The Delaware Bay is the second largest and most diverse bay on the East Coast. It has a rich cultural history, has played an important role in the region's commerce and tourism, and has spectacular and vital natural resources. Birdwatchers gather along its shores to watch the spectacle of thousands of spawning horseshoe crabs, the dense flocks of migrant shorebirds, the fall hawk migration, and the huge migration of monarch butterflies.
Life Along the Delaware Bay focuses on the area as an ecosystem, the horseshoe crab as a keystone species within that system, and the crucial role that the bay plays in the migratory ecology of shorebirds. An overabundance of horseshoe crabs spawning on the Delaware Bay beaches results in an abundance of eggs brought to the surface, providing a source of high-quality food and bringing hundreds of thousands of shorebirds to the bay to forage in late May and early June. A slight decline in horseshoe crabs has resulted in a rapid and dramatic decline in birds, particularly the red knot. This decline has sounded an alarm throughout the world, prompting a host of biologists to converge on the bay each spring, to understand the biology and conservation of red knots and other shorebirds.
Life Along the Delaware Bay examines current efforts to protect the bay and identifies new efforts that must take place to ensure it remains an intact ecological system. Over three hundred stunning color photographs and maps capture the beauty and majesty of this unique treasure – one that must be protected today and for generations to come.
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Cape May, Gateway to the Delaware Bay
2. Horseshoe Crabs
3. The Most Important Stopover of the Western Hemisphere
4. Red Knots
5. Ruddy Turnstones
6. Sanderlings
7. Mud Birds
8. Gulls
9. Tidal Rivers and Marshes
10. Against the Tide: Threats and Conservation Efforts
Index
Lawrence Niles is a scientist for Conserve Wildlife of New Jersey and served as chief of the Endangered and Nongame Species Program of the State of New Jersey. He is a coauthor of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife of New Jersey (Rutgers University Press) and has written numerous scientific papers and articles on migratory shorebirds and raptors.
Joanna Burger is Distinguished Professor of Biology at Rutgers University. She is the editor or author of numerous books, including Naturalist Along the Jersey Shore and 25 Nature Spectacles of New Jersey (both Rutgers University Press) and has received the Brewster Medal from the American Ornithologists' Union and the Distinguished Achievement Award from the Society of Risk Analysis.
Amanda Dey is a principal zoologist for the State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and has worked for over ten years on the preservation of red knots and other shorebirds on Delaware Bay. She is the recipient of the Conserve Wildlife Foundation's Leadership Award for her work on migratory shorebird conservation in New Jersey.
"The book takes an ecological approach and is richly illustrated with hundreds of beautiful color photos."
– Wildlife Activist