Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Christmas Bird Counts 2013 - Fighting the Weather


Nature Notes for December 27, 2013

Weather was the major news on the nature front for the past two weeks.

The Port Hope-Cobourg Christmas Bird Count was held on December, an incredibly cold day. The high temperature recorded for the day was only -13ยบ C. An icy wind out of the north-east chilled observers, especially in open locations. There was fog rising over Lake Ontario, so visibility was limited to 100 metres offshore. Snow started in the afternoon, becoming heavy by 3 p.m., which limited visibility even more.

Despite such wretched conditions, thirty-seven observers took to the field, and tallied 15,843 birds of 68 species. An additional 6 species were seen during count week. This was the lowest species count since 1999.

The highlight was a single Great Gray Owl, which was a new species for this count.

Other highlights were: 4 Bald Eagles (tied record high); 1 Red-shouldered Hawk; 231 Wild Turkeys (2nd highest count); 4 Snowy Owls (tied record high); 1 Yellow-bellied Sapsucker; 2 Winter Wrens (tied record high); 2 Ruby-crowned Kinglets; 1 Hermit Thrush; and 6 Common Redpolls.

Low totals recorded were: 19 White-breasted Nuthatch (lowest ever); 892 Black-capped Chickadees (lowest since 2000); and 2 Northern Shrike (lowest since 1993).

Count Week species included: Northern Pintail, American Coot, Thayer's Gull, Iceland Gull,

The following day, December 15, was the Presqu’ile-Brighton Count. If anything, weather conditions were even worse. Added to the bone-chilling temperatures and winds, roads were snow-covered first thing in the morning. Observers were in the field before many of the secondary roads had been plowed, so had to rearrange their planned routes to accommodate the plows. Observers in Presqu’ile Park itself have to walk their routes, so the 15 to 20 cm of snow added to their challenge.

Still, twenty-six field observers and one feeder-watcher tallied 11,320 birds of 69 species. The 11,320 individuals was about half that found over most of the past decade. The 20-year average species total is 79. Waterfowl numbers were low because there was almost no open water inland and Lake Ontario had a wide ice edge.  Only Black Duck and Mallards of the dabblers were recorded.  Long-tailed Duck (365), Bufflehead (57) and Common Merganser (2) were at 20-year lows.  Inland birds were scarce away from feeders and this was the first count in over 20 years that no Ruffed Grouse were recorded.

Several species, recorded in all 10 areas, included; Red-tailed Hawk, MourningDove, Bue Jay, American Crow, Black-capped Chickadee, American Tree Sparrow and Dark-eyed Juncos.

New for the count was a Cackling Goose, upgraded from a Count Week bird in 2012.


Other unusual birds included: 1 Yellow-bellied Sapsucker; 2 Chipping Sparrows; 2 Iceland Gulls; and 1 Glaucous Gull. One Gray Catbird, a Count Week bird, was the first since 1976.

High Counts (old records and years in brackets): Mute Swan - 824 (624 in 2011); Bald Eagle - 8 (6 in 2009); Snowy Owl - 10 (7 in 1978); Dark-eyed Junco - 649 (568 in 2011).

Near-record high counts included Northern Harrier (7) and Red-bellied Woodpecker (5) that missed tying the record by 1 bird each.

This past weekend brought freezing rain. This will probably reduce bird numbers on the first official Rice Lake Plains Christmas Bird Count to be held on January 1, 2014.

The ice coating on everything is not just an inconvenience for humans. It makes the food that birds depend on inaccessible. The many harvested corn and soybean fields that provide food for waterfowl are now under an impermeable blanket of ice. The fruit that is the food of such species as American Robin, Eastern Bluebird, and Cedar Waxwing is now not available to the birds.

Those birds that have enough energy resources will have fled the area. Those that do not have enough stored energy will die.

My bird feeders have been incredibly busy since the ice came. We had to pry them from their poles and let the ice thaw inside in the shower stall in order for the birds to get at the seeds in them. Even the squirrels have been more numerous than usual. Their seed caches, too, are sealed in a blanket of ice.

Now that power has been restored to my part of Port Hope, I can file this column and send to all of my readers best wishes for the coming year. I hope that you all were able to celebrate a Merry Christmas.

