March - Northern New York Audubon
Transcription
March - Northern New York Audubon
Northern New York Audubon Serving the Adirondack, Champlain, St.Lawrence Region of New York State Mission: To conserve and restore natural ecosystems in the Adirondacks, focusing on birds, other wildlife, and their habitats for the benefit of humanity and the Earth's biological diversity. Volume 42 Number 1 March-May 2014 NNYA 2013/14 Species of Concern Grant ($1,150) Mark Manske, Adirondack Raptors, Inc. The American Kestrel Project Mark Manske and Adirondack Raptors, Inc. has studied and attempted to increase the population of American kestrels in the Adirondack Park by installing nesting boxes and monitoring the reproductive success of the species. During the first 11 years 286 of 1,492 nest boxes (19.2%) produced 1,021 chicks. The next phase of the project involves analyzing the success rate of active nests apropos of road type and activity, with active nests monitored by Samsung Video Baby Monitors in order to determine fledging dates and the number of chicks fledged per road type, i.e., blacktop versus dirt. NNYA 2013/14 Climate Change Grant ($980) Dr. Ezra Schwartzberg, Adirondack Research, Inc. Initiation of a Monitoring Program for Climate Change Adaptation: Fixed Radius Bird Surveys at Intervale Lowlands Dr. Schwartzberg contracted an ornithologist to perform a set of 18-20 fixed radius acoustic avian surveys, which will allow researchers to estimate avian community composition, to monitor population changes and to analyze population responses to anthropogenic changes, including climate change. The data gathered will be used in occupancy modeling and for future metapopulation analyses aimed at estimating the sensitivity of birds to climate change in northern New York. The project will incorporate the data collected into the Intervale Lowlands database as well as eBird and be published within two weeks of the survey. Moose River Plains Grants 2013/2014 1 NNYA’s MassawepieMessage Mire 21 President’s Roosevelt Truck Trail Field Trip 2 Westport Boat Launch Coon Mountain 2 Poke-O-Moonshine Field Trip Crown Point Banding Station Hill to Robert 2 Wilson 2014 Operating dates Moses State Park—Louisville & Massena (St. Lawrence County) Wild Forest Field 3 Huntington NNYA 2013/2014 /Conservation Grant ($1,125) 2 Stephen Langdon Recurring Bird Surveys in Lowland Boreal Habitat at Shingle Shanty Preserve and Research Station. 3 Shingle Shanty Preserve and Research Station includes on its 15,000 acre property the Glacial Lake St. Agnes peatland complex, one of the largest and most remote wetland complexes in the Adirondack Park with approximately 1,800 acres of lowland boreal habitat, including large, intact ecological communities, such as black spruce-tamarack bog, dwarf shrub bog and marsh headwater stream that have been ranked as “exemplary” by the New York Natural Heritage Program. The preserve has historically had rare bird species, including spruce grouse, Canada jay and rusty blackbird. Staff at the preserve has been conducting surveys for lowland boreal birds since 2000, and this grant will enable them to continue their work during the breeding season of 2014. NNYA 2013/2014 Avian Research Grant ($500) Jacob L. Berl Red-Headed Woodpecker Breeding Ecology and Nest-Site Selection The red-headed woodpecker breeding ecology project focuses primarily on quantifying the breeding ecology and habitat selection of red-headed woodpeckers on the Fort Drum Military Installation. The specific research objectives relate directly to establishing management guidelines for the breeding population with the overall goal of managing additional quality habitat for the species on Fort Drum, as well as to obtain important baseline demographic data (i.e., nesting success) for the population. NNYA 2013/14 Hamilton County Lecture Grant ($750) Dr. Bruce Beehler Dr. Beehler delivered Part II of his fascinating lecture about his work in Papua New Guinea, where he has studied endemic species for twenty-five years, including species previously unknown to science. Dr. Beehler developed an instant rapport with the packed audience, and held them spellbound with photos, videos and even a 60 Minutes news story that included incredible footage of rare and fantastical bower birds showing off their elaborate nests and mind-bogglingly elaborate courtship displays. Dr. Beehler’s experiences awed quite a few attendees, and an almost embarrassingly long question and answer period kept the lively pace of the presentation going well into the evening. 