WILLISTOWN CONSERVATION TRUST

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Last Week of Songbirds

November 4, 2013 By Communications Team

Ruby-crowned Kinglet.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Ruby-crowned Kinglet. Photo by Dustin Welch.

Well it has been a stupendous fall with the catch totaling about 1500 birds of almost 60 species when it’s all said and done at the close of this week.

Tomorrow (Nov 5) and Thursday the 7th are our last songbird banding days of this year, so if you or your kids have off tomorrow for election day or inservice, come on by the banding station for a nature experience you won’t forget!  We will be out there in the hedgerows of Rushton Farm from 5:45 am until about 11am.  Stop by any time.

We are still catching White-throated Sparrows, Dark-eyed Juncos, Fox Sparrows, Ruby Crowned Kinglets and more.  The full report for this fall banding season is coming in the next blog post.

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Fox Sparrow.  Photo by Michael Defina
Fox Sparrow at Rushton. Photo by Michael Defina

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: Bird banding, fox sparrow, Rushton Farm

Songbird Banding Open House Tomorrow Morning!

September 20, 2013 By Communications Team

Red -eyed Vireo.  Photo by Bracken Brown
A migratory Red -eyed Vireo banded at Rushton this August. Photo by Bracken Brown

In case the little birdie hasn’t told you yet…

Rushton Banding station will be open to visitors and families of all ages tomorrow, 9/21, from 7-11 am!!

Don’t miss this grand opportunity to see beautiful migrating songbirds up-close as we carefully band them to contribute to bird conservation.  Migration is in full swing, and we’ve been catching a fantastic variety of wonderful warblers (including our first ever Black-throated Green Warbler), flycatchers, thrushes and familiar residents like the sweet little Carolina Chickadee picture below.

Carolina Chickadee banded at Rushton this September.  Photo by Jodi Spragins.
Carolina Chickadee banded at Rushton this September. Photo by Jodi Spragins.
Black-throated Green Warbler.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Black-throated Green Warbler. Photo by Dustin Welch.

Oh and did I mention Gray Catbirds!?  We never run out of these omnipresent birds…until the White-throated Sparrows arrive in October.

A young Gray Catbird growing in new flight feathers and coverts before beginning its journey south.  Photo by Bracken Brown
A young Gray Catbird growing in new flight feathers and coverts before beginning its journey south. Photo by Bracken Brown

Stop on by the station tomorrow to learn about the fascinating science of bird banding while witnessing feathered neighbors like never before!

You just never know what a fall morning at Rushton may bring…

Doris McGovern, federally licensed bird bander,  taking a bird out of the bag to be banded as a child watches with anticipation.
Doris McGovern, federally licensed bird bander, taking a bird out of the bag to be banded as a child watches with anticipation.

Plus, Rushton Farm is breathtaking right now with the goldenrod in full bloom and looks like this…

Rushton Farm cloaked in fields of gold.  Photo by Kelsey Lingle
Rushton Farm cloaked in fields of gold. Photo by Kelsey Lingle

See you in the woods tomorrow!

Blake

P.S.  For all you hard-core birders out there looking to get that rare, elusive, skulking Connecticut Warbler on your life-list, we have caught 6 so far this fall at Rushton!  Not too shabby.

Connecticut Warbler.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Connecticut Warbler. Photo by Dustin Welch.

 

 

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: Bird banding, Connecticut Warbler, fall migration, Rushton Farm

Rushton Bird Banding Station is Officially Open For “Birdness”

September 12, 2013 By Communications Team

Goldfinch on echinacea at Penn State Arboretum's pollinator garden.  Photo by Anita Colyer Graham
Goldfinch on echinacea at Penn State Arboretum’s pollinator garden. Photo by Anita Colyer Graham
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Even the late nesting American Goldfinches are finished, which means fall migration is here and a flurry of all types of feathers are moving south through our area, especially tonight!!! With these severe storms bearing down on us and the winds changing from southerly to northerly overnight, conditions are ripe for fallouts in our region!  This is every birder’s dream and means that large mixed flocks of migratory birds will be traveling overnight and looking for places to rest before sunrise.  Places like Rushton Woods Preserve could be teeming with warblers and other beautiful migrants tomorrow morning.   Check out this amazing regional Bird Forecast that the Cornell Lab of Ornithology updates weekly.  Notice that we are clearly in the potential fallout zone for tomorrow.

