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Celebrating 11 Years of Bird Banding at Rushton Woods Preserve

December 16, 2020 By Blake Goll

Blue-winged Warbler banded at Rushton on September 21, 2020. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Although we did not venture out to track spring songbird migration at the onset of the pandemic this year, we safely resumed our efforts this fall and were handsomely rewarded. The total number of new songbirds banded from the end of August through October came to 939, even though we only operated the banding station twice a week.  This brings our total number of songbirds across 11 years of banding at Rushton to over 15,000 individuals of 100 species!

The beginning of this fall produced copious warblers including elusive Connecticut Warblers, stunning Black-throated Green Warblers, and Black-throated Blue Warblers. September also brought us two new species for the station (never before caught) including a Cooper’s Hawk and Blue Grosbeak. The grosbeak’s presence at Rushton is another nod to the diverse habitat structure that Rushton Farm offers with its wild farmland borders, forest edges, and shrubby hedgerow habitat. To view more photos from the early part of migration see September’s blog post: https://wctrust.org/the-wings-of-change/

Black-throated Green Warbler banded at Rushton in September. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

October reliably brought the sparrows —White-throated, Lincoln’s, Swamp, Field, Chipping, and Song—along with other winter treasures like a few Winter Wrens, a Dark-eyed Junco, and a handful of Purple Finches (an irruptive species that appears in our region in greater numbers some years than others). Slender Gray-cheeked Thrushes and long-winged Blackpoll Warblers are always exciting to band in late fall as they are some of our longest distance migrants breeding as far north as the taiga in Canada and overwintering in Central and South America. Missing from our usual October catch were Golden-crowned Kinglets, Brown Creepers, and the ever pined for Fox Sparrow.

Purple Finch banded at Rushton this October. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Winter Wren banded at Rushton this October. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Blackpoll Warbler banded at Rushton this October. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Gray-cheeked Thrush banded at Rushton this October. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

Established in 2009 with a grant from the Delaware Valley Ornithological Club (DVOC), our banding station has been a huge success over the years, attracting many exceptional volunteers who help us run the station smoothly during spring and fall migration as well as during the summer breeding season.

Our federally licensed bird banders operate up to 16 nets at a time, placing a unique aluminum band on each songbird. Tagging birds in this way allows us to: learn about presence or absence of species that are using our conservation farm and nature preserve; understand migratory behavior (like how long birds stopover in our habitat to refuel); reveal longevity and examples of site fidelity as individual breeding birds return to Rushton and are recaptured year after year; and explore other important population dynamics as well as habitat quality.

Bird Conservation Associate Alison Fetterman aging a Black-and-white Warbler, and volunteer Victoria Sindlinger documenting the molt. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

What follows here are some interesting highlights translated from the 10-year report that was compiled from our data by Alison Fetterman, Bird Conservation Associate.

Top 6 Most Abundant Species

Although we have banded 100 species at Rushton Woods Preserve, a few species dominate the landscape. These include: Gray Catbird, White-throated Sparrow, Common Yellowthroat, Wood Thrush, Ovenbird, and Song Sparrow. Catbirds take the cake numbering over 3,500 individuals through the years!

Top 6 most abundant species banded at Rushton Woods Preserve in order of highest abundance from top left: Gray Catbird, White-throated Sparrow, Song Sparrow, Common Yellowthroat, Ovenbird, Wood Thrush. Photos by Celeste Sheehan

Rare Species

Over 10 years, there are 8 species that have only been captured once. While they are not necessarily rare migrants, their species-specific behavior (e.g., foraging in the tops of trees above our nets) may in some cases account for why these species rarely encountered our nets.

