninsula Master Naturalists partnered with Virginia Cooperative Extension (VCE) to help teachers and students plan, build, and plant a monarch waystation at ten elementary schools and one high school.  Since that time they have had additional schools request their help in creating outdoor classrooms/pollinator habitats for a total of twenty-three schools.  Last year, those schools tagged approximately 650 monarch butterflies that were gathered from the school gardens.  Many were raised in the classroom enabling students the awesome experience of watching the monarchs go through their transformation from egg to adult butterfly.  Some of the schools took on the additional task of testing the monarchs for a protozoan parasite in partnership with the University of Georgia. The project is on track this year to tag another 600+ as they journey to Mexico.  Many of the schools have enlarged their gardens focusing on habitat for birds and frogs.  The Virginia Master Naturalist and VCE Master Gardener volunteers continue to work with the teachers and students providing expertise in planning additions to the garden and more importantly, helping with hands-on lessons for the students.
 


PictureBoone’s Mill Elementary School students plant pollinator habitats on their school grounds with help from Virginia Master Naturalist volunteers.

-Submitted by Rich Brager, VMN-Blue Ridge Foothills and Lakes Chapter
Across the state in Franklin County, VMN volunteers Meg and Rich Brager (Blue Ridge Foothills and Lakes Chapter) assist teachers with an afterschool Junior Master Naturalist (JMN) Program for fourth and fifth graders.  This year the program focused on monarch butterflies.  Each meeting with the children teaches a different aspect of the mon
arch life cycle.  In one session with the students this fall, volunteers guided them through weeding two existing at the school, preparing the soil for new plantings, and planting pollinator plants and seeds in the beds.  Planting locations were carefully documented so that students can make periodic observations on how each plant is doing.

 
“We began this project in order to do our small part to help this situation and more importantly to imbue knowledge and love of nature to our younger generation,” wrote Rich Brager.  “To say the least, the students were exited to work in the dirt wearing gardening gloves and using various garden implements.  To date, our monarch butterfly project has been successful and rewarding.  We will look forward to continue this project through the fall, winter and spring.” 
 
The new raised bed was financed by and built by the Skelton 4-H Center supervised by Amber Wilson.   The Smith Mountain Lake Association also provided funding for the project.

PictureFifth instar monarch larvae on Asclepias tuberosa, Butterfly Garden 1, Pocahontas State Park, Chesterfield, VA. Photo by VMN Pocahontas Chapter.

Tracking Our Monarch Populations
-Submitted by Jennifer Ambs, VMN-Pocahontas Chapter
Monitoring monarch populations is an important part of their conservation, as we need to understand how the populations are changing and if efforts to provide more habitat are making a difference.  There are numerous large-scale citizen science projects focused on monarchs, such as Journey North, Monarch Watch, and the Monarch Larva Monitoring Project, and VMN volunteers are engaged in many of these projects.  The VMN Pocahontas Chapter sent a copy of a letter recently sent to Governor Terry McAuliffe, who had visited Pocahontas State Park on Earth Day 2015 to help put in a monarch butterfly habitat. 
 
“Dear Governor McAuliffe,
 
We are writing to update you on the Monarch Butterfly Garden you initiated in Pocahontas State Park on Earth Day, April 22, 2015. As Virginia Master Naturalists active in the park, we have been monitoring the garden weekly for monarch activity and entering data into the national Monarch Larva Monitoring Project database.  The Monarch Larva Monitoring Project (MLMP) is a citizen science project involving volunteers in monarch research.  It was developed by the University of Minnesota to collect long-term data on milkweed habitat and larval monarch populations, with the goal of understanding spatial and temporal variation in monarch populations.  It aids monarch conservation and increases the understanding of butterfly ecology.  As part of this research, we measured milkweed plants and noted the size and general condition of each plant, the presence of predatory insects, and the development of buds, flowers and seed pods. Our garden is one of only nine sites in Virginia participating in the national database for 2015.
 
