Nature Notes for December 23, 2011
Last Saturday morning at about 7:30 a.m., I was along the
Lakeshore west of Port Hope trying, with my team-mate, to count the incoming flocks
of Canada Geese as they flew from the north towards Lake Ontario. A short time
later, we had walked to the lake and were trying to identify and count the
ducks. We were participating in the annual Christmas Bird Count.
Birders look forward to the Christmas season because of
Christmas Bird Counts. We are now in the middle of the 112th annual
Christmas Bird Count season. These counts can be held any time from December 14
to January 5.
The idea grew out of a Victorian tradition of a Christmas
hunt, when hunters would try to shoot as many animals and birds as possible. In
1900, Frank Chapman, an ornithologist from New York, suggested that perhaps it
would be better just to count the birds.
That idea has grown to become continent wide. Each year,
thousands of volunteers take to the field to try to tally all the birds that
they see and hear in a specific area. It is the longest running Citizen Science
project anywhere in the world.
Last weekend, I took part in two counts, the Port
Hope-Cobourg one on Saturday and the Presqu’ile-Brighton one on Sunday.
This year, the lack of snow made it possible to walk
anywhere. Some years, blizzards, deep snow and/or icy conditions make walking
difficult. The two days of these counts were the coldest we have had so far
this winter, but most bodies of water were still ice free.
The open conditions made it hard work to find birds. They
could find food anywhere, so were not concentrated at backyard feeders or in
the small open leads in ice covered lakes.
Because my husband is the compiler for the Port-Hope Cobourg
count, I have access to details of this day. Thirty-eight observers, most
members of Willow Beach Field Naturalists, participated.
They tallied a total of 18,386 birds of 77 species on count
day, with an additional 8 species seen during count week.
Highlights included Common Loon, 1; Double-crested
Cormorant, 1 count week; Snow Goose, 1: Wood Duck, 1; Gadwall, 6; American
Wigeon, 1; Northern Pintail, 1; Green-winged Teal, 1; Black Scoter, 1; Ruddy
Duck, 1; Bald Eagle, 1; Northern Goshawk, 1; Peregrine Falcon, 1 count week;
American Coot, 1; Purple Sandpiper, 1; Snowy Owl, 1; Carolina Wren, 1 count
week; Hermit Thrush, 2; Northern Mockingbird, 1; Chipping Sparrow, 1;
White-crowned Sparrow, 1.
Record high numbers were counted of American Crow, 2,077;
European Starling, 2,945; American Goldfinch, 999; Northern Flicker, 9.
Species tallied in low numbers included House Sparrow, 193;
House Finch, 48; Snow Bunting, 7; Horned Lark, 2; Pileated Woodpecker, 3;
Northern Harrier, 1; Common Goldeneye, 157.
Despite the long often cold days, birders enjoy these annual
events because there is always the possibility of the unexpected sighting.
There was one interesting non-bird sighting, a fisher in the
rural area of Port Hope. This large weasel seems to be returning to this area. fishers have huge territories and and are mainly nocturnal, so they are not
often seen.
As this is the last column of 2011, I want to take this
opportunity to wish my readers all the best for the holiday season and good
birding in 2012.
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