Bay-breasted Warbler
Clay-colored Sparrow
Cape May Warbler
Eastern Kingbird
Hooded Warbler
Louisiana Waterthrush
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Yellow-throated Vireo

Cape May Warbler, Yellow-throated Vireo, and Yellow-bellied Sapsucker: species banded only once at Rushton. Photos by Blake Goll/Staff

Interesting Recaptures

Of the over 3,200 recaptures—birds captured that already had a band—only two of those birds were not originally banded by us. (This is a typical phenomenon for passive songbird banding.) These migrants included an American Redstart and an American Goldfinch. In addition, one White-throated Sparrow that was originally banded by us was subsequently recaptured at another station. Since all data for each bird is stored in a centralized database called the Bird Banding Lab, banders are able to acquire the birds’ stories from their band numbers:

On September 3, 2015, we captured an adult female American Redstart at Rushton Woods Preserve (RWP). The bird was originally banded at Kiawah Island Banding Station (KIBS) in South Carolina in the fall of 2014 http://kiawahislandbanding.blogspot.com/. These banding stations are 570 miles apart and the bird was presumably on its fall migration when it was encountered in both years. These banding encounters contribute to our understanding of the migratory pattern of this small songbird.

  • American Redstart

On May 1, 2019, tucked within a large flock of American Goldfinches we discovered a second year (SY) male American Goldfinch that had been banded originally at Foreman’s Branch Bird Observatory (FBBO) in Maryland on November 25, 2018. The young bird must have hatched in Maryland in the summer of 2018 and dispersed the 58 miles to Rushton the following spring!

  • American Goldfinch

On October 16, 2016, we banded a White-throated Sparrow at Rushton. The following spring, on March 13, 2017, it was captured at Cape May Bird Observatory—75 miles to the southeast of Rushton Woods Preserve! One can only imagine that the bird continued south in the fall of 2016 after stopping at Rushton, and may have been picked up in Cape May during the north-bound spring migration. Alternatively, the bird may have used Rushton as an important stopover site on its way to its overwintering destination of Cape May, a hot spot for many birds.

  • White-throated Sparrow

Notable Weight Gains

Our data show that 75% of our birds are only captured by us once. Among the other 25% of recaptures, we have noted a few birds that stick around taking advantage of the habitat. When we recapture our birds we are able to record that they are gaining weight and using Rushton to fuel up for their next migratory flight. Songbirds only gain weight during migration in order to make long overnight flights.

As part of the banding process we look at subcutaneous fat stores, visible under the skin on a scale from 0-6, with 6 being the most fat. We also weigh the birds in grams. Through recapture data we can see how long birds may be staying at the preserve and their rate of weight gain for migration. Here are a few examples!

Subcutaneous fat is visible under the skin of birds, and during migration stored fat is commonly seen in the furcular hollow of a bird, just below the throat. Pictured left is a bird with an empty furcular hollow and no fat stores. On the right, the furcular hollow is overfull with fat, stored for a long overnight flight. Subcutaneous fat is visible as an orange fleshy glow under the skin.

Veery : In early September 2017, we captured a Veery twice and discovered that the bird gained 14.9 grams in only eight days! This means the bird gained 47% of its body weight from the first time it was weighed, in only about a week’s time. A true athlete, this small thrush could easily have flown a couple hundred miles in one night following its final capture at Rushton Woods Preserve. It also means the bird was finding everything it needed at Rushton to fuel such a long journey.

A Veery banded at Rushton. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

Worm-eating Warbler: In the fall of 2015 we captured this bird three times between September 3 and October 1. (That’s 27 days!) However, this is a different example of an indication of good habitat quality. This bird did not gain weight between those catches like a typical migrant, but it was a young bird that most likely hatched that summer in a nearby dry wooded hillside—the preferred breeding habitat of this species.

After leaving the nest and its parents, it likely dispersed from the open woodland to the denser hedgerow and meadow habitat where we were capturing the warbler. The long length of stay rather, indicates that Rushton was providing important post-fledging habitat for this young bird and others—a shrubby early successional safe zone full of easy food, hiding places, and fewer predators for young birds learning how to make it in the world.

The Worm-eating Warbler that was captured three times in the fall of 2015. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Longevity Records

After banding with a constant effort at Rushton Woods Preserve over the years, we can start to get a better idea of how long birds live and if they are returning from year to year. The Bird Banding Laboratory (BBL) keeps records of the oldest birds through over a million band records. However, after 10 years, we have a few records of our own.

Veery – At least 11 years old! This male Veery was first captured at Rushton on June 30, 2011, aged After Second Year (ASY), meaning it was at least two years old. We have since recaptured this bird breeding at Rushton in 2012, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019 and 2020! We may not have seen the last of this old Veery! This is incredible when you consider that the Veery migrates to the tropics each winter. The BBL record for Veery is 13 years old.

