Powdermill Bird Banding
Spring 2005
Recent weekly totals
STATISTICS |
5/24 |
5/25 |
5/26 |
5/27 |
5/28 |
5/29 |
|
Daily Banding Total |
45 |
50 |
38 |
27 |
7 |
38 |
|
Number
of Species |
25 |
19 |
19 |
13 |
6 |
21 |
|
Number Net-Trap
Hours |
95 |
125 |
290 |
250 |
60 |
250 |
|
No. Birds/100 Net-Trap
Hours |
47.4 |
40.0 |
13.1 |
10.8 |
11.7 |
15.2 |
|
No. Recaptures |
10 |
11 |
11 |
19 |
2 |
8 |
|
|
|
STATISTICS |
5/31 |
6/1 |
6/2 |
6/3 |
6/4 |
6/5 |
Period
Totals |
Daily Banding Total |
8 |
29 |
15 |
|
39 |
7 |
303 |
Number
of Species |
8 |
12 |
7 |
|
11 |
4 |
49 |
Number Net-Trap
Hours |
75 |
180 |
75 |
|
140 |
95 |
1635 |
No. Birds/100 Net-Trap
Hours |
10.7 |
16.1 |
20.0 |
|
27.9 |
7.4 |
18.5 |
No. Recaptures |
5 |
10 |
2 |
|
8 |
5 |
91 |
< CLICK
HERE for List of Season Totals
>
< CLICK
HERE for List of This Week's Totals by
Species >
<CLICK
HERE for a brief summary of the spring 2005 season>
NOTES and HIGHLIGHTS for 24 May
- 5 June 2005
Because it seemed to be running
on the late side from the beginning, we decided to extend our spring banding
schedule past the end of May to the end of the first weekend in June.
Our summer season banding will begin on Tuesday, June 7, when we will assume
a four day a week banding schedule, generally operating the station on
Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, and Sunday each week, weather permitting.
Following this update, website updates will be monthly until August, when
we will resume more frequent (as often as weekly) updates.
As quickly as the pace of spring
migration picked up at Powdermill through the third week of May (see last
week's notes and highlights), it
trailed off just as quickly in the last two weeks. However,
species that are strictly passage migrants at Powdermill, like Tennessee
Warbler, Mourning Warbler, Northern Waterthrush, Lincoln's Sparrow, Gray-cheeked
Thrush, Olive-sided Flycatcher, and Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, continued
to caught as late as the last two days of May and the first few days of
June. These are late-migrating species, however, that fairly commonly
trickle into June in migration (see spring migration timing charts included
in the Spring 2003 summary)
. So, while the spring flight did seem to peak later than usual (mostly
the result, it seemed to us, of there being no real earlier peak of migration
in April), as of the end of the official spring season, it does not show
signs of extending unusually far into June.
During the last two weeks of
our spring banding season, the most commonly banded birds were Cedar Waxwing
(52), Magnolia Warbler (30), Red-eyed Vireo (21), American Goldfinch (20),
Song Sparrow (19), Traill's Flycatcher (17), Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
(10), and Mourning Warbler (9).
.
We want to thank Emma DeLeon,
Jessica Maggio, Trish Miller, Pam Ferkett, Grace Greenwood, Annie Lindsay,
Cokie Lindsay, Fred and Carol McCullough, Joe Schreiber, Carole Shanahan,
Josh Van Buskirk, Molly McDermott, and Matt Shumar for their help with
the banding during this period.
-
Although it was not mentioned in
the immediately preceding notes and highlights (primarily because no pictures
were taken of it!), we banded our first Olive-sided Flycatcher on May 21.
In fact, it was our first OSFL in more than a year. We missed banding
the species entirely last spring and fall; in fact, we have only banded
two spring birds in the last eight years (1997-2004).
.
Fortunately, we got two more
photo "ops" for this species during the last two weeks of the spring 2005
season, on May 24 and May 29. The behavior of these two OSFLs in
the hand could not have been more different. One posed very calmly,
and even looked a little dopey, like it might already have drunk "three
beers,"
while the other--continually
flapping, bill-snapping, and calling--acted like it wanted three beers
"Quick!"
