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Birds

Postby Brenda » Tue Apr 03, 2007 11:26 am

Greetings all! What a beautiful morning here in the heart of the Finger Lakes! We spotted our first returning Tree Swallow this morning. The herons began to return over the weekend, and we've spotted both green and blue heading north. If anyone has any cool sightings, please let me know. Likewise, if you see anything that you can't identify, I'll be happy to try to help, though I'm no expert. Unlike the majority of the membership, I'll be checking in here during the day, so if you post at night you won't receive a response until the following day. I only have a computer in my office, and I'm rarely out here after business hours. I can force myself to unplug that way. :) I hope to hear from folks!
Last edited by Brenda on Tue May 15, 2007 11:02 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Postby Matt » Tue Apr 03, 2007 12:17 pm

Normally I'm not into birds... I had to watch them non-stop in college, but this summer I'm hoping to get a new camera and high speed telephoto lens... so I'll be out with my audubon guide taking bird shots for the wildlife section.

Speaking of which, that section is in development. I may need your help with identifying species as photos trickle in.
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Postby Brenda » Tue Apr 03, 2007 12:23 pm

I'll be happy to help! BTW, I noticed that you already had the Otisco info complete, after I commented on it. Duh!
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Postby cbobcat49 » Tue Apr 03, 2007 12:32 pm

Every year around late April (bird migration time) I try to head out to Iroquois National Wildlife Refuge. Usually really early on a Saturday morning. There's a heron rookery there. Literally dozens of them nesting. It's cool to watch them fly off into the marsh looking for food for their young. About one takes off every 30 seconds. There's also lots of hawks and sometimes a few bald eagles are seen.

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Postby Brenda » Tue Apr 03, 2007 12:49 pm

I had some guests drive up to Montezuma yesterday. They said there were hundreds of ducks, but they didn't report seeing anything terribly exciting. I know that early mornings are the best time to see activity, but if I suggest that to my guests I'll have to serve breakfast at 6:00! :cry: There are still several GB Heron rookeries along the cliffs on the west side of Cayuga Lake, where it's too high and steep for anyone to build. It is very cool to watch them while drifting past in the boat.
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Postby Jennifer » Tue Apr 03, 2007 5:25 pm

Hi Brenda, I'm just down the road a bit near Watkins Glen. Some friends and I took a ride up to Montezuma on Saturday. We arrived around 9am and saw tons of Canadian Geese. We also saw many grebes, some shovelers, as well as a few heron, snow geese, ospreys. There were even hundreds of carp congregating in the canal trying to reach the warm waters coming through the overflow of the swamp. We found a pair of nesting eagles, too. We arrived just in time to see the "changing of the guard." Two of us left early but the other two wound up seeing a bittern after we left.

http://butterflysis.smugmug.com/gallery/2649997#140074276
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Postby Brenda » Wed Apr 04, 2007 10:08 am

Hi Jennifer,

I really enjoy visiting Montezuma. I think that we'll plan a trip there this weekend, if we don't have anyone here. Aren't those carp amazing? I forgot to mention them to the folks who drove up there the other day. Where is the eagles nest? Tschache Pool? Thanks for reporting your sightings!
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Postby Jennifer » Wed Apr 04, 2007 5:50 pm

Brenda, this was actually my first time there! I've been wanting to go for awhile but hadn't made it.

Yes, the carp were amazing. There were so many!

The eagles were by the locks.

Btw, your cabins look really cute!
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Postby Brenda » Thu Apr 05, 2007 5:09 pm

Thanks for the info, and for checking out my site, Jennifer! I'll be sure to look for the nest this weekend, weather permitting. I'm about ready for a little r&r. I'll report any cool sightings!
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Postby Jennifer » Thu Apr 05, 2007 6:17 pm

You're welcome and good luck!
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Postby Brenda » Fri Apr 06, 2007 1:11 pm

We decided to take a drive up to Montezuma this morning. While we got a late start, it really didn't make too much of a difference as there was a covering of ice over the shallows next to the road along a good portion of the loop, so most of the waterfowl were farther out in the open water. We did see common mergansers, shovelers, cormorants, herons, osprey, and a ton of canvasbacks. The one thing that made the entire drive up there worthwhile was seeing a mature bald eagle fishing just off the road ahead of us, within 30 yards of the vehicle! There was no other traffic on the loop, so we were able to stop and watch it, undisturbed, for several minutes before it left the area. Too cool!
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Postby Jennifer » Fri Apr 06, 2007 5:25 pm

Niiiice! You lucked out!
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Postby cbobcat49 » Sat Apr 28, 2007 6:55 pm

3 of us took a trip to Iroquois this morning. The weather was cold and wet and we didn't see much. Near the heron rookery along route 63 though, the herons were VERY active. There were probably about 7-8 of them milling about in a very small area along the edge of the marsh. Lots of them flying back and forth overhead too. Most had sticks in their beaks. Repairing their nests I guess?

