The new birding challenge: instead of seeing the bird once to check it off on a list, try to understand what is happening in the birds' world.
I live in a world-class hotspot for bird migration. So much is going on here that I can't possibly learn every detail, but it's exciting to try.
My goal is to gain some new insight every day - to never stop learning about the fascinating lives of migratory birds.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Insight: Flocks of flickers

December 29: Today Kimberly and I took part in the Christmas Bird Count centered on Fremont, Ohio.  We saw only ten Northern Flickers for the day, but eight of those were together in a flock.  

Flickers aren't usually considered to be very sociable, so when we saw three fly across the road within a few yards of each other, we were surprised and we stopped to look.  Within the next few moments, another five flickers followed.  For a minute, all eight of the birds were visible.  They were perched in three adjacent trees, and all the birds were several yards apart.  But since we hadn't seen any other flickers within miles of this spot, it was clear that they really were associating with each other, and that as loose as their grouping was, it qualified as a flock.  The eight flickers soon left these trees, and they left one by one, but they all flew in the same direction, going toward a particular spot on the edge of a nearby woodlot.  

I've often seen loose flocks of eastern (Yellow-shafted) flickers flying together in migration.  When I lived in Arizona, I would sometimes find loose groups of western (Red-shafted) flickers foraging together on the ground during migration seasons.  A winter flock like the one we saw today is something I've encountered only a few times.  The Birds of North America account (Wiebe and Moore 2008) says that the species is "Not social but may forage in loosely structured groups at any time of year."  If more birders were specifically watching for this behavior, we might learn more about the situations in which it occurs. 

Monday, December 24, 2012

Question: value of phragmites?

Phragmites (Common Reed) - Often a damaging, invasive weed in Ohio marshes, but potentially also a food source for some wintering birds

December 24: Today I was reminded of a question that first occurred to me a couple of years ago.  I was birding along the edge of a marsh north of Oak Harbor, and I flushed a flock of about 30 American Tree Sparrows from a big patch of phragmites.  I've found flocks of these sparrows in this habitat before; are they mainly using it for cover, or are they actively feeding on the phragmites seeds?  

Phragmites australis itself is a problematic plant.  The species is native to North America, but in recent decades it has become dangerously invasive in many regions.  Here in northern Ohio, marshes that used to be varied and full of life have turned into solid stands of phragmites, crowding out other plants and supporting relatively little wildlife.  Research has shown that the invasive phragmites is actually an alien strain, introduced here from other continents.  Managers of some wildlife areas in Ohio have gone to great effort and expense to control phragmites, to maintain some room for other species.  

Of course, some species of birds will find a way to take advantage of almost any plant.  Tall, dense stands of phragmites provide a certain amount of shelter for birds in winter.  I've often found flocks of American Tree Sparrows in such places.  Once when I had time to watch such a flock for a while, I saw that the birds were actually perching on the tops of the swaying stalks and evidently feeding on the seeds of the phragmites.  Today I watched the birds to see if they would do the same thing, but apparently I had approached them too closely; they would not go back to feeding while I watched, and eventually they flew farther away to an area where I could not follow.  So this will be a question for future observation.  American Tree Sparrows are very common near Lake Erie in northern Ohio in winter; how important are the stands of phragmites as a food source for them?  

Friday, December 21, 2012

Question: Celebrating the wind?

December 21:  Continuing the streak of bizarre weather we've had so far this "winter" - temperatures are still above normal, but the most notable thing about today was the powerful wind.  It seemed to be shifting somewhat but it was mostly out of the northwest; for at least part of the day, sustained winds were at least 30 miles per hour, with gusts above 40 mph.

Most of my "birding" today was done from inside, except for forays out to look around briefly and to fill the feeders on the leeward side of the house.  But in my time outside, and in watching out the windows, I saw surprising numbers of birds flying around - seemingly more than I would on a day of normal weather.  Canada Geese and Tundra Swans were up flying around, Rock Pigeons (usually not around here) and Mourning Doves were flying, Red-tailed Hawks came by repeatedly, and flocks of blackbirds and starlings were flying around all day.  Flocks of House Finches and American Goldfinches were arriving in the yard and then departing again repeatedly, even though leaving here means flying a considerable distance across open fields to the next likely feeding spot.  