Friday, 29 November 2013

Birds of Winter: Bald Eagles, FeederWatch & Christmas Bird Counts



Nature Notes for November 29, 2013

Two large birds were perched in a tree. On closer inspection with a spotting scope, they proved to be two young-of-the-year Bald Eagles! A better perspective of their perch could be found from a bit further down the road. From there, we could see that the eagles were being harassed by five Common Ravens. Then, three coyotes trotted through the scene. The local flock of American Crows was keeping a respectful distance from the eagles.

Were we in Algonquin Park? No. This scene played out along a road just south of Roseneath in Northumberland County last Tuesday, November 26, for five delighted observers. Probably, out of sight from the roadside, was the carcass of some dead animal, perhaps a deer, on which all of these animals were feeding.

Otherwise, this birding expedition was very quiet. Even Black-capped Chickadees were present in smaller numbers than usual. The cold temperatures of the past few days have frozen most marshes, small ponds, and even the quieter bays of Rice Lake. Now waterfowl can be found only on the open water of Lake Ontario.

At feeders, even American Goldfinches are scarce. The other finches that sometimes arrive in winter will probably not come this winter. Observers in the northern forests report an abundant seed crop. Pine Siskins, Common Redpolls, Evening Grosbeaks, and Pine Grosbeaks which feed on these seeds will not have to come south to eat well. Although there have been a few American Goldfinches in my garden, they have been feeding on the cones of the white cedar and the seed heads of the purple coneflower, not on the niger seed in the feeder.

Another Project FeederWatch season has begun. So far, the most abundant bird in my garden has been Mourning Dove. Several days, there have been 20+ doves in a rather small space. When the sun shines, after they eat their fill, they find the sunniest spots to roost. They are very difficult to see against fallen leaves, dead grass and the gray branches of the brush heap. With so many doves present, it probably won’t be long before a Cooper’s Hawk finds the yard.

Up to five Blue Jays have been frequenting my feeder. Their preferred food is corn, which I scavenged from my family’s harvested corn field.

In the past week, 2 Downy Woodpeckers, 1 Hairy Woodpecker, 1 Red-belliedWoodpecker and a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker have visited the yard. All but the last will stay through the winter. Although a few sapsuckers sometimes persist through the winter, most migrate to the southern U.S. and Mexico.

There has been a flock of up to five Northern Cardinals hanging around the yard. Although they are not especially unusual here, I don’t often see so many at a time.

The last stop of the birding group mentioned at the beginning of the column was an overlook of a frozen bay of Rice Lake. There, we found a third Bald Eagle, flying past and north over the islands towards Peterborough.

***************************************************

Before the next Nature Notes appears, two of Northumberland’s Christmas Bird Counts will have taken place. The Port Hope-Cobourg Count will be held on December 14 and Presqu’ile-Brighton’s on December 15. The new, officially sanctioned Rice Lake Plains Christmas Bird Count will be held on January 1, 2014.

Saturday, 26 October 2013

Diving Ducks arriving on Lake Ontario



Nature Notes for October 25, 2013

People are always surprised to learn that birders go into the field throughout the year, including the depths of winter. Although the southern Ontario Hawk Watches will be operating for only a few more weeks and migration of small land birds has slowed to a trickle, there are still birds to be seen.

For Northumberland birders, the focus tends to drift toward Lake Ontario to search for waterfowl. For many diving ducks, Lake Ontario is south.

This is the time of year when huge flocks of Red-breasted Mergansers can sometimes be seen. These ducks breed near large bodies of water throughout the boreal forest. Although some winter on the Great Lakes, most of the ones seen locally are en route to wintering grounds along the Atlantic coast and the Gulf of Mexico.

LesserScaup frequently appear in large “rafts” of birds. These ducks nest throughout the north and west of the continent and are migrating through to wintering grounds in the southern U.S.- Although a few may persist throughout the winter, the majority of the wintering scaup are Greater Scaup.

Greater Scaup look very similar to Lesser Scaup. The males of both species have dark heads and breasts, white sides and black tail. Lessers have a purplish sheen to the head and Greaters are green, but observers are not often close enough to the birds, or in good enough light conditions, to see this difference. The females of both are brown with a white patch at the base of the bill. The white patch is bigger in the Greater Scaup, but again this if often difficult to see. It is easiest to tell these two species apart in flight by the extent of white at the base of flight feathers. This is, of course, a marking that is impossible to see on a sleeping bird in windy conditions. Frequently, I just identify them as “scaup” without trying to differentiate the two species.