3 3 4 3 Trip Hull’s Falls Road Bird Walk Ausable Marsh President’s Message Deadlines for NNYA Conservation Grant Applications Thank You Rishe’s Auto Service Attention 11– to 17– Year Olds: DEC Summer Camp For Free National Audubon Society Email Newsletter Initiative The Warbler Guide, Reviewed by Crown Point Banding Report Joan Collins NABA’s 2010Guide, Lake Placid Warbler continued 53 The ButterflySnowy CountOwl Irruption 2013/14 Effects of Climate 46 Projected Elizabethtown Christmas Bird Change Count on High Elevation Forests Ferrisburgh, CBCGraph Bicknell’s Thrush VT Habitat 5 54th Osgood River 6 41st Massena Christmas Bird Wild Center/Cornell Lab Course 6 Count Wild Center Intern Letter 7 Plattsburgh Christmas Bird Poetry Corner/Dramatic Frag7 Count ment/Become a Member 7 58th Saranac Lake Christmas NNYA Annual Meeting/Outing 7 Bird Count Report & Sightings 7 Snowy Owl at rest—a formal 8 Editor’s portrait Note 8 Editor’s Note 2 President’s Message NNYA Northern New York Audubon, Inc. Board of Directors Leah Valerio President Tupper Lake (518) 359-7800 Larry Master, PhD Vice-President Lake Placid (518) 645-1545 Leslie Karasin Treasurer Saranac Lake (518) 891-2193 Kathleen Wiley Secretary Keene Valley (518) 576-6405 Alan Belford Saranac Lake Michael Burgesss, PhD Ausable Fks Joan Collins Long Lake Thomas Cullen Childwold Charlotte Demers Newcomb Lisa Godfrey Norristown, PA Glenn Johnson, PhD Potsdam Lewis Lolya Paul Smiths Brian McAllister Saranac Lake Melanie McCormack Keene Peter O’Shea Fine Angelina Ross Canton Jacob Straub, PhD Plattsburgh John Thaxton Keene Pat Thaxton Keene Mary Beth Warburton Potsdam Eileen Wheeler Canton Northern New York Audubon, Inc. A chapter of National Audubon Society serving the Adirondack, Champlain and St. Lawrence regions of northern New York, including Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton and St. Lawrence counties. Correspondence and Membership Information Northern New York Audubon PO Box 488 Keene Valley, New York 12943-0488 John Thaxton, Newsletter Editor PO Box 488 Keene Valley, NY 12943-0488 NNYA Web Site: www.nnya.org Charlotte Demers, Web Master Northern New York Audubon Newsletter is published by Northern New York Audubon, Inc. Vol. 42 No. 1 Every morning I invite the locals over for breakfast. I get up and start the coffee, feed and walk the dog and then settle into my comfy chair and spend quality time with the birds in my backyard. From the usual suspects who hang out at my feeders to the family group of cows who inhabit the woods beyond my deck—there is quite a crowd at the morning buffet. And to be honest, this is the only time I spend with them lately. Finding the time away from work to unplug and enjoy nature has become increasingly harder these days. One of the greatest assets of being a birder is that you can enjoy this hobby almost anywhere. You can take it with you on any trip. You can be in your pjs in the comfort of your own home. Or, if you’re like me, you can watch a live stream of one of the plethora of nest cams while you’re at work but dreaming of being outside. Check out our Facebook page and our web site to stay connected with what’s happening in our region and let us know if you have any suggestions about what you’d like to see on our page and site. Happy Birding! —Leah Valerio Saturday, March 1, 2014 Snowshoe the Roosevelt Truck Trail Minerva, NY Time: 8 a.m. Meet: Long Lake Town Offices parking area for transportation to the trailhead on the comfortable Long Lake bus! Leader: Joan Collins Bring: Water and snacks/lunch Registration: Contact Long Lake Parks & Recreation Dept. @ 518.624.3077 Lovely, mature boreal habitat spans the 2.5 mile long Roosevelt Truck Trail. This wide, road-sized trail runs between Route 28N and the Blue Ridge Road in Minerva. Joan Collins will lead a snowshoe hike along this route beginning at the Blue Ridge Road trailhead and ending at the Route 28N trailhead. The trail has hilly and level terrain with an overall loss of 100 feet in elevation by the end of our hike. The habitat along the route provides a year-round home to many boreal bird species. Participants will also be looking for animal tracks. There are restrooms at our meeting location, and two outhouses along the trail! This field trip is jointly sponsored by the Long Lake Parks and Recreation Department and Northern New York Audubon. Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 Poke-O-Moonshine Mountain Chesterfield, NY Time: 7:30 a.m. Meet: Poke-O-Moonshine Observer Trailhead (new parking lot—4 miles on right from I-87 exit 33 Leader: Michael Burgess, Assistant Professor of Botany, SUNY Plattsburgh Bring: Water/snacks Registration: Send email with contact information (name, address, email & phone) to michael.b.burgess@ plattsburgh.edu Join Professor Burgess for a hike up Poke-O-Moonshine Mountain to look for spring migrants, including peregrine falcons that nest on the cliffs here. A wide variety of spring migrants always get reported from Poke-O and the new trail has a much more forgiving grade that the original, steep ascent. Crown Point Bird Banding Station To Be Announced Contact Gordon Howard: ghoward@clemson.edu 3 Saturday May 10th, 2014 Huntington Wildlife Forest Newcomb, NY Time: 9:00 a.m. Meet: At the Adirondack Interpretive Center, 5922 State Route 28N Newcomb, NY Leader: Charlotte Demers Registration: Email to aic@esf.edu or call the AIC at (518) 582-2000 A beautiful 2-3 mile walk in the privately owned Huntington Wildlife Forest. We will be walking along a level dirt road that parallels a lovely marsh at the west end of Rich Lake. The walk continues to a small pond and includes both conifer and hardwood habitats. Plan on two hours of easy walking. Saturday, May 17th, 2014 Hulls Falls Road Keene Valley, NY Time: 7:30 a.m. Leaders: Ruth Kuhfahl, Pat & John Thaxton Meet: Hulls Falls Road @ Marcy Field Registration: No need to register—just come. The annual Hurricane ADK/Northern New York Audubon bird walk with Ruth Kuhfahl and leaders Pat and John Thaxton, will meet at the Keene Valley end of Hulls Falls Road. No need to register—just come. We have always had sightings of an interesting variety of species. On a previous year’s May walk in this diverse, riverside habitat we found nesting pine warblers, solitary sandpipers and bay-breasted warbler. The walk consists of a leisurely mile –and-a-half to two miles, and several of us will have spotting scopes to bring in birds determined to stay beyond binocular reach. The trip traditionally attracts quite a few birders, as well an non-birders, and usually breaks up just in time for a slightly late breakfast or a slightly early brunch, both readily available in Keene & Keene Valley New NNYA Board Members Needed The NNYA Board of Directors needs a few new members in order to fully implement our very varied agenda. The Board meets six times a year and has a significant impact on Adirondack conservation issues. Please contact Leah Valerio with any suggestion: lvalerio@wildcenter.org NNYA maintains a very active Facebook site, complete with information about field trips, programs, festivals and celebrations. Friend us on Facebook! **Deadlines for Grant Applications** Northern New York Audubon (NNYA) is now accepting applications for the 2014/2015 NNYA Environmental and Conservation Grants. Projects that support the conservation ideals of NNYA, either through research or education, are eligible for this grant. Eligibility includes, but is not limited to, environmental organizations, teachers, graduate students, and research project managers This year’s projects ranged widely, from studies of red-headed woodpeckers and rusty blackbirds to extensive analyses of bird-friendly hayfields as refugia for North Country grassland birds and management recommendations for golden-winged warbler habitat along utility rights of way. Applicants should submit a description of their project, a time frame for doing the work and an overall budget. Although most of the work we fund tends to involve studying birds and their habitats, we have given grants for research into acid rain and its effects on aquatic ecosystems, for lectures delivered at both the Paul Smiths Great Adirondack Birding Celebration and the Hamilton County Birding Festival. We also allocated funds to pay half the salary of a naturalist intern at The Wild Center. Application procedures and forms can be downloaded from the Northern New York Audubon web site here http://nnya.org/conservation/cullman/ The email deadline is March 31, 2014; the USPS deadline is March 21, 2014. Attention 11- to 17-Year Olds Attend a DEC Summer Camp for Free Northern New York Audubon seeks to sponsor a teen 11 to17 years of age for a week at the DEC’s Camp Colby in Saranac Lake or Camp Pack Forest in Warrensburg. In addition to ecology workshops and field study in various habitats, campers may enjoy canoeing, swimming, hiking, or hunter safety, games, and other optional activities such as archery and fishing. Full information is available at: www.dec.state.ny.us/website/education/edcamps/html For a great time enjoying the outdoors and learning about nature and the environment, send us a paragraph about why you would like to go to