If I hadn't been watching, I would have assumed that such a windy day would have kept bird activity down.  It almost seemed as if the birds were flaunting their ability to handle these powerful, gusty winds, and perhaps flying even more than usual. 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Insight: staging cormorants

A tiny fraction of the clouds of cormorants crowding upper Sandusky  Bay today.
November 1:  The remains of Hurricane Sandy pushed inland just a couple of days ago.  Kimberly and I were driving back to Ohio from New England during the height of the storm, but today I got out to check some local spots along the Lake Erie shoreline in n.w. Ohio, to see if the storm had brought in any out-of-place birds. 

One of the most notable things that I saw involved a common bird, however, not a rarity.  Out on the open Lake Erie shoreline, where the northwest wind was whipping the waves into a frenzy, I saw very few Double-crested Cormorants.  But on the more protected waters of Sandusky Bay, huge flocks were floating on the water, crowding onto exposed islands, flying back and forth constantly.  From one vantage point on the north side of the bay, the old Yetter Road fishing access, I made a conservative estimate of eight thousand cormorants.  

The majority of the cormorants that nest around the Great Lakes move farther south for the winter, and these flocks most likely were staging prior to their southward migration.  Their concentrated numbers on the bay, rather than on the open waters of Lake Erie, may have been partly a consequence of the very strong winds and high waves of the last couple of days.  The western basin of Lake Erie is quite shallow, so strong waves will stir up the silty bottom of the lake, making the water quite muddy and opaque; this would present a challenge for birds that pursue small fish underwater, such as cormorants.  

Whether or not this was a factor, today's huge numbers on a small area of the bay certainly made for a spectacle.  

Friday, September 21, 2012

Question: Flocks of Pied-billed Grebes?

This is just part of a flock of 97 Pied-billed Grebes seen at Metzger Marsh on September 21. The species is common here, but I haven't noticed this flocking behavior before. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

September 21: Metzger Marsh Wildlife Area was loaded with Pied-billed Grebes during this nesting season, and I frequently saw and heard good numbers when I visited in May and June.  But today I was surprised to see a flock of Pied-billeds.  They were near the outer dike of the marsh, concentrated in one straggling string, and I carefully counted 97 individuals in this group.

I'm accustomed to seeing flocks of some other kinds of grebes.  Out in western North America, Eared Grebes regularly gather in large flocks on lakes, and Western and Clark's grebes will flock up on lakes or on coastal bays.  But with a marsh-dweller like the Pied-billed Grebe, I don't recall ever seeing such a concentration. 

It's possible that recent activity by anglers and hunters in the marsh has spooked the grebes out into this more open area of the impoundment, but I don't know that.  In addition to the flock of 97, I did see other scattered singles closer to the areas of dense vegetation, so at least some of the birds were acting the way I "expected" them to.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Insight: the blackbird divide

July 5:  This evening I happened to be outside at two different spots during the time that blackbirds were flying to roost.  Even though these two spots were not far apart, the birds were flying in completely different directions, revealing something of their behavior.  

In the town of Oak Harbor, I watched flock after flock of Red-winged Blackbirds, Common Grackles, and European Starlings flying over, all headed south or south-southeast.  It was near sunset, and these birds undoubtedly were all flying to a communal roosting site where they would spend the night: possibly in marshes or dense thickets along the Portage River on the south side of town.  

Leaving Oak Harbor, we drove to a farmhouse about three miles north of the town.  Flocks of blackbirds and starlings were flying over here as well - but here, they were all flying north, or north-northeast.  Clearly they were headed to a different communal roosting site than the birds seen just a few minutes earlier.  

At this time of year, it's normal for these birds to forage widely in the countryside during the day, and then fly to these communal roosts at night.  They may fly a considerable distance to a good roosting site.  But somewhere within the first three miles north of Oak Harbor, evidently, there was some kind of divide between birds going to two different roosts.  

Something that I don't know, to look into in the future: would these birds always go to the same roost every night, or might some individuals go to alternate sites on different nights?  

