Whether you live in Willistown or nearby townships, there is much to learn about those hard-to-explain shrub habitats. Discover the beauty in the brambles at one of our upcoming workshops:
Spring Songbird Banding Kicks Off this Week plus Beauty in the Brambles Workshops
WAIT! If you’re a subscriber reading this in email format, before reading any further, please click on the title of the post right above in order to view the blog in the glory it was meant to have on the actual blog website.
“Old Sam Peabody, Peabody, Peabody…..Oh Canada, Canada, Canada….”. However you interpret the angelically melodious song of the White-throated Sparrow, it is undoubtedly one of the sweetest bird songs to grace our ears. Unfortunately, these remaining precious songsters will soon be back in Canada and New England where they breed. The replacements for the White-throats and the Dark-eyed Juncos are quickly flooding through our area, inundating us with a flurry of new colors, songs and activity.
Spring is an exciting time already, aside from the return of the birds: spring peepers are cheerily chirping away and the dreamy whirring of toads fills the night air with vernal euphoria, salamanders are bustling about the forest floor on wet nights, cherry blossoms and red maple buds are bursting open, and spring beauties and other enchanting woodland wildflowers are taking advantage of the light before leafout.
If spring were a cake though, the birds would be the icing… and what good is a cake without icing?
On Tuesday, April 16th, we once again raised our mist nets to monitor the avian species diversity and abundance using Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm as a stopover site during migration. And this is not just any nature preserve and farm; this is both a sustainable farm and a globally significant IBA (Important Bird Area) coexisting and mutually benefiting each other, while demonstrating the benefits of low impact land management techniques on bird populations. Learn more about the farm and stay up to date on both the feathers and the food it supports by following The Wild Carrot, Rushton Farm’s brand new blog!!
You are invited to observe our bird banding program every Tuesday and Thursday morning from April 18-May 21.
We open the mistnets at 6am and close them at 11am, so you are welcome to come visit us at Rushton anytime within those hours. The earlier hours usually produce the most birds because that’s when they tend to be most active, feeding and refueling from their night’s journey. Note: we do not band if it rains.
(Rushton Woods Preserve is at the corner of Goshen and Delchester Roads in Newtown Square, PA with the entrance on Delchester Road opposite 912 Delchester Road, Newtown Square PA 19073.)
The office air is getting stale and we are excited to get back in the field amongst the birds and the land! The handsome Tree Swallows arrived at the farm a couple of weeks ago in their tuxedos and are beginning to claim their real estate (and their women!). The bluebird guys are stunning the lady blues with their breathtaking plumage and lovely, stammering songs. Brilliant red Northern Cardinal males are enjoying this time before the leafout when they can sit on conspicuous, still bare branches and sing their hearts out to their mates.
Purple Martin scouts have returned to the Willistown area from South America and will continue arriving in the coming weeks. Northbound flocks of Palm and Yellow-rumped Warblers are moving through along with some Pine Warblers, kinglets and even Hermit Thrush. Purple Finches are showing up at bird feeders around the area, so be sure to look twice at the birds you think are House Finches. Eastern Phoebes are investigating houses, porch lights, bridges and other man made structures on which to build their nests. Eastern Towhees are noisily scratching around the leaf litter looking for seeds, berries, spiders, insects and snails and telling us, “Drink you Teea!!”
Some early birds have been busy for awhile now: Great Horned Owl chicks in the area are leaving their nests, and Black Vulture chicks will be hatching soon!
Other migratory birds are still on their way: House Wrens, Baltimore Orioles, Scarlet Tanagers, Wood Thrush, Ovenbirds, Catbirds, Indigo Buntings and bushels of warblers galore! As we move deeper into spring migration, remember to help us document the new arriving bird species on our “Bird Species Seen in 2013″ checklist, which is located on our website here. Last year, 170 species were reported in the Willistown area. Help us beat last year’s total!
Oh and get your hummingbird feeders back out (if you ever put them away) because they are zooming over the Gulf of Mexico as we speak!