We have also registered the garden with Monarch Watch, a project of the University of Kansas that is focused on preserving monarch habitats by creating waystations throughout the migration pathways. The garden at Pocahontas State Park has now been successfully certified as a Monarch Waystation.  As participants in Monarch Watch, we tag adult monarch butterflies in order to track the success rate of their iconic migration.
 
The monarch butterflies found our first-year garden and laid eggs on the milkweed plants.  We observed 6 eggs and the following week in early September, found five monarch caterpillars eating the milkweed plants. By the time of our next visit the caterpillars were gone – but we are confident they found their way to nearby branches and successfully completed their cycle to adulthood.  

We are grateful for your initiative to establish a garden to help protect and preserve the monarch butterflies, a critical link in the pollination chain of Virginia’s agricultural and natural resources. We are currently preparing for a second garden in another area of Pocahontas State Park. At the same time we will continue to monitor the garden that you helped establish.
 
We appreciate your support and are proud to be part of this important conservation effort in Virginia.
 
Sincerely,
 Jennifer Ambs, Project Coordinator
Eric Gray, Mary Camp, Karen Daniel, Wanda Cutchins, Katherine Snavely and Joshquinn Andrews, on behalf of the Pocahontas Chapter of the Virginia Master Naturalists


We look forward to sharing more stories on ways that VMN volunteers are helping monarchs in Virginia!

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From Our Sponsors: VMN Chapters Invited to Adopt a VDGIF Birding and Wildlife Trail!

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Article by Jessica Ruthenberg, Watchable Wildlife Biologist, Virginia Department of Game & Inland Fisheries

The Virginia Department of Game & Inland Fisheries (DGIF) is excited to announce the launching of the Adopt-A-Trail project, a new long-term volunteer opportunity for Virginia Master Naturalists.  The Adopt-A-Trail project is a way for the Virginia Master Naturalists to partner with DGIF to update, maintain and improve the Virginia Birding and Wildlife Trail (VBWT).

PictureVirginia Birding and Wildlife Trail signs mark trail sites.

The VBWT is a statewide driving trail composed of 65 loops connecting the best sites in Virginia for watching birds and other wildlife. It was established in three phases between 1999 -2004, with the goal of increasing awareness, appreciation and conservation of Virginia’s wildlife and native habitats.  When it was completed in 2004, it was the first statewide trail of its kind in the country! All sites are marked with signage and a guide to the trail is available in print and electronically on DGIF’s website at http://www.dgif.virginia.gov/vbwt/


PictureVMN volunteer Kate Short (Pocahontas Chapter) visits one of the Virginia Birding and Wildlife Trail sites to monitor its condition. Photo by Lesha Berkel.

The last major update to the trail guide was completed in 2007, which means it is time for another update, but with 637 trail sites located throughout the Commonwealth, DGIF could sure use some help!
DGIF is inviting chapters of Virginia Master Naturalists to “adopt” loops of the VBWT through the Adopt-A-Trail project. Chapters will “adopt” one or more loops that fall within or near the counties of their chapter’s local area. Project participants will visit assigned sites on their chapter’s loop(s) four times a year to assess conditions at the site, communicate with the site’s owner/ manager, update site information in the VBWT guide, observe and record bird sightings using e-bird, and to record additional wildlife observations into their newly updated Wildlife Mapping program. Future plans include the completion of site evaluations and surveys that will help DGIF to determine the top VBWT sites. All of the information collected will be used to make updates to the VBWT guide, build relationships with site owners/ managers, develop new marketing pieces for the VBWT, and improve the overall quality of the trail for visitors.

The Pocahontas Chapter graciously agreed to pilot the Adopt-A-Trail project for DGIF this fall and have already made great strides. They adopted the Appomattox Loop in Chesterfield County and have done a fantastic job of coordinating all of the logistics on their end necessary for this project. Project participants report that they have found the sign-up process and instructions easy to follow and that this is a great project for members interested in visiting nearby trails that they have never encountered before. The Pocahontas Chapter plans to complete their pilot work by the end of November. 