Monday, April 30, 2012

Insight: Birds don't read the weather maps

April 30: Last night, after carefully studying all the weather maps, I predicted that the next big flight of migrants would arrive in NW Ohio no earlier than May 2.  The weather last night didn't look favorable for migration here: winds were from the east, or even the northeast, with some rain in the latter part of the night.  But despite that, people who were out early this morning reported an excellent arrival of migrants, with numbers of Baltimore Orioles and Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, and a big increase in the variety of warblers present in the area. 

So why was the prediction so far off?  One possibility is that we're reaching the point in the spring at which birds will go ahead and move without waiting for ideal conditions.  Especially these mid-sized songbirds, like orioles, grosbeaks, Gray Catbirds, and Great Crested Flycatchers, all of which arrived in numbers today, may be able to migrate as long as they're not battling strong headwinds.  It's also quite possible that the winds above 1000 feet were different from what we experienced on the ground - those winds may have been southerly, like the prevailing winds in areas to the south of us last night.  Whatever the reason, today was a good reminder of the fact that we can't always predict what will happen with the migration.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Question: Yellow Warbler - arrivals vs transients

Yellow Warbler: As a general impression, the local males show up on their summer territories before we start to detect many at the migrant traps along the lake. Is this an illusion, or does it reflect the actual pattern of their migration? Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

April 26 (Audubon's birthday): Here in the region of the Lake Erie shoreline, the woodlots or "migrant traps" along the immediate lake shore have such a concentrating effect that we usually detect migrants there before we start to see them elsewhere in the vicinity.  An exception to this pattern involves Yellow Warbler, which is one of the few warblers to nest commonly in this area.  My impression from past years -- borne out by observations the last few days -- is that male Yellow Warblers show up on their nesting territories a mile or two south of the lake first.  Today they were singing vigorously in several spots south of the Magee boardwalk, such as near BSBO and the Sportsmen's Center, but the first migrants are just now showing up at the boardwalk itself.

Does this mean that the birds that are going to nest here arrive first, while the transients going farther north arrive later?  Or are the local summer resident birds just a lot more conspicuous because they are singing and setting up territories? 

Incidentally, something like this happens with Willow Flycatcher later in the spring.  In the latter part of May, they suddenly show up on their territories in the scrub-shrub habitat around BSBO, and only a few days later they start to become conspicuous in the migrant traps right on the lake shore.  But again, the singing, territorial males are a lot easier to detect than the transient individuals.

So for the moment I have a question without a solid answer.  I suspect that local breeders are among the very first Yellow Warblers to reach this latitude, but I don't know that for sure, and I'll have to look into it further.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Question: Differential timing, sparrow version

Fox Sparrow (eastern, or "Red," population):  We know it's an early migrant, and that makes sense, but we don't know why some sparrows are later.  Photo by Kenn Kaufman.
April 22: Thinking today about two species of sparrows and their migration through NW Ohio.  Numbers of White-throated Sparrows are just now starting to build up, while the peak of Fox Sparrow migration is already well past.  This timing is already well known.  But I'm wondering: why does it differ so much between these two species?

White-throated Sparrows and the eastern population of Fox Sparrows have similar ranges in summer and winter.  They nest in boreal forests across Canada and winter in the eastern United States. White-throated Sparrow has a broader range at both seasons, with its breeding range extending well south into the northeastern U.S.and its wintering range extending north to the Great Lakes.  (Look at any field guide that has range maps to see what I mean.)  Still, their overall distributions are similar.  Hence my question: why do the Fox Sparrows move north a full month earlier, on average, than the White-throated Sparrows? 

Friday, April 20, 2012

Insight: In before the door closes

Male Black-throated Green Warbler: a few arrived in the area within the last couple of days, just before the wind shifted back around to the north. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.
April 20th: We've just had a couple of days and nights of southerly and southwesterly winds, and this evening the wind shifted back around to the northwest.  It looks as if it will stay that way for at least a few days.  But as a result of this recent weather pattern, we have a decent variety of birds around in northwest Ohio. 

This most recent push brought in very large numbers of Yellow-rumped Warblers and White-throated Sparrows, and lesser numbers of other typically early migrants, but it also brought a handful of species more typical of the end of April and beginning of May.  Lakeshore migrant traps like Magee Marsh and like the Black Swamp Bird Observatory main banding station a little to the east reported a few individuals of many species of migrants -- I heard reports of at least 20 warbler species being found within the last couple of days. 