There are even still some reports of Western hummingbirds, like Rufous, in the state. This past fall/winter was a record with over 90 Western hummers reported in Pennsylvania, one of which was right here in Devon, PA. These hummingbirds are evolving new migration routes by passing on a genetic defect that causes them to want to migrate east instead of south for the winter. With the relatively mild winters we now have and the help of birders keeping their hummer feeders up all winter, these “defective” Western hummers can make it through the winter in the East and then go back to the West to make more “defective” hummers. Specially certified banders have been banding these vagrant hummingbirds to learn more about this phenomenon. Watch this Audubon at Home video to witness the banding of an Allen’s Hummingbird in suburban Philadelphia, November 2012.
Northern Saw-whet Owl Banding – 2012 Season Summary
Last Fall was not only a record for Western hummingbirds in PA but also for southbound Northern Saw-whet Owls. We banded 263 new saw-whet owls in 7 weeks of banding from October through November plus recaptured 42 owls that were already banded (called retraps), including our own owls and 9 “foreign” owls (originally banded by other stations). Unlike the Western hummers in PA, these little migratory owls were not “defective”; they were simply doing what they are supposed to do, in larger numbers than usual! Saw-whet owls breed in high elevation coniferous forests in the Appalachian mountains, the mountains of the Western U.S. and throughout Canada and Alaska. In the fall they migrate through our area (with some overwintering) and can travel as far south as Alabama.
The reason there were so many more saw-whets in 2012 as compared to previous years (we banded 34 owls in 2011 and 91 in 2010) is because it was an atypical irruption year. It was a productive summer in the north for the pine trees, which produced many seeds, which in turn supported a healthy rodent population. This set the stage for the production of huge numbers of baby saw-whets, which then got kicked out at the end of the breeding season and were forced to flood south for the winter, a time of food scarcity in the north. About 90% of the owls we banded were hatching year owls (owls born that summer). About 70% of the total catch were females, which is presumably because the adult males prefer to stick out the winter on their northern territories that they worked so hard to establish.
We had several notable discoveries during our 2012 season of owls. One foreign bird that graced our nets was a female banded at Drumlin Farm in Massachusetts in October of 2007! A 5 year old owl is big news, since we mostly get only young owls. One hatching year owl traveled 65 miles north to us from a banding station in Chestertown, Maryland in 4 nights….I guess it back-tracked when it heard about the five-star organic mouse buffet, called Rushton, that it missed on its way down the flyway!
Some of our owls ended up at other banding stations as well. One female that we banded as a second year bird in November 2010 showed up this year near Blue Mountain! Another of our banded owls was retrapped at Lake Ontario, Canada, and we’ve exchanged many owls with Scott Weidensaul’s multiple stations north of us in PA. To learn more about the fascinating world of saw-whet owls and saw-whet owl banding, a MUST READ article is Dark Moon Traveler in Natural History.
Beauty in the Brambles Workshops
Successional Shrub Habitat is the “in between habitat” that exists before a meadow becomes a woodland. Composed primarily of shrubs, these important habitats are threatened in Southeastern PA because many landowners clear these areas, seeking a more suburban manicured look. Our workshops are meant to help people understand and consider the ecological value of these habitats for birds and other wildlife and learn to see the unconventional beauty these places hold.
During these educational workshops, we’ll discuss the value of shrub habitats to birds, explore options for management on preserves and your own property, and see some of the bird species that depend on this special habitat. These workshops will be held by Audubon Pennsylvania, Valley Forge Audubon Society and the Willistown Conservation Trust at preserves within our program area where Successional Shrub Habitat models have been established.
We hope our efforts will help landowners, property managers, landscapers and the general public consider the “Beauty in the Brambles” when faced with decisions to clear habitat. Why not simply leave it (or at least part of it) alone and enjoy the life it supports? We have enough to clean inside our houses…why spend energy and money tidying up every single inch of our properties to resemble biologically barren lawns when habitat loss is the leading cause of decreased biodiversity today. As the human population continues to take over the earth, it’s becoming more urgent that we become more considerate stewards of the land and better neighbors to our fellow creatures.
We’re not asking people to get rid of their lawns completely, but rather to consider saving (or even creating) a corner or two filled with wonderful shrubs for the birds! Remember when all of the habitat is gone and there are no birds left, spring will be a very sad and lifeless cake with not a speck of icing!
We have already lost half of the songbirds that filled the sky just 40 years ago, according to Bridget Stutchbury in her new book, “Silence of the Songbirds”.