camp. Include your name, address, age, and phone number. You may send it online or to NNYA Scholarship, 585 Pink School Road, Canton, NY 13617. The deadline for applications is March 31st. Good luck! For more information about the contest contact: Brian McAllister at (518) 637-1773, (e-mail: birder64@yahoo.com ) or Eileen Wheeler at (315) 386-2482, (e-mail: eiwheeler@yahoo.com). Save the Dates Great Adirondack Birding Celebration June 6th-8th Hamilton County Birding Festival June 13th-15th 4 In The Warbler Guide, the species accounts begin on page 138! The first part of the book is a treasure trove of information about warblers and includes: how to use the book (important information on the icons used in the species accounts), a detailed topographic tour of a warbler, what things to notice on a warbler (with lots of tip information on color, contrast, and lighting), aging and sexing warblers, understanding sonograms, how to listen to warbler songs, chip and flight calls, visual guides, and warbler song, chip, and flight call finders. The visual guides are already a huge hit! They include the following “quick finders,” face shots, side views, 45 degree views, under views, east coast species, west coast species, and of course, undertail patterns! Throughout the book, the authors use a big, black check by field marks that are diagnostic for species identification. For example, all you need to see to identify a Magnolia Warbler is its undertail with the inch of black at the tail tip and white undertail coverts, or the chestnut cheek patch surrounded by yellow to identify a Cape May Warbler. There are also auditory guides that include song, chip and call note finders using aspects of the sound such as trilled, buzzy, complex, or clear, and pitch – rising, falling, or steady, and low or high. If you are interested in using the book to learn more about warbler vocalizations, you will want to order The Warbler Guide Song and Call Companion. All of the referenced song and call clips in the book, with sonograms, are on this comprehensive companion. Book Review The Warbler Guide by Tom Stephenson and Scott Whittle Princeton University Press, 2013 560 pages, $29.95, softcover Several years ago, on the international list serve “Birdchat,” a person asked for the best location to see breeding warblers in the United States. Someone else answered, “Northern New York!” Our local Audubon chapter is fortunate to encompass the breeding warbler hotspot of the U.S., and it is hard to come up with any other location that has as many breeding warbler species. From the St. Lawrence Valley across the Adirondack Mountains to the Lake Champlain Valley there are 30 warbler species listed in “The Second Atlas of Breeding Birds in New York State”! As the warbler species move back in during the spring, males begin to sing. Birders find themselves relearning all those songs – with many that sound frustratingly alike! Was that an American Redstart or Magnolia?... Yellow or Chestnut-sided?... Blackburnian or Nashville!? In the fall, silent warblers confound identification in their drab fall plumage. Was that a Cape May or Yellow-rumped, etc.?! Well, there is now a wonderful new resource to help not just with visual identification, but with detailed auditory identification also. “The Warbler Guide” by Tom Stephenson and Scott Whittle, is an invaluable resource for birders with a serious interest in all aspects of warblers. 5 The species accounts are filled with photographs. Each account begins with icons (for both males and females) that show profile, color scheme, undertail pattern, breeding range in the U.S., foraging height in the canopy, and foraging behavior. Males are covered first with images from three different angles and detailed descriptions, plus additional photos of “distinctive views” showing diagnostic field marks, and more photos that include flight shots, distinctive behaviors, and comparison species. There is also a page on aging and sexing – spring and fall adult males and females, along with first year males and females. A map of North and South America showing fall and spring migration routes, and breeding and wintering locations is also given. Next, my favorite part of the species accounts, is the auditory section. Sonograms for each song, and variations of that song, are given (sonograms are indexed by letters and numbers for songs and variations), followed by similar sounding songs of other species – including exactly which song and variation to compare it to! The song and call companion is set up in order with the book, so you can sit