Note: For those who may not
know this (and who, therefore, must be wondering about the odd text accompanying
the above photos!), the song of the Olive-sided Flycatcher usually is phonetically
rendered as, "Quick!... three beers."
-
On May 27, we caught and banded
our tenth ever Broad-winged Hawk (and our first one in eight years).
-
Such an unusual catch was cause
for summoning everyone in the vicinity to the banding lab for a look.
Mike Lanzone is holding the hawk; others in the picture (from left to right)
are: Trish Miller (Mike's wife), Cokie Lindsay (Powdermill's Administrative
Asst., hidden behind Mike), Dave Smith (Powdermill's Director), and Bruce
Horner (Powdermill's Maintenance Manager).
-
The hawk was aged/sexed as a third
year (TY) male. In the photo below, you can see that the outermost
right rectrix is a retained juvenal feather, lacking the broad black-and-white
band typical of adult Broad-wings. The bird was sexed male based
on its small size--unflattened wing chord, 259.0 mm; mass, 318.0 g.
Both of these measurements are on the small side for a male, based on data
in Palmer's Handbook of North American Birds, Vol. 5).
A typical female would have a wing length >270 mm and would weigh 75-100
g more than our male did.
-
Also on May 27, we caught a White-eyed
Vireo with an eye color not unlike that we will expect to see in hatching
year birds a month or two from now. This bird, however, was a second-year
adult. Not only its retained juvenile gray eye color, but also its
very unextensive wing molt (including no outer primaries or inner secondaries),
reflected what almost certainly was a very late hatching date for this
individual in 2004.
-
The orange yellow eye in the photo
below belongs to a Green Heron caught on May 28. In herons and egrets
the soft part colors generallly become more highly colored for the breeding
season, especially in the males. In the case of Green Herons, their
usually light yellow eye becomes darker and oranger; the usually yellowish
green fleshy area around and in front of their eyes becomes bluish gray;
their legs also change from yellowish green to brighter orange yellow.
-
Almost as big a handful as the Broad-winged
Hawk banded the day before, the Green Heron was our first of the season.
It proved to be an ASY male in definitive alternate, or "nuptial," plumage.
The long, narrow gray feathers on its back, which are elongated back and
scapular feathers, are the so-called "nuptial plumes." In some other
members of the heron family, especially the egrets, the decorative appeal
of the specialized nuptial plumes of the breeding plumage led to devastating
persecution of the adult birds. They were indiscriminately killed
in order to obtain ornate feathers for the millinery (women's hat) trade,
oftentimes leaving their young to starve in the nest. Thankfully,
concern over this led to the formation of a National Audubon Society that
quickly tackled this problem on public, corporate, and governmental fronts.
Because of their success in doing so, Great Egrets and other of the larger
herons were pulled back from the brink of extinction.
-
Nuptial plumes aren't the only specialized
feathers that members of the heron family have in common. They also
have what are called powder down feathers hidden beneath the contour feathers
on their upper breast. In the picture below, the contour feathers
are being blown aside to expose the yellowish powder down feathers.
When we blow on the feathers like this in order to examine the fat depsoits
of Green Herons, a visible plume or puff of powder actually is dislodged
from these feathers. Whether actively, during preening, or passively,
by sifting down through the plumage during normal activity, the fine waxy
powder that comes from disintegrating powder down feathers of herons and
bitterns may help keep their plumage free of oily residues from the quantities
of fish that they eat.
-
The Green Heron certainly helped
make it a more interesting banding demonstration for David Leibmann and
a few of his students from Shadyside Academy in Pittsburgh, who kept their
scheduled appointment with us in spite of the rainy weather. Because
of the weather, we could operate only a few nets for a short time, but
with the Green Heron and an adult male Scarlet Tanager among the half dozen
or so birds caught, they told us it was worth the trip. In the photo
below (left to right) is banding intern, Jessica Maggio, Shadyside Academy
students, Deirdre Sutula and Connie Parham, their teacher, David Leibmann,
and another student, Jon Miller.