If you haven’t already, please read more about our “Beauty in the Brambles” Successional Shrub Habitat initiative for the birds in my past blog post called “WCT Gives Thanks for a National Grant from Audubon and Toyota.”
You can also learn more about the importance of this bold new habitat initiative by checking out our enlightening “Beauty in the Brambles” brochure, which is available to thumb through electronically on the Audubon and Toyota TogetherGreen blog!
Hope to see you at one of our workshops! They’re short and fun plus you’ll get free food, new knowledge and a native shrub that birds love!
WCT Rushton Birds are NOW TWEETING!
Follow the Rushton Banding Station on Twitter to receive instant news live from the field at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm. I’ll let you know how the mornings are going, if significant numbers of birds are hopping into our nets, and if we are banding significant or uncommon species, like Connecticut Warblers. If you already have a Twitter account, simply search for “WCT Rushton Birds” and click “Follow.” If you don’t have a Twitter account, go to Twitter.com and set one up today by choosing a username and password.
Enjoy the spring! There’s a lot going on in the woods…
Blake
They’re Back….
Spring Songbird Banding at Rushton Woods Preserve Begins Tuesday April 16!!
Stay tuned… LOTS more information to follow about banding and more!
And in the meantime, if you’re cooking up something to do for next Friday April 19, look no further. Celebrate sustainable agriculture (which is good for you and the birds) at our Victory for Veggies event. Victory Brewing Company will be there…will you?
Click on this link for more info and to register. Hope to see you there!
~Blake
Valentine’s Day Fun: What Men Can Learn from Avian Romance
The natural world is filled with romance, beauty and enchantment, and every day seems to be Valentine’s Day outside if you look around. This time of year, in particular, the male waterfowl are beginning to perform their elaborate courtship displays on ponds and lakes in our area, as the handsome Hooded Merganser, pictured above, is doing. Do you see any resemblance in his hairdo to heart throb Elvis Presley’s famous hair? Guys, Elvis and mergansers may be on to something…Lesson # 1: A voluminous hairdo is sure to elicit female swooning.
Geese and swans are the ultimate romantics, with most pairs mating for life. Dabbling ducks, like mallards, and diving ducks, like mergansers, are generally more promiscuous and consequently have a wider variety of male displays. No matter their marital status though, all ducks and geese, like many other birds, spend a lot of energy on performing wonderfully ritualized mating displays to impress the females. This is lesson # 2, guys: Put effort into impressing your woman every day!
Don’t get complacent about attracting her, even if you are already married or have been together for decades. This could involve you getting back into using that gym membership that keeps shamefully showing up on your billing statement each month, buying her flowers for no reason or some other grand display of affection. If you’re having trouble thinking up something that will ‘wow’ her, take notes from this male Red-capped Manakin. Borrowing some of his moves is sure to put the steam back into your relationship!
Youtube video of moonwalking Red-capped Manakin
If that’s a little too flamboyant for your style, observe the suave Emperor Penguin’s quiet, deeply romantic courtship ritual in the “March of the Penguins” (a great date night movie!). This is lesson # 3, guys: Make time for and ritualize those intimate moments of romance.
Jane Austen depicted this provocative avian display in the following love poem. To spice things up, try reading this to your mate this Valentine’s Day over a glass of wine with Barry Manilow playing softly in the background:
“The Penguin” by Jane Austen
With a single indecorous groan
a glacier calves an iceberg the size
of a cathedral into the christening sea.
Along the icefoot, ritual courtship
flurries the frigid air into squawks
and plumage, the shuffled chase
that observers, stomping their feet for warmth,
call dance. And after?
After a belle’s dance card filled twice over
and a wallflower wilted with watching
territory staked step by measured step,
and the pecking order of kisses?
After the final bow,
after swallow-tailed males swooped
over the shimmer, the shiver
of jewel-and-sweat-scaled females?
Up from the bed of lost feathers,
the mating for life. Under a sky
literate with M’s, littered
with scavengers’ winged W’s,
two months stand still on the ice for him,
egg cradled on his melting feet.
For her the miles to retreating sea
to feed, then the longer walk back.
