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Birds & Science
> Important Bird Areas
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Greenwich Point Park and Nearby Islands
Greenwich, Fairfield County
Status: Recognized IBA
Ownership: Town of Greenwich
Nominator: Gary Palmer
Size: 147+ Acres
Location: 73° 35’ W, 41° 00’ N
Habitats:
Primary—Deciduous forest
Secondary—Shrub, field, salt marsh, estuary, sandy beach, and islands
Land Use:
Primary—Other recreation and tourism, nature and wildlife conservation
Threats:
Serious—Invasive or non-native plants, hydrologic changes (rising sea level, erosion on islands)
Minor—human disturbance

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Greenwich Point Park's peninsular geography and undeveloped nature make it a migrant magnet, attracting thousands of migratory birds each year, such as Cedar Waxwings. Photo by AJ Hand, courtesy of the Connecticut Ornithological Association, the COA Electronic Committee and webmaster Dave Provencher.
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Site Description: Greenwich Point Park is immensely popular and offers beaches, picnic areas, boating, claming, a secluded garden, nature areas and a museum. There is a circular trial around the peninsula. Access is limited from April 1 through November 30 to protect fragile natural resources. Islands adjacent to the park include: Greenwich Island, which has a rocky shore with some trees, Bluff Island, which is rocky with some low vegetation, similar Diving Island, and Sand or Pelican Island, a sand/gravel island that has been eroded in recent years.
IBA Criteria: 500+ waterfowl (winter)/1000+ waterfowl (staging); 100+ terns, 500+ shorebirds; 5000+ raptors; Rare, Unique, or Representative Habitat; High Conservation Priority Species; Exceptional Concentrations of Migratory Landbirds.
Birds: Due to the park’s peninsular geography and the variety of habitats available it is an important migrant stopover habitat for many species of birds. Good numbers of waterfowl winter offshore and in Eagle Pond, many raptors pass the park in fall migration and the park acts as stopover habitat for some of them. The offshore islands offer breeding habitat for Common and Least Terns.
Existing Conservation Measures: Access to the park is limited during nesting season. This reduces the public impact on nesting wildlife. The park is popular year-round. Some invasive control work has been done by the town and the Friends of Greenwich Point Park.
State-listed Species:
Species
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Breeding
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Winter
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Migration
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Dates
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Common Tern, SC
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100 pr. Formerly
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-
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√
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Up to 2001
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Least Tern
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√, Formerly
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-
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√
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Up to 2001
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American Oystercatcher, SC
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4-8 pr
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√
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√
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