with the book open and play the vocalizations as you look at the sonograms. The authors include text to explain how the similar sounding species songs are similar and how they differ, referencing “elements,” “phrases,” and “sections” of the vocalizations that are visually depicted in the sonograms. Females are covered last with similar detailed information and photographs. After the species accounts, there is even more information! Similar non-warbler species and hybrid warblers are covered, there is a quiz and review section, warblers in flight are shown, with verbal descriptions of their flight style and features, a North American taxonomy chart is given, a measurements table is listed, silhouettes of warbler species are depicted, and habitat and behavior is described for each species. The Warbler Guide is a remarkable accomplishment! Now, if only the authors would shift their focus to sparrows! —Joan Collins Mountain Birdwatch Needs Volunteers Do you enjoy hiking? Are you a birder- or would you like to learn more about bird identification to support a conservation effort? Mountain Birdwatch is a long-term monitoring program for Bicknell’s Thrush and other high-elevation forest birds. We’re looking for beginner to experienced birdwatchers who are strong hikers to conduct a survey in the Adirondacks, Catskills, Green and White Mountains, or Maine. Hike a scenic mountain trail, enjoy the sunrise, and count birds for conservation! To learn more about Mountain Birdwatch protocols, visit http://www.vtecostudies.org/MBW/prep.html, or to check out our list of available routes, see http:// www.vtecostudies.org/MBW/availableroutes.html . Please contact Mountain Birdwatch director Judith Scarl (jscarl@ vtecostudies.org) if you’d like to learn more about this exciting program! 2013/2014 Snowy Owl Irruption After the astonishing snowy owl irruption of 2011/2012, no one expected any significant snowy owl activity for another four or five years, the usual interval between snowie irruptions, which coincide with indecipherable fluctuations in vole populations in the arctic. Snowy breeding productivity has to do with protein levels, with the result that when vole populations spike these owls produce more young, in bumper crop years fledging as many as fifteen young. This hyper-fecundity results in a mass eviction of young birds, which disperse in search of food, which this autumn/winter found them littering the eastern United States as far south as Florida and Puerto Rico, with unprecedented numbers in the Adirondacks and adjacent North Country locations. A mid-February Snowy Owl Blitz in Addison County, Vermont, immediately across Lake Champlain from the Crown Point/Port Henry section of the Adirondacks, found 24 snowy owls. On the way to get my blood drawn at my doctor’s office in Keene, Pat shouted, “Snowy Owl.” and I slammed on the brakes, skidding slightly as the anti-lock brakes chattered and then spotted the owl, perched on that dilapidated barn at the intersection of Routes 73 & 9N. I called Larry Master, who took the top photo below a few minutes later. He captured the bottom image in Addi—JT son, VT a few weeks later. Photos by Larry Master/masterimages.org 6 2013 Christmas Bird Counts Elizabethtown CBC Elizabethtown NY – 44° 13' N 73° 36' W centered at Essex County courthouse. The 2013 count was held on Saturday December 21 from 5:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Sixteen observers participated in the count for a total of 35.10 party-hours, covering 11 miles on foot and 261 miles by car. Temperatures ranged from 29° F to 38° F. Although the winds were calm in the morning they shifted and were coming out of the north by the afternoon. The weather conditions were less than ideal for both birds and observers with the roads icy and difficult to access. Snow cover ranged from 1” in the valley up to 8” in the woods and on the trail to Hurricane. Still water was frozen while moving water was partly open. Light rain occurred throughout the day. Graylag Goose 2, Canada Goose 10, Mallard 16, Common Merganser 1, Ring-necked Pheasant 1, Ruffed Grouse 5, Wild Turkey 2, Bald Eagle 2, Red-tailed Hawk 9, Roughlegged Hawk 1, Rock Pigeon 106, Mourning Dove 127, Downy Woodpecker 17, Hairy Woodpecker 9, Pileated Woodpecker, 5, Blue Jay 119, American Crow 143, Common Raven 13, Black-capped Chickadee 301, Tufted Titmouse 8, Red-breasted Nuthatch 37, White-breasted Nuthatch 4, Brown Creeper 13, Golden-crowned Kinglet 21, Eastern Bluebird 1, American Robin 66, European Starling 95, Cedar Waxwing 62, American Tree Sparrow 22, Darkeyed (Slate-colored) Junco 107, Snow Bunting 24, Northern Cardinal 4, Red Crossbill 5, American Goldfinch 808, House Sparrow 46. Two count week birds were a Sharpshinned Hawk and Purple Finch. Totals: 36 species and 2212 individuals. This is just below average for both number species (38) and number of individuals (2795) but not the worst year ever despite the challenging conditions. Participants: Becky Bosley, Robin Brown, Eric Damour, Charlotte Demers, Denise Griffin. Judy Heintz, Fuat Latiff, Megan Murphy, Beth Nickerson, Dan Nickerson, Jim Otto, Timothy Quaid, Carole Slatkin, Eric Teed, John Thaxton, Pat Thaxton. —Charlotte Demers 54th Ferrisburgh, VT CBC Fifty-one people took to the field to observe and count, with an additional four feeder counters. Though the day was cold and overcast the relative lack of wind provided good conditions for counting. Observers found a total of 24,552 birds of 79 species with one additional count period species (a merlin). Our running ten-year average including this year is 22,013 birds of 80 species. An abundance of juniper cones and wild grapes kept many fruit eaters around. For the second time in three years we found over 3,000 robins—prior to 2011 the record had been 1,575 in 1994. Along with the robins we found an astonishing 55 yellow-rumped warblers. The 55th Annual Ferrisburgh, VT CBC is scheduled for Saturday, December 20, 2014. Species: common loon 25, horned grebe 37, double-crested cormorant 2, Canada goose 6,364, snow goose 1, mallard 494, American black duck 176, northern pintail 2, green-winged teal 1, wood duck 1, gadwall 1, ring-necked duck 4, greater scaup 1, lesser scaup 1, scaup spp. 23, common goldeneye 1,599, bufflehead 52, long-tailed duck 3, white-winged scoter 4, hooded merganser 36, common merganser 152, redbreasted merganser 3, sharp-shinned hawk 2, Cooper’s hawk 9, red-tailed hawk 82, rough-legged hawk 24, bald eagle 16, northern harrier 7, merlin 1 (count period), peregrine falcon 3, ruffed grouse 1, ring-necked pheasant 1, wild turkey 94, great black-backed gull 49, herring gull 56, ring-billed gull 461, rock pigeon 920, mourning dove 499, eastern screech-owl 14, great horned owl 5, barred owl 7; short-eared owl 2, snowy owl 1, northern flicker 13, pileated woodpecker 12, hairy woodpecker 40, downy woodpecker 99, red-bellied woodpecker 19, yellow-bellied sapsucker 4, northern shrike 4, blue jay 243, common raven 47, American crow 336, horned lark 183, black-capped chickadee 647, tufted titmouse 57, whitebreasted nuthatch 93, red-breasted nuthatch 4, brown creeper 8, Carolina wren 4, American robin 3,441, northern mockingbird 1, eastern bluebird 89, golden-crowned kinglet 11, European starling 4,142, cedar waxwing 648, bohemian waxwing 1, yellow-rumped warbler 55, northern cardinal 139, eastern towhee 1, dark-eyed junco 474, American tree sparrow 580, white-throated sparrow 20, song sparrow 4, snow bunting 471, red-winged blackbird 10, brown-headed cowbird 1, purple finch 23, house finch 146, American goldfinch 708, house sparrow 508. Totals: Species: 79 (+1 count period); Individuals: 24, 552. —Mike Winslow 41st Massena, NY/Cornwall CBC The 41st Annual Massena, NY/Cornwall, Ontario Christmas Bird Count took place on Saturday, December 28, 2013. A total of 19 field observers and 10 feeder watchers recorded 54 species and 10,888 individuals. It was an interesting day birding with lots of snow on the ground and strong winds. The drifting snow reduced access to certain areas due to the unplowed roads. Most feeders were quiet as birds took shelter from the winds. The temperature ranged from -3 centigrade to +3 centigrade with variable visibility along the St Lawrence River. The St Lawrence River was wide open except for sheltered bays that were frozen or had ice along the shoreline. The overall variety of birds was low on the river too. The 42nd annual Massena, NY/Cornwall, Ontario CBC is set for Saturday, December 27, 2014. Species: Canada goose 31, American black duck 12, mallard 59, long-tailed duck 6 (record high), bufflehead 24, common goldeneye 277, hooded merganser 6, common merganser 380, red-breasted merganser 19, ring-necked pheasant 1, ruffed grouse 1, wild turkey 63, common loon 1, double-crested cormorant 1, bald eagle 11 (record high), sharp-shinned hawk 2, northern goshawk 1, red-tailed hawk 4, herring gull 761, Iceland gull 53 (record high), lesser black-backed gull 2 (record high), glaucous gull 69 (record high), great black-backed gull 686, rock pigeon 416, mourning dove 106, snowy owl 5 (record high), downy woodpecker 24, hairy woodpecker 11, northern