O cotillions and calling cards,
clergy waddling in wedding vestments,
marriage of property to title, awaiting issue,
how roughly do you compare?
Lesson #4 can also be gained from the male Emperor Penguin: Be sure to hold up your end of the parenting deal and then some! Check this out: clip from BBC’s “Planet Earth”. A male Emperor Penguin may incubate the egg for up to two frigid months while the female travels hundreds of miles to sea to feed. He loses up to half of his body weight while guarding the egg and fasting all winter, patiently awaiting her return in howling winds that can reach 120 mph. How’s that for parental dedication? Next time your wife asks to go on a vacation for two months while you watch the kids, remember the selflessness of the emperors and say yes!
Lesson # 5: Let go of your inhibitions and macho inclinations and dance with her! What woman doesn’t enjoy dancing with her man? Take ballroom dance lessons with her if you’re unsure and need more confidence before stepping out onto the floor. For a little avian inspiration, watch this video from BBC’s “Life” of Western Grebes performing their beautiful courtship ballet. If that doesn’t make you want to dance, I don’t know what will!
And did you catch the other lesson in that video clip? Shower her with fish! Er, I mean gifts. It’s probably not a good idea to shower her with raw fish unless she likes sushi. Otherwise, surprise her every now and then with little gifts that make her feel special (Lesson # 6!).
I hope everyone has a wonderful Valentine’s Day filled with love and birds!
And don’t forget to show how much you care about birds and their conservation by participating in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend! Visit the website to register and for more information. All that is required of you is that you identify and count birds for at least 15 minutes anytime from Feb 15-18 and enter your results online.
Have fun!
~Blake
P.S. Since Valentine’s Day is about love and all things precious, be sure to read George Armistead’s excellent article about the top ten cutest birds in North America on the ABA blog! It’s sure to brighten your day.
WCT Gives Thanks for a National Grant from Audubon and Toyota
Go to wctbirds.wordpress.com or click on the post’s title above to view the blog post in your browser instead of through email.
This Year The WILLISTOWN CONSERVATION TRUST Received A GENEROUS NATIONAL AUDUBON AND TOYOTA “TOGETHER GREEN INNOVATION GRANT” TO RESTORE AND PROMOTE SHRUB HABITAT FOR BIRDS
One of only 40 nationwide Together Green 2012 grant recipients, the Willistown Conservation Trust, in partnership with Audubon PA and Valley Forge Audubon, received $20,500 from National Audubon and Toyota’s Together Green Innovation Grant program! We are proud and thankful to have received this prestigious award and will use it to help preserve and raise awareness of Early Successional Scrub/Shrub Habitat (ESSH) for the birds.
ESSH is that low shrub habitat that we have all seen but may not have been able to name. It includes mostly shrubs , a few small trees, and some wildflowers and grasses. This is the type of habitat that occurs or succeeds after a grassy area has been unmowed for several years. The beauty of these shrub areas may be difficult to see until you realize the immense value this threatened habitat holds for young birds and other wildlife.
Here are some examples of Early Successional Shrub Habitats:
In order to promote this under appreciated and often misunderstood habitat, we are in the process of creating one of Pennsylvania’s first multi-site models for ESSH! Our three demonstration sites in the WCT program area will include an area in Ridley Creek State Park, our own Ashbridge Preserve and Rushton Woods Preserve; these sites will show landowners the ecological value of ESSH and the applicability to managing and preserving ESSH on their own properties. The model sites with varying degrees of management will show landowners that promoting ESSH on their land can be as simple as just not clearing a shrubby area or can involve planting native shrubs and managing tree growth. Work Day activities at the demonstration sites will include some removal of invasive plants, the planting of native shrubs (selected to provide the structure and food sources needed by migrant and nesting birds), and fencing plots for deer protection.
During this project, we will not be placing major emphasis on the removal of vines and invasive plants because it is a controversial subject. New findings suggest that heavily invaded areas are in fact quite stable and capable of carrying out the same ecosystem services as pristine environments; these human influenced natural areas can be allowed to provide good habitat for birds and wildlife rather than be “torn out in an expensive and fruitless attempt to return native vegetation dominance” in an “unceasing tide of change,” as suggested in “The New Normal”, an interesting article in Conservation magazine.