Even last night was a great flight , much heavier than predicated, given the southerly winds and sticky conditions.  Check out this incredible footage of thousands of migrants, mostly warblers, that were temporarily trapped in the light beam in New York City for the 9-11 memorial last night.  Luckily, collision crises were avoided by changing the direction of the lights when the “living snowflakes” were observed by volunteers as venturing dangerously close to buildings.

Young Chestnut-sided Warbler. Photo by Jesse Estlow
Young Chestnut-sided Warbler. Photo by Jesse Estlow

In light of this great movement of birds we are seeing, we will open the banding station tomorrow , 9/13.  Come on out if you can before work or call in sick for the morning (I won’t tell anyone!).

We open our mist nets at 6am and close them at about 11am.  Visit us at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm anytime within those hours!  Our normal days of operation are Tuesdays and Thursdays from now until the migration stops in early November.   Visitors are always welcome.  Please contact Lisa Kiziuk  (lkr@wctrust.org) or myself Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org) for more information or to reserve a day for your school group or other large group.

Stay tuned to the blog for updates throughout this fall and more photos of our beautiful migrants.

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

P.S.  The Mid-Atlantic Young Birder Conference is this Saturday at the lovely Ashland Nature Center in Hockessin, DE!  Coordinated by the American Birding Association, the day will be full of memorable birding experiences, educational talks from experts and comaraderie among fellow Young Birders of all experience levels.  Click here for more information and to register (just $25)!

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: Bird banding, fall migration

MAPS and Moths

July 30, 2013 By Communications Team

Juvenile Wood Thrush.  Photo by Bracken Brown.
Juvenile Wood Thrush. Photo by Bracken Brown.
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MAPS (Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship)  banding is almost over for the summer with just one more session to go.  Be sure to read the last section of the previous blog post, “Sayonara Spring…“, to learn more about this rigorous, national scientific research effort.

July was hot and wet and started off very slow with little more than ten birds a day and hardly any babies.  However, the past couple of weeks have shown a marked increase in birds and bird babies!  As you can see from the chart below that breaks down our total MAPS catch each year starting in 2011, this year’s baby boom appears to  have been delayed by several of periods from last year (each  period is 10 days and there are 8 periods each summer).  Last year, the boom happened in Period 3 with 26 birds, whereas this year it didn’t occur until Period 6 with 23 birds.  This delay was probably linked to the slow,cool spring and overabundance of rain in early summer. 2011 was just an exceptionally great year for our birds and probably abnormal.

Pd.    2011-2012-2013

1)    26- 19 -10
2)    32 -19 – 17
3)    27 – 26 – 16
4)    23 – 25 – 11
5)    43 – 31 – 13
6)    32  17   23
7)    26 -23 – 24
8)    34 – 24  –

Last week was the best this summer with 24 birds including hatching year (hatched this summer) Gray Catbirds, Wood Thrush, Carolina Wren,  Blue Jay and Ovenbird.

Hatch Year Gray Catbird.  Photo by Blake Goll
Hatch Year Gray Catbird. Photo by Blake Goll
Hatch Year Blue Jay.  Photo by Bracken Brown.
Hatch Year Blue Jay. Photo by Bracken Brown.  His tail is still growing in!
Hatch Year Blue Jay showing flight feather molt.  Photo by Bracken Brown
Hatch Year Blue Jay showing flight feather molt. Photo by Bracken Brown
Ovenbird.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ovenbird. Photo by Blake Goll

The hatch year Ovenbird was significant because, although these are usually the bulk of our catch during the summer, this year we have only caught two Ovenbirds.  We suspect it was not a good year for breeding Ovenbirds in Rushton Woods either because of all the rain or an increase in predators like chipmunks.  Ovenbirds are vulnerable to forest floor predators and flooding from rain because they build their nests right on the ground amongst the leaf litter.

Pictured below are other great birds we’ve banded thus far during our 2013 MAPS season.