flicker 5, pileated woodpecker 6, merlin 2, northern shrike 2, blue jay 187, American crow 5,744, common raven 4, black-capped chickadee 431, red-breasted nuthatch 1, white-breasted nuthatch 33, brown creeper 6, Carolina wren 1, golden-crowned kinglet 4, American robin 33, European starling 551, cedar waxwing 102, Lapland longspur 2, snow bunting 255, American tree sparrow 103, white-throated sparrow 1, dark-eyed junco 71, northern cardinal 35, purple finch 7 1, house finch 2, American goldfinch 221, house sparrow 53. Total Species: 54; Total Individuals: 10,888. -Bruce DiLabio Plattsburgh CBC Plattsburgh NY – 44.6495990000 73.4736910000, centered on Plattsburgh AFB. The 2013 count was held on Sunday, December 15 from 5:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Eighteen observers participated in the count for a total of 77 party-hours, covering 6 miles on foot and 370 miles by car. Temperatures ranged from 7.4° F to 18.8° F. Winds were calm, coming out of the northeast. The weather conditions were treacherous with heavy morning snow and light snow in the afternoon.. Snow cover ranged from 4" to 6”. Still water was partly frozen while moving water was partly open. Species: snow goose 5,670; Canada goose 6,060; American black duck 26; mallard 808; lesser scaup 450; scaup sp. 3,500; long-tailed duck 2; bufflehead 14; common goldeneye 942; hooded merganser 9; common merganser 140; redbreasted merganser 4; ruffed grouse 1; wild turkey 43; common loon 8; horned grebe 3; Great Blue Heron (Blue form) 1; Bald Eagle 2; Northern Harrier 3; Sharp-shinned Hawk 1; Cooper's Hawk 1; red-tailed hawk 12; rough-legged hawk 4; merlin 1; peregrine falcon 1; ring-billed gull 106; herring gull 109; glaucous gull 2; great black-backed gull 30; gull sp. 80; rock pigeon 116; mourning dove 345; belted kingfisher 1; downy woodpecker 27; hairy woodpecker 21; northern flicker 1; pileated woodpecker 3; northern shrike 2; blue jay 89; American crow 5,571; common raven 3; horned lark 14; black-capped chickadee 216; tufted titmouse 4; red-breasted nuthatch 1; white-breasted nuthatch 19; Carolina wren 3; eastern bluebird 3; American robin 63; northern mockingbird 1; European starling 205; cedar waxwing 124; American tree sparrow 60; white-throated sparrow 3; dark-eyed junco 190; snow bunting 129; northern cardinal 65; brown-headed cowbird 2; house finch 34; American goldfinch 251; house sparrow 42. Totals: Species: 61; Individuals: 25,631; —Michael Burgess 58th Saranac Lake CBC Saranac Lake, N.Y. -44°19’0”N 74°04’23”W, mostly as adjust very slightly (a few seconds) in 2007 to be more precise (using Google Earth). Dec. 29, 2013; 2:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Temperature 20° to 40°. Wind 1-15 mph. Snow depth 1-4 in. Still water frozen. Moving water partly frozen. A.M. cloudy. P.M. cloudy. Observers: 43 in field in 16-17 parties (non-owling), plus 1 at feeders. Time and distance: 5 hours at feeders; 8.5 hours and 86 miles owling. Total party-hours 101.5 and party miles 460.9: 56.25 hours and 48 miles on foot, 43.25 hours and 406.9 miles by car, 2 hours and 6 miles by kayak. Totals: American black duck 23, mallard 425, Common goldeneye 1; hooded merganser 35; ruffed grouse 19; wild turkey 30; bald eagle 2; red-tailed hawk 1; roughed-legged hawk 1; rock pigeon 291; mourning dove 39; great horned owl cw; barred owl 8; northern saw whet owl 1; belted kingfisher 1; downy woodpecker 23; hairy woodpecker 30; blackbacked woodpecker 7; pileated woodpecker 18; gray jay 14; blue jay 338; American crow 302; common raven 39; horned lark 2; black-capped chickadee 995; boreal chickadee 9; tufted titmouse 2; red-breasted nuthatch 158; white-breasted nuthatch 12; brown creeper 12; golden-crowned kinglet 76; European starling 188; American tree sparrow 6; white-throated sparrow 1; fox sparrow cw; dark-eyed (slate-colored) junco 40; Lapland longspur 3; snow bunting 165; northern cardinal 12; red-winged blackbird 2; brown-headed cowbird 8; purple finch 18; American goldfinch 1,611; evening grosbeak cw. Totals: 44 species; 5,015 individuals. Participants: Milt Adams, Bill & Alice Boardman, Ron Bussian, Diane, Tyler, Sawyer, & Dellice Chase, Shelly Cihan, Joan Collins, Eric Damour, Joe & Pat Demko, Liz & Russ DeFonce, Margot Ernst, Ed Grant, Denise Griffin, Audrey Hyson, Debbie, Ed, Ned & Tassie Kanze, Leslie Karasin & Steve Langdon, Linda LaPan, Fuat Latif, Ted Mack, Larry Master (compiler), Brian McAllister, Melanie McCormack, Sean O’Brien, Peter O’Shea, Carol Pinney, Warren Radcliffe, Chris Rimmer, Lew Rosenberg, Pat & John Thaxton, Eileen & Tom