In addition to work days for our ESSH project, there will be a series of fun and educational workshops offered in the spring for landowners and anyone interested, which will feature interactive tours of these ESSH demonstration sites, mini hikes, bird banding and bird surveying (which will be crucial to the monitoring of these demonstration sites). Ultimately, what we really want is to shift people’s suburban mentality to a mindset that allows them to see the natural and ecological beauty of Early Successional Scrub Habitat. We want landowners to have a strong enough connection to, understanding of, and sense of responsibility to nature that they think twice (particularly about birds) before clearing shrubby areas on their property or that if they do clear they go about it in a sensitive way (in stages) and are prepared to replant with natives.
With lawns totaling 1.2 million acres in the U.S. and 21 million acres of natural land being lost to residential development each decade (according to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology), it’s time for all of us who value wildlife and biodiversity to begin viewing our properties as habitats. If everyone shared just a corner of their perfectly manicured (and biologically barren) lawn to natural habitat, whether it be an unmowed field, wildflower meadow or shrub area, think of all the extra room there would be for wildlife that we and our posterity could enjoy!
This “backyard as habitat” movement has already begun to take root as evidenced by bestsellers like “Bringing Nature Home” by Doug Tallamy and “Noah’s Garden” by Sara Stein. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology even has a cool new citizen science project, called YardMap, that encourages homeowners to map their yards in a network of people dedicated to providing habitat for birds in their yards. Each property can make a difference, and the more properties that participate the easier it becomes for birds to move between these patches of habitat.
Early Successional Scrub Habitat is a great place to start in this “backyard as habitat” movement because ESSH is valuable to birds even in small, patchy distributions like yards. Unlike grassland dependent species, like Eastern Meadowlarks, which require acres upon acres of contiguous grassland habitat, most shrub-associated birds, like Common Yellowthroats and Gray Catbirds, are typically not sensitive to patch size. Therefore, even efforts on individual properties can affect local breeding populations.
In addition to nesting habitat, ESSH offers crucial cover and food sources for birds throughout the year, including baby birds trying to survive their first and most vulnerable year of life. It’s a fact that over 50% of baby birds do not make it through their first year of life. In a recent telemetry study by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, scientists found that even birds like Wood Thrush and Ovenbird that have long been considered emblematic of undisturbed mature forests will head straight for brushy tangles that ESSH offers after leaving their nests. These thickets offer more protection than open woods from predators like hawks, snakes and chipmunks.
We see this phenomenon at Rushton where we band in the shrubby hedgerow during spring and fall migration. Most of the birds we capture in the shrubs in early fall are hatching year birds (baby birds born that summer) of all different species including the woodland nesting birds. Many of these young woodland birds are even recaptured in the hedgerows in fall after we banded them as “fresh-out-of-the-nest” babies this summer in the woods, which proves this species-wide affinity in hatching year birds for ESSH. These recaptured birds of two habitats have included Wood Thrush, Ovenbird, Downy Woodpecker, Common Yellowthroat, Veery, and even a Kentucky Warbler. Hence, banding also reveals the nuanced story that telemetry has begun to reveal-that just because a bird breeds in one specific habitat does not mean that it doesn’t need other habitats for the other parts of its life.
In the spring and fall, many exhausted migrants of all ages also seek and value that “other habitat”, ESSH, for food and shelter. Through banding we have discovered that many young and some adult birds of all species, no matter what their breeding habitat preference, see Rushton’s shrubby habitat from above and decide to touch down for refueling . Birds of all species seem to have a search image, whether learned or genetic, for these types of shrubby areas during migration. They know the shrubs are teeming with berries and insects and that they will find rest for their weary wings in the thick protective undergrowth.
Migrant Saw whet Owls also love these shrubby areas for the healthy population of mice and voles they often support and for the dense thickets the shrubs offer for secretive roosting during the day.
Here are some migrant birds that enjoyed their stay at Rushon’s Early Successional Habitat this fall, whether they dined on insects or berries or rodents!
Bird populations as a whole are declining, and migration is so fraught with peril that bird mortality rates are 15 times higher during migration. During migration and throughout their lives, birds are faced with habitat loss and other human threats like pesticides, toxins, harmful fishing practices, free-roaming cats, and communication towers and wind farms with which they often collide. Comparisons of spring radar records from 1960s to those from the 1980s show a sobering 50% decline of migratory activity on favorable weather days.