Hatch Year Downy Woodpecker.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Hatch Year Downy Woodpecker. Photo by Blake Goll.
White-eyed Vireo.  Photo by Blake Goll
White-eyed Vireo. Photo by Blake Goll
Veery
Veery

Uropygial gland (preen gland) on Veery.  This gland secretes preen oil, which birds spread around their feathers to help with waterproofing and protection from mites and the like.
Uropygial gland (preen gland) on a Veery. This gland located at the base of the tail secretes preen oil, which birds spread around their feathers to help with waterproofing, feather grooming and protection from mites and the like.
Catbird with band.  Photo by Blake Goll
Gray Catbird with band. Photo by Blake Goll
Taking wing measurements of a partly leucistic Gray Catbird.  Notice the three white tails feathers, or rectrices.
Taking wing measurements of a partly leucistic Gray Catbird. Notice the three white tail feathers, or rectrices, that are normally all gray.
Hatch Year Gray Catbird showing off his scantily feathered thigh, which is a juvenal characteristic we look for.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Hatch Year Gray Catbird showing off his scantily feathered thigh, which is a juvenal characteristic we look for to help us age birds this time of year. Photo by Blake Goll.
Eastern Wood Peewee.  Photo by Blake Goll
Adult Eastern Wood Peewee. Photo by Blake Goll
Common Yellowthroat brood patch with egg shells stuck to it!  A brood patch is the patch of skin on the female's belly that gets highly vascularized after she picks the feathers out.  This allows her to regulate the temperature of her eggs more efficiently.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Common Yellowthroat brood patch with egg shells stuck to it! A brood patch is the patch of skin on the female’s belly that gets highly vascularized after she picks the feathers out. This allows her to regulate the temperature of her eggs more efficiently. Photo by Blake Goll.
Adult male Common Yellowthroat.  Photo by Gloria Ives
Adult male Common Yellowthroat. Photo by Gloria Ives

National Moth Week 

Did you know National Moth Week was last week, July 20-28?  Or that National Moth Week even exists?  Every week, spring through fall, can be moth week!  If you’re looking for a surprisingly fun and easy nature activity to do with your kids this week, try mothing!  Mothing is sort of like birding; it’s simply the act of discovering and enjoying these silent, winged creatures of the night in order to connect to nature and contribute to  their conservation.    As birding is more enjoyable with binoculars, mothing is made more enjoyable with a digital camera that can capture the minute details that our eyes can’t see.  Through the lens of your camera, I guarantee you’ll be blown away by the beautiful colors, patterns and diversity of the moths in your backyard!

Clymene Moth we found in Rushton woods during MAPS banding one morning.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Clymene Moth we found in Rushton Woods during MAPS banding one morning. Photo by Blake Goll.

Now, how do you find these moths at night? One way is to simply turn on your porch light and take close-up pictures of the moths that come to it.  Another way is to set up a black light with an extension cord out in your yard and shine it on a large white sheet on a clothesline.  The moths that are attracted to the light will rest on the sheet, allowing you to observe them and get pictures.  The theory behind moths being attracted to lights is that they navigate by the light of the moon, so light disorients them.  Another theory is that UV light stimulates pheromone receptors on the moths’ antennae, luring them in.

Junior Birders at Rushton investigating moths on a sheet.
Junior Birders at Rushton investigating our moths on a sheet lit by a black light.
Ambiguous moth
Ambiguous Moth

Then there’s the Bait and Wait method for those moths that aren’t into the light.  For this method, you need to make a gross concoction of beer, rotten fruit like bananas, sugar, maple syrup , and anything else along those lines you can think of.  If you have time, let this mixture ferment for a few days, although it’s not mandatory.  Paint the mixture on some trees about an hour before dusk and then go back and check the trees every 30 minutes or so after dark.  Sneak up on the moths quietly (they can hear!) and with a red light if you can, to avoid scaring them off before you snap your picture.  If you use a regular flashlight, you’ll be able to see their eyes shining in the light as you approach! Time to get your stealth on.  I’ve found that some species are more shy than others.

Ultronia Underwing.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ultronia Underwing. Photo by Blake Goll

As with birding, it’s important to report your mothing observations to a database.  If you get a chance to try to identify the moths you find you can submit your sightings (with picture proof) to BAMONA (Butterflies and Moths of North America).  This website is a great reference for learning about moth and butterflies and is an attempt to collect and share species information and occurrence data.   Another great website for learning about moths and their identification is John Himmelman’s “Moths in a Connecticut Yard”.  On his website, Himmelman also displays his wonderful books, including children’s books, about moths and night-singing insects.

It is  especially important to report your moth data because there is so much we don’t know about these elusive creatures.  While there are only about 1,000 butterfly species in North America, there are 11,000 moth species! There is much more to learn about moths and their distribution in order to be able to contribute to their conservation.  Every night you turn on your porch light, you have the chance to be a citizen scientist and contribute to our knowledge of moths.  Plus it’s fun and exciting!  On a good night of mothing, you can easily find over a dozen different moth species, and you can attract different species at different times of the year ( during spring, summer and fall). It really is quite astounding!

