Wednesday, September 07, 2011

August totals

Hi all,
Here's an update of our totals through August, plus pictures of what we've been up to lately :)

Top Ten:
1. Nashville Warbler-432 (NEW ALL TIME RECORD!! and the season's not even over yet!)
2. Audubon's Warbler-317
3. MacGillivray's Warber-284
4. Yellow Warbler-238
5. Dusky Flycatcher-216
6. Chipping Sparrow-162
7. Ruby-crowned Kinglet-104
8. Spotted Towhee-93
9. Western Tanager-73
9. Warbling Vireo-73
10. Oregon Junco-57
Three American
TOTAL-2,475

Least Flycatcher

Calliope Hummingbird

Townsend's Warbler

Wilson's Warbler

Jay with the Rufous Red-tail he caught

The first of now 10+ Flammulated Owls this season

The first Common Nighthawk ever caught at Lucky Peak!


Common Nighthawk



Video of a Common Nighthawk Growling :)

Monday, August 29, 2011

Boise State Students in Spain

Hi all,
As some of you may know, IBO is always trying to establish contacts with people from other countries who also study migration. Both this year and last year, two Spanish students have been able to come to IBO to work on our migration project as part of an exchange program; and this year two of our own raptor grad students were able to go to Spain and see migration there!
So, here's a guest blog post from Micah and Martina with an update on their first month there:

Greetings from southern Spain! We have been working with the Migres Program for one month now to help survey for migrating raptors, storks, passerines, and marine birds as part of a student exchange program between Boise State University, the Idaho Bird Observatory, and FundacĂ­on Migres. The goal of the Migres Program is to monitor population changes of migratory birds in Spain and the rest of Western Europe. The migration observatories are situated on the coast of Spain looking out over the Strait of Gibraltar. Each year hundreds of thousands of soaring birds and an estimated 20-40 million songbirds pass through this area as they cross the Strait at its narrowest point (approximately 14 km) on their voyage between Europe and Africa. This makes the Straight one of the most excellent places to study the phenomenon of avian migration!

Griffon Vulture soaring over head. This species is migratory but not until the end of October. We see many each day and monitor the numbers seen so the wind farms can use this information to help mitigate collisions. Griffons are the most commonly killed soaring birds by wind turbines.


Sparrow Hawk saying "I see you too"

The Migres Program operates several observatories which are used at different times of the year. Each observatory is strategically placed to capture the majority of migrating birds for different species. Our most inland observatory, Facinas, is used to count the bulk of the White Stork migration. Approximately 71,600 Storks are counted here each year! This observatory is up and running from July 25th to August 25th after which the observatory of Algorrobo is utilized. At Algorrobo we are able to view the majority of migrating Honey Buzzards. Nearly all of the migratory Honey Buzzard populations pass through in just two weeks with some days having upwards of 20,000 birds flying overhead. The main observatory, Cazalla, is located near the coast and looks out of the city of Tarifa and across the Strait of Gibraltar to the Moroccan coast. The greatest diversity of raptors are counted at this site, the most common of which is the Black Kite (approximately 78,000 each year). Here is what we have counted so far from the main observatory at Cazalla…

Black Kite-104,826
Black Stork-4
Booted Eagle-316
Cinereous Vultur-1
Common Buzzard-8
Egyptian Vilutre-92
Honey Buzzard-194
Lanner Falcon-1
Lesser Kestrel-9
Lesser Spotted Eagle-1
Long-Legged Buzzard-1
Marsh Harrier-21
Montagues’s Harrier-199
Osprey-1
Peregrine Falcon-1
Red Kite-3
Ruppel’s Vulture-1
Short-Toed Eagle-625
Sparrow Hawk-11
White Stork-71,352

TOTAL- 177,667!!!!

Another 100 thousand birds were also counted at Facinas as well for a grand total of approximately 300,000 birds counted so far this season. You will notice that we have nearly surpassed the average number of storks and Black Kites counted and we still have another two months of migration yet…it has been a great year so far!!

