Wednesday, May 11, 2011

7th/8th May Weekend and Snow Bunting update



It was another quiet weekend at the reserve. The weather is still not warm enough to deposit migrants, with cool overnight temperatures retarding the emergence of leaves, not to mention insects.
Having said that, species diversity is increasing, as are numbers. A total of forty two birds were banded, representing twenty species. The first Palm Warbler of the year was a welcome addition to the list, as was the first Lincoln's Sparrow. No species were there in any abundance however, and this was also noted by the various trail monitors, who enjoyed the sunshine, but precious little bird life.

The final net round produced the bird of the day, a second year male Sharp-shinned Hawk. A right vicious little bastard he proved to be too, as my fingers still attest!
In the customary order of appearance, the following were banded:

Yellow Warbler 4
Lincoln's Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 1
Gray Catbird 3
American Robin 1
Common Grackle 5
Red-winged Blackbird 2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 1
Brown-headed Cowbird 3
Field Sparrow 2
Blue Jay 2
White-throated Sparrow 4
House Wren 1
Western Palm Warbler 1
American Goldfinch 5
White-crowned Sparrow 1
Song Sparrow 1
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
Common Yellowthroat 1
Rose-breasted Grosbeak 2

A retrap Field Sparrow was of interest, having originally been banded as an after hatch year bird on August 23rd, 2008. The lapsed time between banding and recapture is 985 days. Also retrapped was a Yellow Warbler, originally caught 30th May 2009, 710 days earlier!

Brett was busy over at the Bannister Lake location, where he has banded a total of 208 birds since mid April. Highlights include 13 Myrtle Warblers, along with singles of Northern Waterthrush, Great-crested Flycatcher, Baltimore Oriole and Warbling Vireo.

He also conducted a banding demonstration for Jason Bracey's class of Grade 12's, catching 4 Yellow Warblers and a very noisy Rose-breasted Grosbeak. By all accounts the students were thrilled with their first up-close experience of our neotropical migrants. Good job, Brett!

Finally, some interesting news was received on the Snow Bunting project front. One of Bill Read's buntings, banded during after Christmas, was photographed visitin a feeder in Nuuk, capital city of Greenland, on April 22nd! The finder did an excellent job of photograhing the bird, and from these images, was able to make out the band numbers. It will be interesting to see how many of this winter's birds return next winter.

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