Moths are an important part of the environment for a number of reasons.  They are a valuable source of food for bats, which are in dire need of all the help they can get in light of White-nose Syndrome (watch this documentary to learn more about this sad environmental disaster), and the moth caterpillars are a vital part of the diet that most adult songbirds feed their nestlings.  Unfortunately, moths and other flying insects have been declining for several decades, which is negatively affecting birds that rely on them like Purple Martins and other aerial insectivores.  This is just another reason why it’s so important to get more citizen scientists to take an interest in moths.  The more we know about their distribution and biology, the better we are able to conserve them.

In addition to providing food for birds and bats, moths actually do a lot of pollinating of our fruits and vegetables long after the bees have gone to bed.  This month, we held a mothing night at Rushton Woods Preserve and Farm for our Junior Birders and found that Rushton supports a variety of these night pollinating mysteries.

The 3.5- acre sustainable farm was designed to be a  nature preserve that enhances and complements nature while providing more food per acre for the community than any traditional large-scale farm.  In the five years since the farm was started, we’ve documented an increase in human members, migratory birds and pollinating insects at Rushton.  (Read page 37 of the Land Trust Alliance’s summer publication to learn more about the unique Rushton Farm).

Rushton Farm.  Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton Farm. Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton Farm.  Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton Farm. Photo by Blake Goll

Until this month, however, no one thought to check out Rushton’s moth diversity!

Pictured below are some of the beautiful moths we discovered and reported.  Two were new reports for the county and one is in the process of being confirmed by BAMONA as the first for Pennsylvania!  It just goes to show that you never know what you might discover when you go looking for moths in the night…

Texas Mocis (1st for Chester County).  Photo by Blake Goll.
Texas Mocis (1st for Chester County). Photo by Blake Goll.
Badwing (1st for Chester County).  Photo by Sheryl Johnson.
Badwing (1st for Chester County). Photo by Sheryl Johnson.
Black tailed Diver.  Photo by Blake Goll.  Not 100% positive on this ID.
Black -tailed Diver. Photo by Blake Goll. Not 100% positive on this ID.
American Idia.  Photo by Blake Goll
American Idia. Photo by Blake Goll
Black-banded Owlet.  Photo by Blake Goll
Black-banded Owlet. Photo by Blake Goll
Black-bordered Lemon.  Photo by Blake Goll
Black-bordered Lemon. Photo by Blake Goll
Celery Leaftier.  Photo by Blake Goll
Celery Leaftier. Photo by Blake Goll
Delicate Cycnia.  Photo by Blake Goll
Delicate Cycnia. Photo by Blake Goll
Flame-shouldered Dart.  Photo by Blake Goll
Flame-shouldered Dart. Photo by Blake Goll.  1st for PA??
Ipsilon Dart.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ipsilon Dart. Photo by Blake Goll.  (The nasty-looking glob is the moth bait concoction!)
Glossy Black Idia.  Photo by Blake Goll
Glossy Black Idia. Photo by Blake Goll
Horrid Zale.  Photo by Blake Goll
Horrid Zale. Photo by Blake Goll
Splendid Palpita.  Photo by Blake Goll
Splendid Palpita. Photo by Blake Goll
White-headed Grape Leaffolder
White-headed Grape Leaffolder.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ultronia Underwing
Ultronia Underwing
Ultronia Underwing.  Photo by Blake Goll
Ultronia Underwing. Photo by Blake Goll

Sometimes you don’t need lights or bait , just a bit of luck!  This Tuliptree Beauty landed on my arm while my nieces and I were mothing at home!

No, that is not a tattoo! It’s a very friendly Tuliptree Beauty.
Tuliptree Beauty on my arm!
Tuliptree Beauty on my arm!

Here’s a large Waved Sphinx we had to extract from one of our nets while bird banding last week!  I don’t know how Lisa Kiziuk did it, but she’s Director of our Bird Conservation Program for a reason!  If you can gently extract a delicate moth out of a net, I’m pretty sure you can extract any bird.

Waved Sphinx moth. Photo by Blake Goll
Waved Sphinx moth. Photo by Blake Goll

And here’s an uncommon, spectacular moth my sister found on her doorstep this weekend.  It’s an Imperial Moth, in the Royal Silkworm Moth family (with Luna Moths).  The larva feed on pines.