Observatory inland (Facinas)


Main observatory of Cazalla


View from our hostel (yes, we have a swimming pool)



"the bosses" Greg Kaltenecker (IBO Director) and Dr. Marc Bechard (BSU professor)

In addition to counting soaring birds we have also had the opportunity to trap and band (or ring as they call it over here in Europe) Black Kites (Milano Negros) and passerines. Trapping raptors here is particularly difficult. When birds arrive at the Straight they are on a mission to cross and are therefore usually uninterested in food. However, when the weather is poor birds will forage along the coast. We trapped Black Kites on just such a day. There had been strong winds for two days prior and poor visibility across the Straight making it ideal conditions to bait a walk in trap for Black Kites. We had moderate success in the morning with 38 birds captured. After processing the Kites we re-opened the door to allow more Kites to enter while we took lunch. An hour later we returned to find about 150 birds inside!!! Needless to say we were busy for the next several hours banding and processing birds. We took measurements and blood from only a portion of the birds captured and released the rest after ringing them.


Walk in cage trap full of Black Kites (around 150!!!)


Black Kites waiting to be processed

Martina releasing a Black Kite after it was banded

Once every two weeks we also mist net Swallows (Golondrinas) in the natural reserve of La Janda about 40 km north of Tarifa. We attract the birds to the nets using a playback call just before dusk. This last week we were also fortunate enough to capture two Bee Eaters! Bee Eaters are another common migrant seen here traveling in flocks of 5 – perhaps 50. Stunning colors!

Micah releasing a European Swallow

Adult Bee eater being processed (juvies lack the red eye)

We hope to keep you all posted on more of our activities here as we continue to experience a different culture, learn about new birds, and participate in monitoring avian migration at one of the most important migration sites in the world. Esparamos que todos esta bien con el migratiĂłn in los estodos!!

Happy Briding,

Micah and Martina


Thursday, August 25, 2011

July totals and Highlights

Hi all!
sorry for not posting these sooner, but here are the totals for July.
We'll have the August totals up soon, and hopefully we will start posting daily totals on here, instead of just posting them on facebook.

736 birds total since July 16th

1. Nashville Warbler: 207
2. Chipping Sparrow: 93
3. Audubon's Warbler: 69
4. Spotted Towhee:41
5. Oregon Junco: 37
6. Dusky flycatcher: 30
7. MacGillivray's Warbler:31
8. Mountain Chickadee: 27
9. Lazuli Bunting: 26
10. Pine Siskin: 24

Highlights so far this season: 2 Brown Creepers, Gray Flycatcher, Least Flycatcher, American Redstart

Tuesday, July 05, 2011

Summer Hummingbird Banding Schedule!

Hi all!
sorry for the long hiatus on this blog...but we're up and running again!

If you have Facebook, you can like our IBO fanpage there to get more frequent updates. For those of you who don't have Facebook however, we will be posting important updates here as well...hopefully on a more regular basis! :)

Just wanted to let everyone know that IBO is doing Hummingbird Banding every 2 weeks in Boise at the Idaho Shakespeare Festival Facilities (click here for map) off of Warmsprings Ave.


Black-chinned Hummingbird male (Photo by Alex Lamoreaux)

ALL BANDING DAYS ARE WEATHER DEPENDING so please check our IBO status updates on Facebook, or this blog the night before to make sure we don't have to cancel because of rain, etc!

We have been catching about 7-10 Black-chinned hummers a day. We found that most of our hummers are caught early (before 8AM) and we don't really catch any after about 10AM, so you might want to show up early rather than late...but who knows what it'll be like from week to week?
There will be opportunities to see and photograph the tiny hummers up close, and maybe even hold one as it is released. Its a great time for families and people of any age group :)

We are hoping that the banding dates later in the season will turn up more migrants, so there will be a chance to see more birds, and other species like Rufous or Calliope.

Here's the schedule of days so far:
We begin at sunrise, and continue for 5 hours after sunrise.
Saturday July 9th (sunrise: ~615AM)
Saturday July 23rd (sunrise: ~6:30AM)
Saturday August 6th (sunrise: ~640AM)
Saturday August 20th (sunrise: ~700AM)

We will continue scheduling banding days for as long as the hummers stick around.