This is a good reflection of the importance of noting numbers of individuals.  If we just reported a species list, it would give a very misleading impression of what's going on.  For example, we might list Yellow-rumped, Black-throated Green, and Yellow warblers.  But if we note that we saw 100 Yellow-rumped Warblers, 3 Black-throated Green Warblers, and one Yellow Warbler, it gives a better idea of what is happening with the migration.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Question: Where are these Avocets going?

Three of seven American Avocets (hanging out with Ring-billed Gulls) at the inland beach at Maumee Bay State Park, Ohio, on April 15, 2012. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

Mid-April:  Yesterday while Ethan Kistler and I were on the hawk tower at Magee, he got a call from Sherrie Duris, who was over at Maumee Bay -- looking at 7 American Avocets.  These snazzy relatives of the sandpipers are generally rare in Ohio, so we couldn't resist running over to the park to look at them.

It's quite possible to go through a year of birding in Ohio without seeing any avocets at all.  But when they're seen -- and especially when they're seen in spring, I think -- they often occur in flocks, not as singles. 

This is mainly a western species.  It can be abundant on the Pacific Coast and on wetlands in the interior of the west.  It may nest as far east as the Dakotas and western Minnesota, and fairly small numbers spend the winter as far east as Florida and South Carolina.  But when I draw a line from any point in the winter range to any point in the breeding range, Ohio is not along that line.  American Avocets that show up here are not taking the most direct route.  Are they just wind-drifted off course, in flocks, every spring?  Or is there something else going on? 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Insight: First push of Broad-wings

A migrating Broad-winged Hawk comes low over the parking lot at the Black Swamp Bird Observatory in northwest Ohio, late in the day on April 15, 2012. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.
April 15: Last week I had predicted that we'd get a good hawk flight today, "including the first big push of Broad-winged Hawks for the year."  That was on another blog where I try to make predictions for the migration in n.w. Ohio; the link to it is here.

Of course, after I make these predictions, then I'm sweating it, hoping that they'll prove to be accurate.  Today, through the middle of the day, I was beginning to doubt that it would happen. 

Here in n.w. Ohio, good spring hawk flights happen mainly on warmer days with southwest winds.  The hawks are moving north on a broad front, but the southwest winds shift them toward Lake Erie; then they cut back to the west-northwest, paralleling the shoreline, until they can turn the corner at the western end of the lake and continue north into Michigan.  Today we had good southwest winds, but after some stormy weather overnight, nothing seemed to be happening with the hawks during the morning. 

Shortly after noon I went to the hawkwatch tower at Magee and spent half an hour.  I did see one Broad-winged Hawk and a few Sharp-shinned Hawks, but not much else, so I went elsewhere.  Sometime after 1:30, Ethan Kistler called me from the hawkwatch tower, to tell me that things were picking up.  I went back there to watch.  Ethan and I watched from the tower for a while, then went to Maumee Bay State Park, then to the west edge of Ottawa NWR, then after 6 p.m. we were back at Black Swamp Bird Observatory; everywhere we went for the whole afternoon, we saw Broad-wings and other hawks migrating.  It was definitely a major movement.

I think a couple of things contributed to the quality of today's flight:
1.  We had had northerly winds most of the time for more than a week before this.  Broad-winged Hawks are affected by wind direction, so they probably had been dammed up somewhere to the south of us, just waiting for a good day to move.
2.  Winds of about 20 mph by late morning were good for getting the hawks moving.  Later in the afternoon the winds were stronger, gusting to over 30 mph, and I think this was influencing the birds to fly low so that they were very easy to see.  On a calmer day, they might have been flying much higher.  Indeed, at Maumee Bay, the Sharp-shinned Hawks were flying only a foot or two above the ground or above the water in open spots. 

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Question: Mergansers and merg answers

A female-plumaged Hooded Merganser, photographed in March in Ohio. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

April 14: Lots of things happening today, but one observation left me scratching my head and wondering.  On the north side of the auto tour route on Ottawa NWR, scanning the rather secluded Pool 9 East, I found a good variety of ducks (including the only group of Northern Pintail that I've seen in the last few days).  I began to notice that the ducks included a lot of Hooded Mergansers. 