Wheeler, Cris Winters, Uta Wister. This is the winter of the American goldfinch, with more than 1,600 observed on count day to smash the 57-year-old record of 1,115 goldfinches. Record numbers of hooded mergansers, ruffed grouse, and black-backed and pileated woodpeckers were also observed. Lapland longspurs, seen by two parties, were observed for the first time since 1951, and horned larks were observed for only the 3rd time in the past 40 years. Both species were accompanying snow buntings, which were seen in unusually large numbers. Other unexpected finds included rough-legged hawk, northern saw-whet owl, and tufted titmouse. Despite a good cone crop only small numbers of purple finches and no siskins or crossbills were observed, likely because of even better food crops in Canada, which kept the birds to our north. But some of these species should start to appear in number later this winter to take advantage of our conifer crop. Finally, the last remaining flock of house sparrows in the count circle was not found despite diligent searching. This introduced species has been seen 55 of the past 58 years of this count. Many thanks to all the dedicated participants on this year’s count. Next year’s count is tentatively scheduled for Sunday, January 4th, 2015. I hope to see many of you then. —Larry Master Snowy owl Photo by Larry Master www.masterimages.org 8 Editor’s Note When I awoke imagining the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes performing a colossally out of step tap dance on the roof above my bedroom, and when the illusion persisted even as I slouched toward consciousness and caffeine in the kitchen, I went to the corner of the living room and looked at the roof above my bed, rubbing my eyes as I watched about twenty-five goldfinches hopping higgledy piggledy all over the roof and a half dozen others hovering-jumping up and down along the very edge of it, drinking from the upside down popsicles, until a sudden blast of bird shadows all across the snow covered roof flushed the whole flock, spooked, apparently, by a pair of large deer vacuuming up the spilled sunflower seeds beneath the feeders. When one neighbor mentioned seeing an osprey in Keene in mid-January and another a pair of snowy owls hanging out at the deer carcass dump at the junction of Routes 9N & 73, we took a ride around to investigate, didn’t see anything and stopped at the Rivermead Farm Store to pick up some apples, and as Rob Hastings rang us up he mentioned the February sun and how he had really wanted to bring his new kitten out to gambol in the sunshine but stopped in his tracks, the kitten in his arms, when he saw a huge hawk hovering over his fields. The osprey and the snowy owls transmogrified over the next few days into a pair of light phase rough-legged hawks working the fields around Keene. Aside from the extremely rare sub-arctic appearance of a Ross’s gull near Montreal (see Larry Master’s images on his web site: www.masterimages.org), the incredible irruption of snowy owls in the eastern United States and Canada handily qualifies as the most exciting avian event of the season, with snowy sightings showing up on list serves multiple times a day from multiple locations. The Brooklyn CBC had fifteen snowies. I detail inside the region’s CBC totals as well as this years NNYA Conservation Grants, which range from The American Kestrel Project to Recurring Bird Surveys at Shingle Shanty Preserve and Research Station to a Monitoring Program for Climate Change Adaptation via Radius Bird Surveys at Intervale Lowlands. NNYA will award Conservation Grants for 2014 as well, and see inside for Grant Application Deadlines. We have an exciting series of Field Trips scheduled, including two new ones—a snowshoe on the Roosevelt Truck Trail in Minerva and a Spring Migrants Hike up Poke-O-Moonshine—as well as the popular Huntington Wild Forest hike and Ruth Kuhfahl’s Hull’s Falls Road bird walk. Every once in a while an absolutely mind-blower of a field guide gets published, and when a copy of Tom Stephenson’s and Scott Whittle’s The Warbler Guide arrived in the mail my jaw dropped. As Joan Collins notes in her review of the book the species accounts don’t even begin until page 138—the introductory material to this book alone justifies the price, and then the hundreds of plates, and comparison plates, and the available online The Warbler Guide Song and Call Companion—Yow! And don’t forget those birding festivals; I’ll detail them in the next newsletter. —John Thaxton P.O. Box 488 Keene Valley, NY 12943-0488 NORTHERN NEW YORK AUDUBON, INC.