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?
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