During the last week I had seen only a few Hooded Mergansers, in twos and threes, around tree-lined wetlands.  That made sense, because the species breeds locally in such situations, scattered through the swamps.  But here on this one pond, in a careful scan, I counted 57 of the birds.  That would be a large number for any time of year here, but especially at this season.  And of these 57 Hoodeds, not one was an adult male; all were brown birds, essentially female-plumaged.

At this season, adult female Hooded Mergansers in Ohio are mostly sitting on eggs at scattered sites, not flocking together on ponds, so I didn't know what to make of this.  After talking to Mark Shieldcastle (who knows a ton about waterfowl -- he was wetlands biologist for Ohio's Division of Wildlife for several years) and reading the Birds of North America account for the species, I'm guessing that these 57 Hoodeds may have represented a group of one-year-old, non-breeding birds.  They don't breed for the first time until they're two years old, and first-year males look similar to females.  (And some of these birds had a messy appearance to the head pattern, as if some black feathers had molted in among the brown, suggesting first-year males.) 

Still, I don't think there's a well-known pattern of young non-breeding Hooded Mergansers flocking together like this.  I have to wonder if they'll spend the summer in this area, or if they were on their way to somewhere else.  I'd be interested to hear from anyone who has some insight on this question.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Question: Waiting our tern?

Caspian Tern is commonly seen along the Lake Erie shoreline in northwest Ohio during the warmer months. But this year, at least, it showed up later here than it did farther east along the lake. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.
April 12:  Every day for the last 10 days, my birding time has included visits to hotspots on the Lake Erie shoreline in Lucas or Ottawa counties, n.w. Ohio.  I've been expecting to see Caspian Tern any day, and I finally did see one on April 11. 

Looking at the data on eBird, no one had the species much earlier in this area. (Tom Bartlett saw one on Sandusky Bay on April 10, and Ethan Kistler and Jeremy Ross both saw singles on Ottawa NWR on April 12.)  But just a little farther east along the Lake Erie shoreline, from Lorain to Cleveland, there were reports of singles and small flocks several days earlier -- going back almost 2 weeks, to March 28th.  Why would Caspian Terns show up earlier on that part of the lake?

The western basin of Lake Erie displays some notable differences in birdlife from the rest of the lake, with some deep-water birds like scoters being much more common farther east.  But I can't see why this would affect the timing of something like Caspian Tern.  Is this just a fluke, something that just happened this year, or is it consistent?  I'll have to see if I can find any data from past years -- or just try to document the timing carefully next year as well.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Insight: First Palm

Okay, I know, it's a terrible photo. This was a record shot, for documentation, and it was so freaking cold that my hands were shaking!  Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

April 10:  Among the earliest warblers to come through n.w. Ohio in spring is the Palm Warbler.  Their peak numbers occur in late April and the first few days of May, but we can hope to see our first one before mid-April if we get out enough.

Today I found my first Palm Warbler of the season, but it was notable in another way: it was of the eastern subspecies, the "Yellow" Palm Warbler (Setophaga palmarum hypochrysea).  These brightly colored birds nest mainly in eastern Quebec, the Maritime Provinces, and Maine, and they migrate north mostly along the Atlantic Coast, so they are rare in Ohio.  The vast majority of the birds that pass through here are "Western" Palm Warblers (Setophaga palmarum palmarum), which nest all the way from western Quebec to the edge of the Canadian Rockies.

"Yellow" Palms have been documented to migrate north earlier in spring than "Western" Palms, so perhaps it is not surprising that the first one to show up here would be a stray from this population.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Sources: eBird and BirdsEye

Early April:  This evening at the good shorebird spot on Benton-Carroll Road, along with 28 Dunlins, 61 Lesser Yellowlegs, 286 Pectoral Sandpipers, and others, I found a single American Golden-Plover.  (I found out later that Ryan Lesniewicz had seen the bird this morning, so it was here all day.)  This species is typically an early migrant, so I was expecting it to show up around this time, but I hadn't seen any reports of golden-plovers yet on the state listserve or the local RareBird forum. 