If you have friends who are interested in attending hummingbird banding, you can share the link to this blog post with them: http://idahobirdobservatory.blogspot.com/2011/07/summer-hummingbird-banding-schedule.html, or direct them to our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/IdahoBirdObservatory

Hope to see many of you there!


a teeny hummingbird band (photo by Michelle Laskowski)

Friday, October 16, 2009

Lucky Peak Songbird Migration Totals

On Thursday, October 15 we netted for songbirds for the last time in 2009 and then took the nets down. Probably due mostly to the weather, our last two days had rather lackluster totals (we captured only 21 birds each day) that were dominated by Dark-eyed Juncos. BUT, we did catch several of the fattest juncos of the season, including a male that weighed 23.1 grams (any junco weighing in @ 20g or more is definitely carrying a lot of migratory fuel but 23.1 is really fat!).
Late season 2009 songbird crew, from left: Heidi, Jay, Caroline (sweet hat!),
Nathan
, and Stephanie

(we also had help from Jack & Rob earlier in the season and Gary, Erin, Micah, Randy, Dave, & Carol throughout)

In all, we captured 5,748 birds of 61 species in 2009; this marks the 5th highest season total and capture rate (5,748 birds in 4,364 mist net hours = 1.317 birds per mist net hour) in the 13 seasons so far. Thus, 2009 was a little above average ... which is still really good, especially in comparison with most other banding stations I know of that have significantly lower capture rates.

The top ten:
  1. Dark-eyed Junco 799 (includes a single-day record 170 juncos on 10-10)
  2. Western Tanager 697 (new season record)
  3. Ruby-crowned Kinglet 638 (lowest season-total to date)
  4. White-crowned Sparrow 495
  5. Dusky Flycatcher 322
  6. Spotted Towhee 285 (2nd highest season total)
  7. MacGillivray's Warbler 283
  8. Yellow-rumped Warbler 226
  9. Nashville Warbler 195
  10. Yellow Warbler 192
We captured 3 new species in the songbird nets this year, including an American Kestrel on Aug 21 (a common migrant at the site that had never been caught in the songbird nets) as well as the much more rare Hermit Warbler on Aug 6 and an Indigo Bunting on Sept 12 (see prior blog posts for pics of these two). Other unusual species captured in 2009 included a Green-tailed Towhee on July 29, a Gray Flycatcher on Aug 2, a Yellow-breasted Chat on Aug 20, an American Redstart on Aug 27, a Rose-breasted Grosbeak on Sept 9, a Least Flycatcher on Sept 15, a White-breasted Nuthatch on Sept 26, and a Varied Thrush on Sept 29.

We set or tied season records for a number of species in 2009, including Western Tanager (n=697), Cassin's Vireo (131), Lazuli Bunting (91), Swainson's Thrush (45 - 19 better than the previous high of 26!!), 'Western' Flycatcher (22 - a tie with 2006), Black-chinned Hummingbird (16), Song Sparrow (9), and Savannah Sparrow (4). Also, though we hardly captured any compared to the # that was around, we had an amazing late fall for American Robins - hundreds were around the site for a couple weeks straight and the hawkwatchers estimated over 2,250 robins flying past on one day!

Notably absent again was Northern Pygmy-owl which we had captured at least one per season for the first 11 years and then none in 2008 or 2009 after a record season in 2007 (???). Also, though I don't see any reason for concern for most of the species that we catch (based on the raw numbers anyway; still awaiting a more rigorous analysis of population trends) and most species numbers are either stable (with some cyclic and/or inter-annual variation) or increasing, my concern for the status of Golden-crowned Kinglets continues to grow.

A trio of very cute Golden-crowned Kinglets captured together in fall 2006 - photo by Caroline Poli

Though we detected this species by their high-pitched call notes most days in September and October, we captured/banded only 11 in 2009 and this is the lowest season total yet. It could be that shifts in their feeding (i.e., maybe concentrating their feeding in the Douglas-fir trees even more than usual) could be driving this pattern but we captured at least 60 individuals from 1997-2001 and numbers have generally been much lower since (see the below Excel graph to get a sense of the trend in annual captures for GC Kinglets):

In contrast, the following Excel graph shows the annual capture rate for all songbirds combined during the same period:
As you can see, the combined total for the songbird community as a whole paints a positive picture - stable if not slightly increasing. Thus, why the apparent decrease in Golden-crowned Kinglets?? Something to look into ....

I'll post again with the final raptors #s and/or if something unusual shows up.