PictureVolunteers also will record wildlife sightings.

After the pilot phase is completed, DGIF will fine tune the Adopt-A-Trail project as needed to get it ready for more chapters to participate, starting in early Spring 2016. If your chapter is interested in participating in the Adopt-A-Trail project, DGIF would love to hear from you. Please email Jessica Ruthenberg, DGIF’s Watchable Wildlife Biologist at Jessica.Ruthenberg@dgif.virginia.gov to find out how to get started!


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Laurels – Fall 2015

PictureANROSP 2015 award winners from naturalist programs in North Carolina, Virginia, Utah, and California. Photo by Alycia Crall.

The Virginia Master Naturalist program won the 2015 award for “Outstanding Educational Materials” from the Alliance of Natural Resource Outreach and Service Programs (ANROSP.)  ANROSP is a national alliance of Master Naturalist-type programs with member programs from more than two dozen states.  The award is specifically for our new curriculum materials for the “Urban and Developed Systems Ecology and Management” section of the VMN basic training curriculum.  These materials include videos, Powerpoint presentations and scripts, lesson plans for hands-on activities, assessment questions, and evaluation resources.  Development of these materials was funded by an Urban and Community Forestry grant from the Virginia Department of Forestry.  We are honored to be recognized by our peer programs!  


PictureVMN volunteers signed up for daily shifts assisting natural resource professionals with outreach activities at a new State Fair exhibit.

The VMN sponsoring agencies would like to thank all the 75+ volunteers who assisted with the State Fair exhibit!  “I think the VMN volunteers had a good time and provided a wonderful service for our agencies,” says Ann Regn, director of Public Information and Outreach for the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (VDEQ.)
​Volunteers signed up to provide education and outreach at the 3-building exhibit, “Living on the Water: The Chesapeake Bay.”   VMN volunteers received training from VDEQ to prepare them for their work, and then they worked alongside state agency staff to engage visitors in learning about live native animals such as horseshoe crabs and turtles, as well as about what Virginia is doing to improve the health of the Bay.  “I had a blast, and the most fun in months! I’ll definitely volunteer next year,” wrote Nick Koreisha (VMN volunteer, Fairfax Chapter.)  

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Yorktown butterfly survey team, 2015. Photo by Shirley Devan (VMN volunteer – Historic Rivers Chapter)

Picture This Great Purple Hairstreak butterfly was a park record for Yorktown. Photo by Shirley Devan.

Colonial National Historical Park requested assistance from VMN Historic Rivers Chapter volunteers to conduct the Park’s first BioBlitz/Butterfly Survey. 

Ten Chapter volunteers along with 12 other Park volunteers gathered Saturday, September 12 to form three teams to survey Yorktown Battlefields, Colonial Parkway, and Jamestown Island. This survey was a true community effort.

The survey was planned and coordinated by Dorothy Geyer, Natural Resource Specialist, and Peggy Whitney, BioTech Assistant, of the Colonial National Historical Park of the National Park Service. Volunteers spent 7-8 hours in the field on the day of the count and recorded over 70 volunteer hours.

The three teams tallied 42 butterfly species and 740 individuals. A new park record was a Great Purple Hairstreak found by the Yorktown team.  

  • The Yorktown group observed 22 species, including a high count of 82 Common Buckeyes.
  • At Jamestown 28 species were identified, the highest number of the three sections. The most numerous species was the Least Skipper with 34 individuals.
  • Along the Parkway, 25 species were observed with a high count of 89 Common Buckeyes.
  • All three teams spotted Monarch butterflies and a total of 12 individuals.

Per Peggy Whitney: “It was a great success and we couldn’t have done it without all of you.”



PictureDaina Henry receiving award from Jameson Brunkow – James River Association

River Rats – that is what James River Association calls the volunteers who paddle the James River making observations, reporting problems, or doing water quality testing.  This October, VMN Volunteer Daina Henry (Peninsula Chapter) was recognized as the “Outstanding Volunteer for the Lower James River”.  She was commended on her dedication to water quality testing, pursuit of a grant from DEQ to maintain testing, and her involvement in two action projects – a training session for new River Ra
ts, and twice-a-year cleanups of Lucas Creek.


