Saturday 30 August 2014

Common Nighthawks on the move



Nature Notes for August 29, 2014

“I saw a flock of birds flying over my yard, but I don’t know what they are. They are bigger than a swallow with a white blotch on each wing and their flight in like bats. Would you have any idea what they are?”

Several times in the past couple of weeks, I have received queries similar to the one above. I wish all bird identification questions were as easy as this one. The birds in question were Common Nighthawks. There have been a number of recent reports of migrating Common Nighthawks and I’ve seen them over my house in Port Hope.

Common Nighthawks aren’t hawks at all, but are part of a group known as nightjars. For reasons that no one really knows, this group is sometimes called goatsuckers. It was thought that they entered barns and sucked on the teats of goats. This is, of course, a myth, but the name has stuck.

They are aerial foragers which hunt for flying insects primarily at dawn and dusk. For the size of the bird, they have a very large mouth with rictal bristles. These are similar to the whiskers on a cat and, combined with the wide mouth, are very effective in scooping flying insects from the air.

The colouring of Common Nighthawks is a mottled mixture of shades of brown. Since they prefer to nest on the ground in open sites, this coloration provides good camouflage. The white spots on the wings aren’t visible when the bird is perched.

Their natural nesting habitat is in open areas, such as those provided after a forest fire, or on rocky outcrops in the Canadian shield. Their nests can be found in openings in the forest due to fires or clear cuts, on sandy blowouts and in old, unused gravel pits.

Since the mid-1800s, they have also been found nesting on flat gravel roofs in urban areas. This type of roof is no longer in favour with builders, so this habitat has reduced somewhat. Initially, the rooftop locations provided protection from predators such as foxes, raccoons and skunks. However, urban gulls and crows have discovered the nighthawk nests and are now major predators of roof-nesting nighthawks.

In the spring, Common Nighthawks are most often detected by sound. Their call is a loud “peent”. The males have a spectacular display flight. The will fly to a great height and plummet towards the ground and a waiting female. Just when it seems that they will crash, they pull up, which causes a loud booming sound from the wind forced through their wing feathers. This boom can be heard over quite a distance and has contributed to another colourful name for this species: Bullbat. Bull was because of the loud booming sound and bat because of the style of their flight.

As with all the aerial foragers, their populations are showing declines. In the twenty years between the two Ontario Breeding Bird Atlases, there was a significant decline in the observations of Common Nighthawk. They are listed as “Threatened” by the Committee on the Status of Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) and as of “Special Concern” by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources  (OMNR).

Their breeding range includes most of North American south of the tundra. The ones that are passing through Northumberland now are heading to wintering areas in South America, as far south as northern Argentina.

Probably by the end of this week, when this article appears in print, most of the Common Nighthawks will have moved through the area.
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Presqu’ile Provincial Park is holding the 30th annual Monarchs and Migrants event over Labour Day weekend. Check the Friends of Presqu’ile web site http://www.friendsofpresquile.on.ca/ for the complete schedule of events. They include guided bird hikes, bird banding and Monarch butterfly tagging.

On September 20, Alderville Black Oak Savanna hosts Prairie Day, a project of the Rice Lake Plains Joint Initiative.

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