biologists speculated the eggs may have had genetic defects or the adoptive parents did not correctly cover the eggs to keep them warm, payer said.
the fact humans handled the eggs could also have been a factor in them not hatching, officials concede. the eggs were taken from their laviolette bridge parents because they were too close to the massive construction project underway on the bridge.
“it is thus a sad outcome of an operation designed to give the eggs the best possible chance, which does not mean the operation itself was a bad decision,” payer said.
“it is not possible to know whether the eggs would have hatched left untouched on the laviolette bridge without human intervention, given the hazards of the wild and the possibility of genetic defects.”
payer stressed the ministry sought the guidance of specialists at falcon environmental, which has a successful track record with such operations, although such a daring transfer was a first.
“everyone had confidence in the process,” payer said, adding the ministry takes steps every year to avoid conflicts between wildlife and construction sites.
the fastest birds in the world, peregrine falcons have nested for years on the laviolette and mercier bridges, but this is the first time the ministry has tried a switch.