News

cleanup

80 People Tackle Trash

With clear blue skies, a bright sun and a gentle breeze, 80 eager volunteers cleaned up trash along the Dyke Marsh and Belle Haven Park shoreline on April 14, 2018, for three hours at low tide.  Many youngsters got school service credit. Everyone got exercise and a great feeling of accomplishment as the bags piled up. 

Dr. Luttrell

Marsh Wrens, Charming Birds

“Marsh wrens are special, very charming birds,” Dr. Sarah Luttrell told the Friends of Dyke Marsh on February 25, 2018.   Her presentation focused on how comparing multiple traits, including plumage color, size, shape, vocal behavior and genetics, reveals a pattern of evolution.  “Genetic variations are very high within a marsh,” she said.

Eagle nest

Bald Eagles Make Dyke Marsh their Home

As of early February 2018, three bald eagle pairs have active nests in the Dyke Marsh Wildlife Preserve.  Observers have seen eagles taking sticks to nests, pairs perched, females incubating eggs and a male taking prey to a female on the nest.  

Bald eagles lay two to three eggs in late winter and females incubate the eggs for five to six weeks.  Between May and July, chicks fledge at 10 to 12 weeks of age.  Nest construction, breeding, nesting and eaglet hatching do not always succeed.

Red fox

Mammals Stand Out on an Icy Dyke Marsh

The January 2018 cold snap and days of subfreezing temperatures brought out winter’s beauty in Dyke Marsh.   Particularly stunning against the icy white background was a red fox (Vulpes Vulpes), photographed by Ed Eder on January 2 off the boardwalk. The fox was prying a piece of dead fish embedded in the ice as another fox called.  Eventually, the vocalizing fox joined the foraging fox.

snow goose

Wintering Waterfowl

Waterfowl numbers in Dyke Marsh, Hunting Creek and along the Potomac River multiply in the winter and many people love to study and identify them.  Waterfowl are ducks, geese and swans, birds that require water bodies or aquatic habitats to survive.  These birds have waterproof feathers, webbed feet and broad bills. 

water stargrass

SAV, Important to the River’s Health

Submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV), native and non-native, is increasing in the Potomac River and helps improve water quality, reported the Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin (ICPRB), citing the September 13, 2017, presentation to the Friends of Dyke Marsh by Dr. Nancy Rybicki, U.S. Geological Survey (see below). 

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Friends of Dyke Marsh

P.O. Box 7183
Alexandria, Virginia 22307-7183
info@fodm.org