Of course I was curious to know what was happening with golden-plover migration -- were there others around?  Had they arrived elsewhere in Ohio?  As recently as a couple of years ago it would have been hard and time-consuming to find out.  Today I just fired up the BirdsEye app on my iPhone.  I may be biased in favor of this app, since I wrote some text for it, but it's incredibly handy for finding out what has been reported to eBird, the massive online database.  According to BirdsEye, no American Golden-Plovers had been reported anywhere nearby yet this year. 

Later at home, I went online and looked directly at the eBird website, digging around on "View and explore data," and found the same thing there.  Golden-plovers had been reported this far north even in late March, off to the west of here (the species migrates north mainly through the Great Plains), but this bird on Benton-Carroll apparently was the season's first in Ohio.  Being able to put my own sightings into this broad context of the total species distribution is a remarkable development -- it makes the whole experience of the migration seem more three-dimensional.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Insight: The social snipe

Early April: Wilson's Snipes are arriving in n. Ohio in good numbers, although they're not up to peak passage yet.  I'm seeing them in several areas with shallow water, including the flooded fields down on Benton-Carroll Road and a couple of the impoundments at the edge of Ottawa NWR. 

I saw my first Wilson's Snipes when I was ten years old, and I've probably seen thousands, even tens of thousands, at all times of year.  So I thought I knew the species well.  But I'd always thought of it as a solitary bird.  Walking into a marsh where snipes were common, I would see them flush singly and fly off as individuals, each on its own zigzag trajectory.  While many members of the sandpiper / snipe family are quite gregarious, forming large flocks in migration and winter, I had never considered Wilson's Snipe to be sociable at all.

Here in n.w. Ohio, where I've lived for almost 7 years, I've often seen groups of Wilson's Snipes foraging together during migration.  Gradually it's dawning on me that they will, in fact, form flocks.  Today at Ottawa NWR, a harrier made a low pass over a marshy impoundment, and a flock of 13 snipes flew out together, circled around several times, and then returned and landed together in the marsh.  No question, they were acting as a tight, cohesive flock.  So at least during migration, in Ohio, it's not accurate for me to classify them as solitary birds. 

Friday, March 30, 2012

Question: Are Tree Sparrows facultative migrants?

American Tree Sparrow: Strictly a winter bird in Ohio, leaving in spring to go far to the north.  How much is its departure time affected by local weather?  Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

Late March: Today I'm thinking about birds I'm not seeing.  For the last couple of years, I've seen small flocks of American Tree Sparrows around Oak Harbor throughout the winter and into spring, at least into early April.  There were plenty of them around this winter, but most of them seem to have disappeared in early March, about the time we started having record-warm temperatures.  Was their departure partly a result of the weather?

Researchers who study migration talk about different bird populations being obligate migrants -- those that move at a certain time of year, regardless of what the weather is doing -- and facultative migrants, which can vary the time of their migration (and even the distance that they migrate) depending on the conditions of the moment.  These are not two completely distinct groups, but rather two ends of a spectrum.  Most facultative migrants only vary their migration within certain limits -- that is, they won't suddenly start to migrate south if there's a cold day in June; the conditions have to fall within the right general time of year.

The most obvious examples of facultative migrants around here are various waterbirds, especially ducks, in their fall migration.  Many of them will come south to northern Ohio in fall and then linger as long as there is enough open water.  If it's a mild winter, they may stay the entire season.  Sandhill Cranes respond to weather also, so recently they've been migrating south later and later in fall, and staying through the winter farther north than they used to.

My question of the moment involves American Tree Sparrows.  Their breeding range is far to the north of here, in arctic and subarctic Canada and Alaska.  In a typical year, most will be gone from northern Ohio by mid-April, and almost all of them by the beginning of May.  This year, with record high temperatures for days at a time in March, the Tree Sparrows seem to have disappeared a month earlier than usual.  Did they, in fact, start north so much earlier?  I will be interested to find out if areas north of the wintering range had earlier spring records than usual.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Insight: Pumped-up Red-wings

A male Red-winged Blackbird. Yes, it is walking around looking for food in the dry grass on the roadside; and yes, it is pausing every few steps to sing. Photo by Kenn Kaufman.