Therefore, we are excited to do what we can for the birds by promoting Early Successional Scrub Habitat, which in itself is threatened in Pennsylvania. Historically, ESSH was much more prevalent in forest gaps in PA that were routinely created by fire, storms, Native Americans, and beavers. Now fire is suppressed and beavers have been wiped out of most areas from trapping. In addition, many people are clearing these shrubby areas with the misconception that they are junky “unnatural areas.” Other landowners would rather let the shrub habitat succeed into forest, which is sometimes perceived as more valuable, ecologically and economically.
With the Together Green Innovation Grant, the Trust hopes to encourage landowners to preserve and even help create ESSH for the benefit of our natural heritage and the birds that so desperately need our help. It’s time to embrace those wild, unkempt areas on our properties and see the beauty in the great biodiversity such places can hold. These are places full of life on our properties that, instead of getting frustrated with, we should be getting excited about and treasuring for the hope and wonder it holds for us and for our children.
Another major purpose of this grant project is to connect people to nature who have not previously been a part of the conservation movement. On Election Day this fall, we held our first Together Green work day at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm during which about 20 students, ranging in age from 3rd to 5th grade, worked alongside a handful of adults to plant 100 native shrubs in our ESSH demonstration area. These urban students were from the Melton Arts and Education Community Center of West Chester where I first taught them about birds and the importance of habitat a couple of weeks ago during an after school session. The workday was an excellent opportunity for the children to show us that they not only listened but cared deeply about the topic.
All of the tensions and hot air surrounding the imminent election dissipated as the adults were blown away by the students’ single-mindedness and earnest compassion for the environment. The students first visited the songbird banding station where they were delighted to see familiar birds up close like the Blue Jay and Cardinal. Some students, not normally known for having a gentle touch, softly held the birds before releasing them and breathed, “I could feel its heart beating!” Others who reported being scared of birds upon arrival got over their fears as their peers sensitively encouraged them to touch a bird.
After they got their fill of birds, the Melton students raced over to the demonstration area, learned how to plant and cage shrubs and did not hesitate to get their hands dirty. After all, “it’s for the birds to eat!” , they exclaimed. Pretty soon, the students were excitedly working in teams of three and each trying to help each other plant as many shrubs as they possibly could. It was so inspiring to watch these urban kids take to nature and the soil so fast and make the real connection between the native shrubs and the birds.
To learn more about preserving ESSH and get involved with the Trust’s efforts, stay tuned for future workshop days to be offered in the spring. If you’d like to be notified of volunteer opportunities and workshops related to this program, if you have any questions, or if you’d like to get the list of native shrubs we are planting for birds and other wildlife for use in your own landscaping, just send me an email (“Blake Goll” <bhg@wctrust.org>). Another great link for discovering which plants are important for which specific birds is the Plant-Bird Database pabirdplants.org.
Click here for more information about this Together Green Grant.
Click here to read an article by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology about the importance of shrub habitat to baby birds.
Guess ‘Hooo’ is loving our shrub habitat right now? Owls! Rushton is an owl magnet this year; we are up to a record 255 new Saw-whet Owls banded this season! Although we are closed to the public for the season (we’ve had close to 1,000 visitors), we are still netting about 10 Saw-whet Owls per night, mostly young birds with a sprinkling of older adults and foreign recoveries. We even netted a magnificent Long-eared Owl for our Bird Conservation Committee on the 13th, which was perhaps the most beautiful bird I’ve ever laid eyes on. He was like a work of art, so regal and dignified- looking , even with his slightly cross-eyed stare.
This owl season has been stupendous, but we banders are getting very tired….
…We are ready for the owls to stop coming, so we can catch up on sleep for the winter in our cozy warm beds.
We are thankful for our birds and thankful to Toyota and Audubon for the Together Green grant that will enable us to take action to truly show the birds our appreciation of the vibrance and character they bring to our lives, our properties and our countryside.
What will you do to give thanks for the birds this holiday season ?
~Blake
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 13
- 14
- 15
- 16
- 17
- …
- 28
- Next Page »