Imperial Moth.  Photo by Brian Lewis.
Imperial Moth. Photo by Brian Lewis.

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

DSCN0859

Filed Under: Bird Banding Tagged With: MAPS banding, mothing, Moths, Ovenbird, Rushton Farm, songbird banding

Sayonara Spring – Hello Breeding Birds of Summer!

July 2, 2013 By Communications Team

Yellow Warbler with Columbine.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Yellow Warbler with Columbine. Photo by Dustin Welch.
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The last few May days of spring migration banding at Rushton were not spectacular in terms of numbers, but  we did manage to add a few lovely first-of-the-year birds to our  catch: a resident White-breasted Nuthatch, an Indigo Bunting here to stay for the summer, and a Northern Waterthrush passing through.

Indigo Bunting.  Photo by Blake Goll
Indigo Bunting. Photo by Blake Goll

This spring, we caught just over 200 birds with 15 days of effort, which is quite a contrast from last spring’s bounty of 365 birds in 20 days.  Adding extra days this spring would not have made up the difference because we were only catching about 8 birds a day, on most days.  The coolness and abundant rain and storms of this spring seemed to  somehow put a damper on the migration.  There were very few nights with warm fronts from the south to encourage mass migration north, so the migration we saw seemed to me more of a slow trickle.  This makes it hard to band any substantial number of birds, especially considering how often we got rained out of the banding station this spring.

Volunteer extracting Gray Catbird from mistnet.  Photo by Jodi Spragins.
Volunteer extracting Gray Catbird from mistnet. Photo by Jodi Spragins.

Usually fall migration is better than spring at Rushton, with more individual birds and more species in the nets.  This is probably because fall migration is generally more dire for birds;  the threat of diminished food availability that comes with cold weather is a more immediate threat than the distant threat of getting your breeding territory overtaken before you get there in spring.  Thus we see bigger flocks of mixed species touching down at Rushton during the fall rush.  Fall at Rushton is also more nutritionally bountiful for the tired migrants.  The shrubs in the hedgerows are loaded with berries, the meadows  and farm fields have had more time to mature and the farmers even leave bruised or defective vegetables in the crop rows (which attracts insects for migrants).

PA Young Birders

The PA Young Birder Family Open House  at the banding station on May 18th was an exciting educational experience for all.  Adults and children had the chance to see first-hand why habitat conservation is so important as they viewed with wide eyes – and for the first time-  the amazingly beautiful birds that travel right through their own backyards during migration.   The survival of each of the birds they got to see up-close during the banding process depends on the availability of stopover sites, like Rushton, where they can rest and refuel before continuing their treacherous journeys.  Some of the wonderful migrants we banded that morning included a Red-eyed Vireo, Gray-cheeked Thrush, Swainson’s Thrush and Wood Thrush.

Young Birder viewing Swainson's Thrush before release.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Young Birder viewing Swainson’s Thrush before release. Photo by Blake Goll.
Ageing a Swainson's Thrush. Second year by the buff tips on its outer greater coverts.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Ageing a Swainson’s Thrush. Second year by the buff tips on its outer greater coverts. Photo by Blake Goll.
Doris McGovern educating the Young Birders about banding.
Doris McGovern educating Young Birders and their families about bird banding.
Gray-cheeked Thrush.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Gray-cheeked Thrush. Photo by Blake Goll.
Observing a banded Swainson's Thrush. Photo by Blake Goll
Observing a banded Swainson’s Thrush. Photo by Blake Goll

On June 8, the Young Birders came out to Rushton for the annual “Kids Get Out and Bird” event.  They learned about the importance of providing nest boxes for cavity-nesting birds, like bluebirds, as they helped gather monitoring data on each of Rushton’s bird boxes.  After doing some birding in the woods where they got to hear the “weeping” of a Great -crested Flycatcher near the stream and the magical, flute-like serenade of the Wood Thrush, the children collected various botanical samples for leaf pressing!

Young Birders monitoring nest boxes at Rushton Farm.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Young Birders monitoring nest boxes at Rushton Farm. Photo by Blake Goll.
Young Birder holding Tree Swallow nestling after banding.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Young Birder holding Tree Swallow nestling after banding. Photo by Blake Goll.
Tree Swallow hatchlings.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Tree Swallow hatchlings and egg. Photo by Blake Goll.
Leaf printing.  Photo by Blake Goll
Leaf printing. Photo by Blake Goll
Leaf printer extraordinaire!  Photo by Blake Goll.
Leaf printer extraordinaire! Photo by Blake Goll.
Leaf printing on forehead.  Our Junior Birders always take creative work to the next level!  Photo by Blake Goll.
Leaf printing on forehead. Our Junior Birders always take creative work to the next level! Photo by Blake Goll.