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Postby Brenda » Fri Jun 15, 2007 9:38 am

Populations of 20 common U.S. birds down by half
Audubon blames suburban sprawl, climate change
By Seth Borenstein
The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The populations of 20 common American birds — from the fence-sitting meadowlark to the whippoorwill with its haunting call — are half what they were 40 years ago, according to an analysis released Thursday.

Suburban sprawl, climate change and other invasive species are largely to blame, said the study's author, Greg Butcher of the National Audubon Society.

“Most of these we don't expect will go extinct,” he said. “We think they reflect other things that are happening in the environment that we should be worried about.”

Last month a different group of researchers reported that seven species had dramatically declined because of West Nile virus. The species harmed by West Nile are different from those listed in the new study — except for the little chickadee, hard-hit on both lists.
Many of the species listed as declining in the new study depend on open grassy habitats that are disappearing, said Butcher, Audubon's bird conservation director.

Some of the birds, such as the evening grosbeak, used to be so plentiful that people would complain about how they crowded bird-feeders and finished off 50-pound sacks of sunflower seeds in just a couple days. But the colorful and gregarious grosbeak's numbers have plummeted 78 percent in the past 40 years.

“It was an amazing phenomena all through the '70s that's just disappeared. It's just a really dramatic thing because it was in people's backyards and (now) it's not in people's backyards,” Butcher said.

For the study, researchers looked at bird populations of more than half a million, which covered a wide range. They compared databases for 550 species from two different bird surveys — the Audubon's own Christmas bird count and the U.S. Geological Survey's breeding bird survey in June. The numbers of 20 different birds were at least half what they were in 1967.

Today there are 432 million fewer of these bird species, including the northern pintail, greater scaup, boreal chickadee, common tern, loggerhead shrike, field sparrow, grasshopper sparrow, snow bunting, black-throated sparrow, lark sparrow, common grackle, American bittern, horned lark, little blue heron and ruffed grouse.

The northern bobwhite and its familiar wake-up whistle once seemed to be everywhere in the East. Last Christmas, volunteer bird counters could find only three of them and only 18 Eastern meadowlarks in Massachusetts.

The bobwhite had the biggest drop among common birds. In 1967, there were 31 million of this distinctive plump bird. Now they number closer to 5.5 million.

“Things we all think of as familiar backyard birds ... they appear in books and children's stories and suddenly some of them are way less familiar than they should be,” said John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell ornithology lab, who was not part of the study.

Audubon Board Chairman Carol Browner, former head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, called the declines “a warning signal.”

“We are concerned. Is it an emergency? No, but concerns can quickly become an emergency,” she said.

While these common birds are in decline, others are taking their place or even elbowing them aside. The wild turkey, once in deep trouble, is growing at a rate of 14 percent a year. The double-crested cormorant, pushed nearly to extinction by DDT, is growing at a rate of 8 percent a year, and populations of the pesky Canada goose increase by 7 percent yearly.

Many of the birds that are disappearing are specialists, while the thriving ones are generalists that do well in urban sprawl and all kinds of environments, Butcher said. In a way it's the Wal-Mart-ization of America's skies, he said.

“The robins, the Carolina wrens, the blue jays, the crows, those kinds of birds, are doing just fine, thank you,” Butcher said. “They really get along in suburban habitats, most of them even like city parks ...”

But nothing matches the take-over ability of one invading bird.

“Right now the Eurasian collared-dove is conquering America,” Butcher said. The bird first entered Florida in the 1980s. It is the most prevalent bird there and is in more than 30 states.

“Soon you'll be seeing Eurasian collared-doves in any city in the world,” he said.






Originally published June 15, 2007
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Postby Matt » Fri Jun 15, 2007 10:06 am

sad.
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