Cheers,

Jay

Sunday, October 11, 2009

1st Annual BIG SIT @ Lucky Peak (& some Merlin action)

On Sunday, Oct 11, the gung-ho hawkwatch team decided to initiate a 'Big Sit' (in which observers attempt to document as many species as possible from one vantage point) from the top of Lucky Peak. Thus, John (who'd done one in coastal New Jersey last year) was up on top by dawn listening and looking for any songbirds, owls, or anything else they might miss later in the day. During the AM, Dave, Eric, and Preston took shifts (allowing the others to eat breakfast and get ready for the hawk count to start @ 10am) on the peak.

The 2009 Lucky Peak hawkwatch crew (from left, Eric, Dave, Preston, & John) on duty counting hawks during the BIG SIT on Oct 11, 2009

The total for the day was 39 species, mostly consisting of raptors and landbirds but also including Mallards, Canada Geese, Ring-billed Gull, and Great Blue Heron that we (especially Dave) picked out along the Boise River using his 60x Swarovski scope!

A few other highlights included a couple of Merlins (coming in pretty good #s of late - see below for more info/pics), a fly-by Northern Shrike, Evening Grosbeaks, Clark's Nutcrackers, and some migrating Western Bluebirds. It was a fun thing to do and something I hope will become an annual event!

......

In other news, we've been enjoying a pretty impressive flight of Merlins in recent weeks (great for me as they're my favorite raptor!!). As an example, here are three shots of 2 immature male Merlins of different subspecies that I captured in a matter of 7 minutes yesterday (the highlight of an otherwise very slow hawk flight due the passing cold front). The first bird to come in was quite dark and might represent the 'Black' (suckleyi) subspecies whereas the second bird looks to be of the 'Prairie' (richardsonii) subspecies. What do you think?

Two immature male Merlins captured and banded on 10-10-09. Pretty strikingly different appearances: on the right is a bird of the 'Prairie' subspecies (more common further east but seems to be annual but rare in Idaho) whereas the bird on the left might represent the 'Black' subspecies (that hails from the Pacific Northwest and also seems to be a rare, annual visitor to Idaho) - photo by Brad Ware

The same 2 Merlins in reverse order - photo by Brad Ware

In this picture, note especially the tail pattern (bold white bars on the 'Prairie' vs. a predominantly dark tail on the possible 'Black') as well as the overall coloration - photo by Brad Ware

The expected subspecies in Idaho (and most of the continent) is the nominate (columbarius) subspecies, which I captured and photo'd a few weeks ago:
(for comparison) An immature female Merlin of the nominate columbarius subspecies captured on 9-17-09; note the medium brown color and the moderately distinct tail bars - photo by Holley Carlisle

A shot of the chest/undwerwing of the same columbarius individual caught on 9-17-09 - photo by Holley Carlisle

Cheers & happy birding!

Jay

Monday, October 05, 2009

Snow on Lucky Peak!

On Saturday (Oct 3) afternoon, we started to get some sporadic snow flurries and, with a forecast for a lot of precipitation thru the weekend, we wondered what it would look like. Fortunately, the few hawks that were around (only 17 raptors counted all day) were pretty hungry and we were able to catch 6 birds in the trapping blind - including this snazzy adult male Sharp-shinned Hawk:
Adult (after-second-year) male Sharp-shinned Hawk captured & banded on 10-3-09

Heidi holding the stud male 'Sharpie' after finishing banding & measuring the bird

Fortunately for me, the whole songbird crew (Heidi took the picture) came down to the blind to keep me company/warm - from left, clockwise - Caroline, Stephanie, Jay, & Nathan - and got to enjoy a couple of the hawks

At around 530pm, a big cloud moved in to envelope the mountain and we closed up shop for the day in favor of some warm soup (care of Caroline) and games inside the trailer. At 8pm, some big snowflakes started falling and we got an inch or so last night (I took a very enjoyable but wet walk in the snow before bed!). Then, at round 6 this morning, the snow began again and we had 3" or so by the time I headed down to Boise (since all the songbird nets were completely covered in snow and there was no way to safely run nets in this weather).

Most of the songbird & hawk crews, including Preston, John, Caroline, Nathan, Stephanie, Heidi, & Dave (with a snowflake blocking his face - sorry!), standing outside the trailer enjoying the snow

This makes two straight years that we've received significant snow in October. I'll admit that I was whining about the high 80s/low 90s weather that dominated for most of September and was wishing for fall weather but this was a little extreme ;-). Now I'm looking forward to the weather clearing up so we can start counting/catching some migrants again!