The Trust’s Junior Birder Club is a chapter of PA Young Birders , a club that invites kids to learn about the natural world while enjoying the outdoors and birding!  Leaders include experienced birders and educators as well as guest experts and professionals.  Some of our objectives are:

  • To connect children to nature on an intimate level in order to foster a lifelong love of the natural world.
  • To help children understand the interconnectedness of habitat, birds and other wildlife.
  • To create in children a conservation ethic by demonstrating the importance of preserving open space.
  • To develop children’s science skills and understanding of the scope of science.
  • To refine children’s birding skills and cultivate a wholesome lifelong hobby.
  • To give children the capacity and confidence to be stewards of the land on which birds depend.
  • To nurture in children a spirit of discovery and wonder.
  • To have children ultimately understand the positive role humans can play in the natural world.
Child observing bird banding.  Photo by Jodi Spragins.
Junior Birder observing bird banding. Photo by Jodi Spragins.
Junior Birders studying wetland invertebrates during wetland exploration.  Photo by Blake Goll
Junior Birders studying wetland invertebrates during wetland exploration. Photo by Blake Goll
Junior Birder connecting with nature by building a toad abode.  Photo by Blake Goll
Junior Birder connecting with nature by building a toad abode. Photo by Blake Goll

Please let me (bhg@wctrust.org) know if you’d like to be included in our Junior Birder email list to receive invites to each of our programs and to receive the new schedule, which will be released this week.  I’ve got a jam-packed schedule full of exciting events for the summer!

Upcoming PA Young Birders Program:   “Sugartown Strawberries Purple Martins” 

Wednesday July 3, 11:30am-1:30pm.  Children AND adults, welcome!

On Wednesday, July 3, Farmer Bob has graciously invited us to visit his farm, Sugartown Strawberries, to meet his bustling colony of Purple Martins and watch the banding of the chicks!  This is his fourth year being a proud Purple Martin landlord and his colony has been growing exponentially every year. He has over 50 chicks in his purple martin houses and gourds this year!  These incredible insect-eating birds have become totally dependent on human-supplied housing for the summer and fly all the way to South America for the winter.  Monitoring their conservation status is important, so we band Bob’s babies every summer when they are old enough.  We will meet at the Willistown Conservation Trust office, 925 Providence Rd, Newtown Square PA (NOT RUSHTON FARM).  Please let me know if you plan on attending this special opportunity (bhg@wctrust.org).

Purple Martin nestlings.  Photo by Blake Goll
Purple Martin nestlings. Photo by Blake Goll
Bob Lange's Purple Martin housing.
Bob Lange’s Purple Martin housing.

Young Birders Save the Date for the 2013 ABA Young Birder Conference -September 14!

The American Birding Association holds a Mid-Atlantic Young Birder Conference every fall at Ashland Nature Center, right in Hockessin, Delaware.  It’s a wonderful opportunity for kids to learn about birds and build their birding skills under the guidance of well-known professionals in the world of ornithology and birding.  More information can be found here : ABA Blog.  

Exploring the Night Sky with John Black

Saturday July 6, 9:00-10:30 PM, at Rushton Farm.  Families welcome.

Willistown Sunset.  Photo by Justin Thompson
Willistown Sunset. Photo by Justin Thompson

Grab a blanket to lie on and binoculars or a telescope if you have one!  Willistown has some of the darkest skies around the county, thanks to the Trust’s land preservation efforts.  Come enjoy the dark, wish on a star and learn about astronomy from John Black, a Master Naturalist for Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge.    Suggested donation : $10.  Register with me (Blake Goll, bhg@wctrust.org).

Studying the Breeding Birds of Rushton Woods

It’s hard to believe we are in our third summer of MAPS banding.  It seems like just yesterday we were trekking through the woods, setting up precise net locations and laboriously mapping the habitat diversity and structure of the woods to satisfy the rigorous scientific protocol for the Institute for Bird Populations (IBP).

Rushon Woods.  Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton Woods. Photo by Blake Goll

MAPS, which stands for Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship, holds the highest scientific standards of any banding project in which we can be involved.  All of the data from about 500 MAPS banding stations in the country must be obtained from the same parameters in order for the Institute to be able to draw meaningful conclusions about bird population dynamics.  This information is used to guide the U.S. Forest Service, Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service and other land managers in habitat management for birds.