Early March: Okay, I know this isn't directly related to migration, which is the focus of this effort.  But I can't help but notice the behavior of the male Red-winged Blackbirds that have set up breeding territories in the local marshes.

Some flocks of Red-wings are around all winter, but there's a point in February when a change in behavior is obvious.  Individual males spread out into the frozen marshes, to perch at the tops of the dead stems of last year's grasses, each one singing to announce his own claim to his breeding territory for the season.  The females may not have arrived in the area yet, the actual nesting season may still be weeks away, but those males are making sure they have staked out their turf. 

By now, in early March, the male Red-winged Blackbirds are really worked up.  I was just watching them along the road at Magee Marsh.  They will temporarily abandon their territories out in the marsh and will come to the short grass along the roadside to hunt for food.  But even there, while they forage, they will pause every few moments, puff out their shoulders, and sing.  I guess the instinct is so strong at this time of year that they just can't help themselves.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Question: Are some Killdeers migrating in pairs?

Killdeer in flight: is it flying solo, or with a friend? Photo by Kenn Kaufman.
Early March: Killdeers just started showing up in the area a few days ago.  I've seen them at about a dozen spots.  The thing that strikes me about them is that all the Killdeers I've seen have been in pairs.  So the question is: do they go through their courtship and form pairs very rapidly after they get here, or are they actually pairing up somewhere to the south of here, and arriving together? 

Killdeers don't leave northwest Ohio for very long.  Usually a few linger locally until mid-December, and the first returning birds are back by mid to late February.  They're common in winter just a few hundred miles to the south.  It would be plausible for them to form pairs on the wintering grounds.  The Birds of North America account for Killdeer doesn't shed any light on this.  It does say that Killdeers in the South may remain in pairs all year, and that those in the north may have the same mate for several years in a row. 

I guess I'll have to watch the arriving Killdeers more closely next year, to see if there's active chasing and courting on the day they arrive, or if the birds come in looking like established couples already.  But I'd be interested to hear from anyone who has more insight into this question.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Insight: Too much of a good wind

March 7: Here along the Lake Erie shoreline in n.w. Ohio, we get good hawk flights in spring mainly on days with southwest winds.  With any kind of south winds, or with warm calm weather with good thermals, the hawks will be moving on a broad front, but they won't concentrate anywhere.  Southwest winds push the birds up toward the lake shore, and they then correct and move west-northwest paralleling the shore, aiming for the west end of the lake where they can turn and go north into Michigan.

Today we had southwest winds but they were evidently too strong for a lot of the migrants.  With winds of 30 mph, and stronger gusts, there were probably no thermals rising anywhere, and the smaller hawks that were flying seemed to be having a tough time of it.  I spent a while at midday watching from the observation platform at the corner of Krause and Stange Roads (west side of Ottawa NWR) and saw very little flying.  (Well -- lots of debris, leaves, etc., flying on the breeze, but not many birds.)  Continuing west to Maumee Bay State Park, I counted 220 Turkey Vultures in an hour and a half, but only small numbers of other hawks (just a few Red-shouldered and Red-tailed hawks, Northern Harriers, and a couple of American Kestrels).  Even the Turkey Vultures were rocking in the wind, and the other birds were having a tough time.  I'm inclined to think that ideal conditions would have lighter winds, perhaps 15 to 20 mph from the southwest.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Insight: Eagle migration

Late February: A friend took us to a site where Bald Eagles have a communal roost, on private land near Sandusky Bay.  The evening that we were there, over 100 eagles came in, a few at a time, in the last hour before dusk. Evidently the birds spend the day hunting over a wide area of the waters and marshes of Sandusky Bay and the Lake Erie shoreline, and at dusk they come back to this protected spot, in tall trees far from roads or houses. 

This is a seasonal roost, according to our friend, occupied only from mid-February to mid-March.  We know that we see numbers of Bald Eagles migrating west-northwest along the Lake Erie shore in early spring.  The presence of this established roost makes me think that the birds are arriving from farther south, staging in this area for a few weeks, then going on to the north.  By this date, the local eagles here in Ohio are already on nests; many of the birds using this roost are young birds that won't be breeding this year.