Before the snow came, here's a Mountain Chickadee gauging the situation before flying off again

Cheers,

Jay

Sunday, October 04, 2009

Matt catches a Golden Eagle!

So Matt was due...

Last year in mid-Sept Matt was trapping when a Golden Eagle landed on the pigeon but when he went to pull the trigger for the trap, it didn't go b/c it had been set wrong by a visiting trapper. Thus, Matt had to chase the eagle off the pigeon (no other way to catch it at this point) and lose 'his' first catch of a Golden (something all hawk-trappers hope will eventually happen - I'm still waiting ;-).

Thus, I was very psyched for Matt when I got his text/picture message rubbing it in when he caught the bird on a very windy Wednesday (I was off the mountain at this point) b/c if anyone was gonna catch a Golden this year, Matt deserved it.

Look at the size of this bird!!! - a probable second-year (one-year-old) Golden Eagle captured and banded @ Lucky Peak on Wed, Sept 30

Congratulations Matt! ... and let's hope that now that it has a uniquely-numbered band, one day this bird is recovered somewhere else to help us learn more about Golden Eagle movements (see this link to get a sense for where the raptors we've caught/banded have come from/gone to).

Friday, October 02, 2009

End of September update

Figured I'd provide an update on happenings up on Lucky Peak since September just drew to a close. The recent cold front slowed things down a bit over the last few days but, as you can see from the numbers below, it's been a really good season so far ...

Totals thru September 30:


Raptors 6,992 migrants of 15 species - this is already the 3rd highest season total and we have all of October ahead of us!!!

Top Five:
  • Turkey Vulture 1,456
  • Sharp-shinned Hawk 1,435
  • American Kestrel 1,330
  • Cooper's Hawk 1,217
  • Red-tailed Hawk 735
... and we've set season-records for three species:
  • Swainson's Hawk 177
  • Osprey 115
  • Broad-winged Hawk 84 (more than double the prior season-high of 37!!)
Caroline Poli (veteran/star songbird migration researcher) with an immature Broad-winged Hawk that she captured on Sept 22, 2009 - photo by Nathan Banfield

Closer view of the same immature Broad-winged Hawk captured on Sept 22, 2009 - photo by Nathan Banfield

Owls
59 owl captures
  • Northern Saw-whet Owl 31 (just getting warmed up)
  • Flammulated Owl 26 (3rd best season total!)
  • Long-eared Owl: 2
Golden Eagle Audubon Society field trip to see owls at Lucky Peak on October 10

Songbirds 4,714 captures of 61 species

Top Ten:
  • Western Tanager 697
  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet 518
  • White-crowned Sparrow 421
  • Dusky Flycatcher 321
  • MacGillivray's Warbler 283
  • Spotted Towhee 275
  • Yellow-rumped Warbler 225
  • Nashville Warbler 195
  • Yellow Warbler 192
  • Chipping Sparrow 162
recent highlights:
  • Varied Thrush (2nd ever capture) on 9-29
  • White-breasted Nuthatch (2nd ever capture) on 9-26
  • a season record 45 Swainson's Thrushes (previous high of 26)
On Sept 1, we captured our last 2 Brewer's Sparrows of the season and the first of the day was especially well-marked which made us think of the 'Timberline' subspecies that breeds at high elevation areas from Montana north through the Canadian Rockies. Thus, we took pics of each bird & I put the best here (the potential Timberline wasn't especially photogenic but I think you can see the difference) ...
A Brewer's Sparrow - maybe of the Timberline subspecies due to the more distinct markings, slightly darker coloration, and darker upper mandible - captured on Sept 1 - photo by Nathan Banfield

A more typical Brewer's Sparrow with less distinct markings and paler coloration captured on Sept 1 - photo by Nathan Banfield

On the subject of sparrows, here are two immature White-crowned Sparrows of different subspecies - 'Mountain' (oreantha) on the left and 'Gambel's' (gambeli) on the right. Notice the pinker bill and darker lores of the 'Mountain' bird - photo by Nathan Banfield

Here's the second-ever capture of Least Flycatcher at Lucky Peak (9-15-09) - photo by Nathan Banfield

Mission: to contribute to the conservation of western migratory landbirds through cooperative research and public education