We do not open our MAPS summer banding sessions to the public because the data recording is very serious, and we are there to monitor the breeding birds.  Breeding birds are territorial and easily stressed, so we try to minimize the noise and impact to the area while we are banding.  I’ll keep you updated on our findings through this blog, though!  Otherwise, I encourage you to check out IBP’s website to learn more about MAPS and the other global projects they’re working on.  The IBP also offers banding classes and internships all over the country, if you want to become a bird bander.

So far, this summer has been eerily slow in the woods.  We band about once every 10 days and get a measly yield of 10-16 birds per 6 -hour session.  The birds are there, but not in the abundance of previous years.   Still, it’s uplifting to read the worn number of an old band on a Veery that we banded as a fledgling three summers ago.   Holding these small  fragile birds in my hand, it’s hard to believe that their little wings have carried them, more than once, all the way down to South America and back again to this patch of woods in Pennsylvania to breed.

Veery.  Photo by Dustin Welch.
Veery. Photo by Dustin Welch.

All of the banded birds we catch during MAPS are birds that we banded in Rushton, either that year or a previous year.  These are called recaptures, and they are exhibiting what is called site fidelity.  Most birds return to the exact same breeding spot, use the same stopover sites during migration and overwinter in the same spot from year to year.  As a result, we get to know some of our birds very well!

Rushton's male Kentucky Warbler.  Photo by Blake Goll
Rushton’s male Kentucky Warbler. Photo by Blake Goll

On the 4th of June, the elusive Kentucky Warbler that had been taunting us by broadcasting his rich “tur-dle” song from every corner of the woods, found himself tangled in one of our nets.  Doris McGovern (federally licensed, Master Bander) extracted him, placed him gently in the bag and wordlessly handed the bag to me back at the banding table.  It was the last bird of the day, and I just assumed it would be a catbird.  I reached into the bag and as my hand came out with a strikingly bright yellow and black ball of feathers instead of gray, my eyes became saucers as I exclaimed, “Kentucky Warbler!”  As if that weren’t exciting enough, the handsome fellow was sporting an old Rushton band from last summer!   Man, were we thrilled to see him again!  I’ll admit I even teared up a little.

We banded this special bird last summer as a young male in his second year, the very first Kentucky Warbler banded at Rushton (and still the only one).  Now, he was as dashing as ever in his full adult plumage.  He also had a cloacal protuberance (or CP), which is the male genital that becomes enlarged and round only during the breeding season to assist with mating and sperm storage. This means he was ready to mate, but it’s not a confirmation that he did.  We are not optimistic that he ever  found a female and settled in a territory because we kept hearing him singing from all different areas of the woods, as if he couldn’t seem to find what he was looking for.  We’ve also never caught a female Kentucky Warbler to confirm a breeding pair.  Who knows.  Maybe she is just too smart to get caught in our nets, and he just has a very large territory.

Kentucky Warbler banded at Rushton June 2012 .  Photo by Erika Arnold.
Male Kentucky Warbler banded at Rushton June 2012 . Photo by Erika Arnold.

The Kentucky Warbler loves low, moist, rich woodlands with luxuriant undergrowth and ravines.  This is exactly what we have to offer at Rushton, which is significant because the species has been declining steadily throughout its entire U.S. range and is on the Audubon Watchlist.   One reason for the warbler’s decline is degradation and in some cases complete loss of the understory vegetation due to browsing by an over-abundant White-tail Deer population.  The understory of Rushton has been making a comeback in the past five years, ever since our deer hunting program has been controlling the herd there.

Kentucky warbler range.  From Cornell Lab of Ornithology All About Birds website.
Kentucky warbler range. From Cornell Lab of Ornithology All About Birds website.

Visit Cornell’s “All About Birds” website to learn about any of our birds and to hear the Kentucky Warbler’s song, which is a confusing mix of Ovenbird and Carolina Wren, if you ask me.  Also be sure to check out this preview of The Warbler Guide by Tom Stephenson & Scott Whittle, a highly anticipated book  devoted entirely to our warblers that’s being released this month.  It should be a great learning tool for all those interested in discovering more about the songs and life histories of the fascinating little warblers of our woods.