PictureVMN volunteer Don Hearl, Old Rag Chapter. Photo by Pat Temples.

VMN volunteer Don Hearl (Old Rag Chapter) has been chosen as Educator of the Year by the Culpeper Soil and Water Conservation district.  Don has logged more than 500 hours with the VMN program, and he was one of the leaders of the Town of Washington project, which was our VMN Project of the Year in 2014.  His volunteer work with the Culpeper Soil and Water Conservation District has included giving presentations for K-12 students on environmental topics, leading activities for Meaningful Watershed Educational Experiences, judging the Envirothon, and leading other educational programs.  

Laurels – Fall 2015 Read Post »

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The VMN 10th Anniversary Trivia Contest: The Answers and Winners Revealed!

This fall, we held a trivia contest in celebration of the 10th anniversary of the Virginia Master Naturalist program.  Four volunteers submitted at least 8 out of 10 correct answers: Mary Loose DeViney (Rivanna Chapter), Pat Klima (Rivanna Chapter), Kathy Fell (Southwestern Piedmont Chapter), and Karen Dorgan (Riverine Chapter.)  Mary Loose DeViney actually got 10 out of 10 correct!  Each of them is receiving some gear (a fleece pullover or a hat/scarf set) so they can display their VMN pride while doing their volunteer work this winter.

Now for the answers you’ve been awaiting!

1.     We now have annual statewide or regional conferences for the VMN program.  They are a time to come together to celebrate accomplishments of our volunteers, explore a new area of the state, and participate in continuing education.  In what city and in which year was the first VMN statewide conference held?  

2008, Wytheville

2.     At the beginning of the program, we started new chapters in batches.  How many chapters were started in the first wave or cohort of VMN chapters? 

Ten

3.     We are fortunate to have many Virginia state agencies supporting our program.  List each of the seven state agency sponsors of the VMN program by name and indicate which one has joined most recently.

Virginia Cooperative Extension, Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation. Virginia Department of Forestry, Virginia Department of Environmental Quality, Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, Virginia Museum of Natural History, and the Virginia Institute of Marine Science’s Center for Coastal Resource Management (which is the newest sponsor.)

4.     We have been using the same logo since close to the beginning of the program.  What is the scientific name of the organism featured in the VMN program logo?

Papilio glaucus, the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail.

5.     VMN volunteers who re-certify by completing 40 hours of volunteering and 8 hours of continuing education each year now receive special pins with Virginia species.  What five species have been featured on VMN recertification pins?  List them by common name.

 Virginia Big-eared Bat, Flowering Dogwood, Northern Cardinal, Brook Trout, Spring Beauty  

6.     Choosing a chapter name can sometimes be hard!  Which VMN chapter changed its name a year or two after getting started?  Identify both its former and its current name.

We were thinking of the Shenandoah Chapter, which originally called itself the Daughter of the Stars Chapter.  One volunteer submitted another answer we hadn’t considered previously, but that we accepted.  The Peaks View Pioneers was a local Master Naturalist program that existed before our statewide program, but re-organized and became part of our statewide program as the Central Virginia Chapter.

7.     Our program has grown quickly!  How many VMN volunteers had been trained between the beginning of the program and the end of 2014?

3,241.  You can find this number on our 10th anniversary infographic.

8.     Representatives from our sponsoring agencies provide input into the program through two committees.  Name three current members of the VMN Executive Committee.

​You can find the list of Executive Committee members on our website.

9.     In 2013 and 2014, we conducted a needs assessment and strategic planning process for the program to guide us through our next five years.  Name one goal identified for the VMN program to achieve by 2020 in its strategic plan.

​You can find all the strategic goals and the full plan on our website.

10.  We’re still reaching new parts of the state!  What is the name of the newest VMN chapter?

High Knob Chapter, based in Wise County

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