Thursday, November 1, 2012

Rest of October

10-27 October

October is always a busy month at the banding station and this month was no exception. We've banded more birds so far this fall than any other year. By the 10th Yellow-rump Warbler numbers exploded as usual at this time of year and we continued to band many of them until their numbers waned on the 26th. We banded another Gray-cheeked Thrush on the 10th, this one being much lighter in color than the one on the 6th.


 





We also captured another HY Black-throated Green Warbler.





On the 12th we had many birds of 25 species, one of our best days for diversity. We were surprised to find Cedar Waxwings still in full juvenal plumage.




 


It was our first day of Marsh Wrens for the fall caught in the same net, one being exceedingly smaller than the other one.




 


The plumage coloration on the back is quite stunning.




 

We finally banded a Winter Wren after two escaped right out of our hands. Wrens are certainly wiggly creatures!




 

 While we've handled numerous Golden-crowned Kinglets this fall, our first Ruby-crowned Kinglet didn't show until the 13th, a young male.




 


He had spongy material wrapped around his legs, I've shown this before on other birds, and it turns out to be spider webbing. I was able to clip the webbing easily off his legs. 




 


On the 16th I joined James Junda, who runs the South Monomoy Banding Station, and his crew to band Saltmarsh Sparrows on North Monomoy. We arrived near high tide. Those working for the refuge had never seen it so high.




 


We scoured the area to determine the best place to set up nets.




 


Here James is ageing one of the sparrows captured. 




 


Saltmarsh Sparrows have perfect coloring to fit into the salt marsh, the bird below happens to have some leucism (some of the feathers lack melanin and appear whitish).  




 


These sparrows have very pointed tails. This HY bird is showing off his juvenal tail feathers, they are almost translucent. You can see why this species used to be called Saltmarsh Sharp-tailed Sparrow.




 


Most of the young European Starlings have now molted into their formative plumage and look more like adults in basic plumage such as this one captured on the 17th.




This bird had a few retained juvenal feathers along with juvenal central rects which have an indistinct edging.




 


He was sexed as a male due to the brown iris. 




 


At this time the majority of HY Carolina Wrens






have gone through an incomplete molt as seen in the photo below. The blue arrow points to the pointed, abraded primary coverts and a molt limit is seen between primaries p2 with its light brown shaft and indistinct barring and p3-p9 with dark brown shafts and distinct barring. Clicking on the photo will make it easier to see.




 


Compare that to an adult wing below with rounded primary coverts (blue arrow) and distinctly barred primary and secondary flight feathers.




 


We captured our first of the fall Eastern White-crowned Sparrow on the 17th. The plumage coloration easily identifies it as a first year bird.




 


This bird had molted all of its greater coverts with a molt limit at the alula covert. 




 


Luckily we had a large group helping on the 21st, our biggest day, with 251 birds handled, 177 of those were yellow-rumps and one late Ovenbird. Another Lincoln Sparrow was banded on the 23rd




 


along with a very late HY female Wilson's Warbler,  




 


their fall presence in Mass usually ends the last week in September.  




 


Red-breasted Nuthatches are heard all over the island but we don't capture that many compared to how many I hear! This HY female is showing off her new body feathers and older retained flight feathers. 




 


The following day, the 24th, our first Sharp-shinned Hawk was captured, a HY female. First year birds can be identified by the vertical breast streaks and yellow eye. Her long wing identified her as female.




 


House Finches have also finished molting now making it easier to sex males with their reddish plumage on the face, breast and rump.




 


These finches can be told apart from Purple Finches by the streaking on the undertail coverts. 




 


We banded 4 White-throated Sparrows on the 27th and were able to compare a bird with bright morph plumage (right) and one with dull morph plumage (left). It is said that a bright morph will only mate with a dull morph and not with another bright morph (and visa versa).




 


Thanks very much to all who helped during the past three weeks- Gretchen Putonen, Keegan Tranquillo and his girlfriend Stephanie, Carolyn Kennedy, Judy Keller, Alice and Jimmy Wynn, Ben Lagasse, James Junda, Judith Bruce, and Jessica Rempel. The following is a list of birds seen, heard, or banded during this time period.


 




Total birds: 1056                                      Total species: 72


Total species of banded birds: 41             Birds/100 net-hours: 136


 







































































































































































































































































































Double-crested
Cormorant
Great Blue Heron
Brant
Canada Goose
Turkey Vulture
Northern Harrier
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 new
Cooper's Hawk
Red-shouldered Hawk
Red-tailed Hawk
Merlin
Killdeer
Greater Yellowlegs
Ring-billed Gull
Herring Gull
Great Black-backed Gull
Mourning Dove
Great Horned Owl
Belted Kingfisher
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Downy Woodpecker 2 recaps
Hairy Woodpecker
Yellow-shafted Flicker
Eastern Phoebe 1 new
Tree Swallow
Blue Jay 2 new
American Crow
Fish Crow
Black-capped Chickadee 15 new; 49 recaps; 1 unbanded
Tufted Titmouse 16 new; 4 recaps; 1 unbanded
Red-breasted Nuthatch 9 new; 1 recap
White-breasted Nuthatch
Brown Creeper 2 new; 2 recaps
Carolina Wren 1 new; 6 recaps
Winter Wren 1 new; 1 unbanded
Marsh Wren 2 new
Golden-crowned Kinglet 15 new
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2 new; 1 recap
Eastern Bluebird
Gray-cheeked Thrush 1 new
Hermit Thrush 5 new; 3 recaps
American Robin 22 new; 1 recap; 3 unbanded
Gray Catbird 22 new; 9 recaps
Brown Thrasher
Cedar Waxwing 2 new
European Starling 1 new
Red-eyed Vireo 8 new; 5 recaps
Nashville Warbler 1 new
Cape May Warbler 1 new
Myrtle (Yellow-rumped)
Warbler
   851 new; 126 recaps; 22 unbanded
Black-throated Green Warbler 1 new
Pine Warbler
Western Palm Warbler 5 new
Yellow Palm Warbler 9 new; 1 recap
Blackpoll Warbler 15 new; 2 recaps
Ovenbird 1 new
Common Yellowthroat 6 new; 1 recap
Wilson's Warbler 1 new
Yellow-breasted Chat 1 new; 2 recaps
Northern Cardinal 38 new; 7 recaps; 2 unbanded
Eastern Towhee 1 new
Song Sparrow 56 new; 49 recaps; 1 new
Lincoln's Sparrow 1 new
Swamp Sparrow 34 new; 6 recaps; 1 unbanded
White-throated Sparrow 4 new; 4 recaps
Eastern White-crowned Sparrow 1 new
Dark-eyed Junco 3 new
Red-winged Blackbird
Common Grackle
House Finch 2 new
American Goldfinch 32 new; 1 unbanded
House Sparrow

 


 


 


 


 







 




 


 


 










 


 


 


 







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