Other highlights of the MAPS banding season thus far were an Acadian Flycatcher and a bright yellow, adult female Scarlet Tanager in our nets!  The Scarlet Tanager was quite a lovely surprise, considering they spend most of their time in the upper canopy and our nets are in the understory.  Judging by the orange-ish hue on her face and back, we aged her as an older bird.  Like some Kentucky Warblers, the Scarlet Tanagers spend their winters in the tropics of South America.

Acadian Flycatcher at Rushton.
Acadian Flycatcher at Rushton.
Adult female Scarlet Tanager.  Photo by Blake Goll
Adult female Scarlet Tanager at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll
Adult female Scarlet Tanager with remains of last meal on bill!  Photo by Blake Goll.
Adult female Scarlet Tanager with remains of last meal on bill! Photo by Blake Goll.
Male Scarlet Tanager.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Male Scarlet Tanager. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

The male Scarlet Tanagers have been serenading us all summer, their tropical songs coarsely trickling down the leaves of the trees to our ears.  Red-eyed Vireos’ clear notes soften the upper canopy chorus.  The mid-story of the woods echoes with the ethereal flute-like songs of Wood Thrush and Veery, and the understory reverberates with emphatic Eastern Towhee songs, Common Yellowthroat broadcasts, intricate Gray Catbird music and the quirky sputtering melody of the White-eyed Vireo.   Oven birds liven up the forest floor with their “Teacher! Teacher! Teacher!” calls.

The birds are certainly present, but we haven’t seen many juvenile birds yet, which should be the bulk of our catch now.  We did band a precious juvenile female cardinal.  Hopefully, more babies are to come.  Below are pictures of some of the other adult breeding birds we’ve caught so far this season.

Juvenile Northern Cardinal.  Photo by Blake Goll.
Juvenile Northern Cardinal. Photo by Blake Goll.
Male Hairy Woodpecker.  Photo by Blake Goll
Male Hairy Woodpecker. Photo by Blake Goll
Northern Flicker wing (aged as third year).  Photo by Blake Goll
Northern Flicker wing (aged as third year). Photo by Blake Goll
Male Eastern Towhee.  Photo by Blake Goll
Male Eastern Towhee. Photo by Blake Goll
Common Yellowthroat.  Photo by Mimi Davis
Common Yellowthroat. Photo by Mimi Davis

Other Bird Babies of Rushton

We have ten  bluebird nestboxes sprinkled around the farm field area of Rushton, which we monitor weekly.  We have had to remove a few dead chicks from the nest boxes; their deaths were most likely caused by the excessive amounts of rain that on some days prevented the parents from being able to find enough insects to feed the nestlings.  Hypothermia is another threat to baby birds that get wet.  This is one reason why monitoring  nestboxes weekly is so important.  It’s not ideal for the surviving chicks to continue growing in a box that has a decaying sibling in it.  Morbid,  I know, but this is nature.

Other than that, our nextboxes have been pumping out healthy baby birds left and right!  We’ve had Tree Swallow, Eastern Bluebird, and House Wren chicks.  Most have fledged and are now flying around the farm fields hunting the ample insects and keeping the farmers company as they harvest.  After each “batch” fledged, we emptied out the old, dirty nest to make way for the new.  Many of our birds have built new nests in the clean boxes and have started raising their second broods!

Tree swallow chick.  Photo by Blake Goll
Tree swallow chick. Photo by Blake Goll
Clutch of bluebird eggs.  Photo by Blake Goll
Clutch of bluebird eggs. Photo by Blake Goll
Banded House Wren nestling at Rushton
Banded House Wren nestling at Rushton.  Photo by Blake Goll

Rushton is certainly full of life right now.  The unmowed natural meadows have burst forth with the exquisite flamboyance of victorian pink Common Milkweed flowers.  Skippers, hairstreaks, fritillaries, azures, wood nymphs, sulphurs and swallowtails dance around the flowers like fairies at a ball.  This is Act I of summer’s opulent show; to glance over this is to throw away wonders you’ll never know.

Common milkweed.  Photo by Blake Goll
Common milkweed. Photo by Blake Goll
Great Spangled Fritillary on Common milkweed at Rushton.  Photo by Blake Goll
Great Spangled Fritillary on Common milkweed at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll
Orange sulphur.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Orange sulphur. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Wood Turtle, Lebanon County, by Chad Propst
Wood Turtle, Lebanon County, by Chad Propst

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: Bird banding, Kentucky Warbler, MAPS banding, PA Young Birders, Purple Martins, Scarlet Tanager, youth birding

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