A few Black Scoters have been spotted in recent days. These ducks breed in the northern Quebec and Labrador. Some also breed in Nunavut and central Alaska.  The ones seen on Lake Ontario are passing through to wintering areas on the Atlantic coast.

Long-tailedDucks breed throughout the Arctic as far north as Ellesmere Island. In winter on Lake Ontario, we see them in a plumage which is primarily black and white. In the breeding season, they are mostly brown. The male has long tail feathers, which gives this species its name.

I haven’t yet seen any Common Goldeneye or Bufflehead, two other common wintering ducks on Lake Ontario. Like many other wintering ducks, they are primarily black and white. These two species breed primarily in the boreal forest, where they nest in tree cavities. Numbers of these two ducks will arrive on Lake Ontario in the next few weeks to spend the winter here.

Along with these more common species, a single female plumaged Harlequin Duck was spotted off Lake St., Port Hope on October 14. This species favours forested mountain streams in the summer. The eastern population breeds in Labrador, the Ungava Peninsula of Quebec and southern Greenland. When it comes to the Great Lakes, it can often be found quite close to shore, foraging for mollusks amongst the rocks of habour jetties.

Probably by the time this column appears in print, many of the ducks mentioned will have arrived on Northumberland’s section of Lake Ontario. Perhaps readers will have the opportunity to look for them.

Friday, 27 September 2013

Wilson's Phalarope stops in Port Hope



Nature Notes for September 27, 2013

The water level in the A.K. Sculthorpe Woodland Marsh, alongside the Waterfront Trail at the east end of Port Hope has been quite high this fall. This makes it unsuitable habitat for all but the most long-legged shorebirds. On September 11, there was one GreaterYellowlegs in the marsh, a suitably tall bird for the depth of the water.

But there was another shorebird, playing hide-and-seek amongst the Mallard flock. This bird sent my husband scurrying back to the car in the parking lot to fetch the spotting scope to have a better look. Gray back and head, white underneath, with a fine, needle-like bill: this was a Wilson’s Phalarope in winter plumage.

In the breeding season, they are more colourful. As with all of the three phalarope species, the female has the brighter plumage. The female Wilson’s has a strong stripe through the eye and down the neck, black on the face and neck, blending into cinnamon on the neck. It is gray above and white on the belly, gray and cinnamon on the wings, with a white rump. The male is a much more faded version of this colouring, with only a hint of cinnamon on the neck. Female phalaropes are also larger than the males.

With all phalaropes, the male incubates the eggs and cares for the young. The behavior led John James Audubon, the man who first described these species to Europeans, to confuse male and female.

In spring, the females arrive on the breeding grounds before the males and compete with other females for mates with a colourful display.

Females may lay more than one clutch of eggs in different nests with more than one male, a behaviour called polyandry. As with most shorebirds, the nest consists of little more than a depression in the ground, lined with grass, and hidden in dense tall grass or sedge, near water.

Phalaropes have an unusual technique of feeding. They spin around in the water, changing direction often, in order to stir up the aquatic invertebrates which are their primary food. This bird was swimming around the foraging Mallards, probably because the ducks were churning up the water, and thus, turning up food for it.

Although there are scattered breeding records for Ontario, Wilson’s Phalaropes breed primarily in the prairies of Canada and the U.S. It is an inland species and a species unique to the new world. The other two phalarope species, Red and Red-necked, also occur in the Old World and nest near salt water in the high Arctic. Wilson’s Phalarope nests near freshwater or brackish ponds, often on islands. Where is does nest in southern Ontario, it favours the verges of sewage lagoons for breeding.

Several years ago, a pair of Wilson’s Phalaropes were found in a wet pasture field on Chub Point. They were seen throughout the spring and may have nested there, although no young were ever found.

Most Wilson’s Phalaropes that appear in Northumberland County are, however, migrants. These birds are usually found in wet grassy fields or shallow ponds. Occasionally they turn up on the beach at Presqu’ile.

Wilson’s Phalaropes winter in large shallow ponds and saline lakes in the grasslands and mountains of South America. In contrast, Red and Red-necked Phalaropes are pelagic in winter. That is they winter on the ocean

The Wilson’s Phalarope in Port Hope lingered for two days and was seen by several of the local birders.