-
On May 29, our friends Don and Donna
McCarty, from Indianapolis, IN, visited us at the banding lab. They
were pretty well satisfied with a small parade of Empidonax flycatchers
of four species, as well as a few late migrating warblers, but more than
anything, they Don wanted to see a male Mourning Warbler. The pace
of banding slackened off by late morning, when it began to get hot, and
Don and Donna decided to leave before we made our last net round of the
day. The first bird out of the net that round was the feisty Olive-sided
Flycatcher pictured above, and we managed to shout the news to Don and
Donna before they reached their car. We cautioned that it might be
a good idea for them to wait until we finsihed the net round to see what
else we might catch, but Donna urged Don back to the car. Well, Don
and Donna, as luck (or Murphy's Law) would have it, look what we caught
right after you left!
In case you doubt it, we had
him sign the guest book right below your names!
-
At Powdermill we use clean paper
bags, rather than cloth bags, to transport birds from the mist nests back
to the banding lab. For most birds, this works very well, but for
some kinds, it's a very temporary holding arrangement, even when we use
a doubled bag. So, any ideas whose beak is making a break for it?
-
In general, you may have correctly
guessed a woodpecker of some kind, but if you were observant enough to
notice the dirt caked on the bird's bill, we'll bet you knew, specifically,
it was a Northern Flicker. Unlike most woodpeckers, flickers do most
of their foraging on the ground, probing into ant hills for their favorite
food.
-
While we're on the subject of bird beaks... The two birds
pictured below were banded in the same net round on June 1. They
shared more than the jet black and bright orange plumage of adult males
of their species, Red-winged Blackbird (top) and Baltimore Oriole (bottom).
They also share a similar bill shape, stout and sharply pointed, that is
one of the morphological characteristics that tells a taxonomist that they
are members of the same, albeit very diverse, blackbird family (Icteridae).

Spring 2005 in review
With the exception of a few good
catches, such as an ASY male Prothonotary
Warbler in late April and the Broad-winged Hawk from the above highlights,
it was a so-so spring flight, with only a couple species, like Magnolia
and Chestnut-sided warbler, represented by well above average banding totals.
Similarly, only one or two species were banded in well below average numbers,
most notably Dark-eyed Junco, the recent spring flights of which have been
a fraction of their historical volume at Powdermill, with no obvious banding
station habitat changes to explain it. We discussed this decline
in an update earlier
this spring.
The spring 2005 season peaked
in terms of both number of birds banded and species diversity on May 16-17:
our total of 198 birds of 47 species on May 17 is one of our best-ever
spring banding days.

Our overall 2005 spring banding
total, 2,178 birds, was well below our long-term average of 2,735, but
well within one S.D. of it. The near absence of any substantial flight
of juncos during the early half of the season, and the rather poor early
portion (mid- to late April) of the migration of Neotropical wintering
species, contributed most to our low seasonal total. The latter half
of the migration (mid- to late May) was rather good for many species.

CLICK
HERE to see a complete tabular summary of our spring 2005 final
banding totals, with statistical comparisons to our long-term (1962--2004)
data.
Last but not least, for help
with the banding this spring, the Powdermill Avian Research Center banding
program staff (Adrienne Leppold, Mike Lanzone, Bob Mulvihill, and Bob Leberman)
are very grateful to those who attended our two bander workshops in April
(Workshop I: Cheryl Deane, Lisa Abernathy, Jessica Maggio, and Lannie
Graham; Workshop II: Frank Rouse, Jean Bickal, Margaret Hahn,
and Fred and Carol McCullough). We also thank our regular volunteers
Pam Ferkett, Mike Comley, Randi Gerrish, Carroll Labarthe, Molly McDermott,
and Matt Shumar; our seasonal interns, Emma DeLeon, Grace Greenwood, and
Jessica Maggio; and even a few visitors whom we pressed into service, like
Emma's parents Bob and Donna DeLeon, Amy Smith, Maria Somma (and her husband
David King and their boys, Austin and Aaron), Joe Schreiber, and Josh Van
Buskirk. Powdermill's Director, Dave Smith, and its Administrative
Assistant, Cokie Lindsay, helped with the spring banding on several occasions
and help with the Powdermill Avian Research Center programs in countless
ways every day. Thanks to everyone, including the readers of these
web pages, for their continued assistance with and interest in our work.
We could not do nearly as much or as well without it!
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Last Updated on 06/07/05
By Robert S. Mulvihill