Our old Veery was featured on social media this summer by the Institute for Bird Populations.

Ovenbird – At least 11 years old! This female Ovenbird—another neotropical migrant—was first captured on May 27, 2011, aged ASY, meaning it was at least two years old just like the Veery. We have since encountered this bird breeding at Rushton in 2014, 2015, 2017, and 2020. The BBL record for Ovenbird is 11 years old, so we’re tied!

Our old Ovenbird was featured on social media this summer by the Institute for Bird Populations.

If you’d like to view the 10-year songbird banding report in its entirety, please contact us at bhg@wctrust.org. It will also eventually be available for public view on our website.

Wishing you the health and prosperity of our old birds and happy owl-idays!

As always, there’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

One of the 84 new Northern Saw-whet Owls banded this fall at Rushton during our nocturnal owl banding program. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Conservation Tagged With: Bird banding, bird banding data, bird migration

7 Ways to Give Traveling Birds a Boost – A Virtual Event!

May 7, 2020 By Communications Team

Join Willistown Conservation Trusts’ lean, mean, bird-friendly team for a virtual flappy social hour. Members of the Bird Conservation Program’s field team will share short talks about ways guests can support migratory birds while remaining socially distant. The talk will be moderated to save time for a casual Q&A with the team. Leave with knowledge to promote bird conservation in your backyard and beyond! All ages welcome*!
 

Instructions on how to join the webinar on Zoom will be sent by email after registration! 

 

Tagged With: Bird banding, bird migration, birding

When it's Cold Outside, I've Got the Month of May

October 20, 2018 By Blake Goll

Cape May Warbler banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

As if we weren’t already a motley crew, banders donned their mismatch layers of winter coats, thrifted fleeces, alpaca fingerless gloves, and garish hats this week.  Mornings dipped into the 30’s, and although the sun was (actually) shining bright, the brisk autumnal wind kept the temps suppressed.   Banders and birders live for this  kind of weather though, because riding in the dark on these cold north winds come oodles of southbound migrants.

Indeed, Tuesday set a record for our season thus far even though we kept two of our fifteen nets closed all morning due to the wind.   Banders bared the cold and cranked through 65 birds of 19 species. We were thrilled to host some savvy birders from Birding Club of Delaware County who wisely chose this day to bird at Rushton, knowing this first cold front would have opened the migratory floodgates.

Ruby-crowned Kinglet before release on Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

The first Ruby-crowned Kinglets came en masse, and we are always amazed by these little flying nickels (they weigh little more than that).  Thrushes abounded as well including Swainson’s, Gray-cheeked, and Hermit, and the array of warblers was astonishing— Tennessee, Palm, Yellow-rumped, Blackpoll, Black-and-white, Black-throated Blue, and even a Common Yellowthroat still hanging around.

American Robin banded Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Swainson’s Thrush banded Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Swainson’s Thrush banded Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Yellow-rumped Warbler banded on Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Yellow-rumped Warbler banded Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

Palm Warbler banded Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

The stunner was our very first Yellow-bellied Sapsucker!  Even as a young hatch year bird, she still stole the show with her beautiful golden belly, her bark-like charcoal flecking, and her finely spotted red princess crown.  As a more northern breeder, sapsuckers are only seen in our area during migration and winter.  Sapsuckers drill small holes in trees with their sturdy bills to consume the sap and even the cambium of the tree.  Other creatures can sip the sap at these sapwells, including bats, porcupines, and hummingbirds.  In fact, some Ruby-throated Hummingbirds time their spring migration to parts of  Canada with the arrival of sapsuckers.

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker banded on Tuesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker banded Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Northern Flicker banded Tuesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Wednesday was another cold  and exciting morning with 52 birds of 16 species.  The morning opened with a delightful suite sparrows — Field, Song, Swamp, and Lincoln’s— and Rushton’s first adult male Purple Finch!  These finches have the most beautiful dusty rose hue to their feathers, like raspberry sorbet, pink velvet, and peonies.

Field Sparrow banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Swamp Sparrow banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Song Sparrow banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Lincoln’s Sparrow banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Purple Finch banded Wednesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Purple Finch banded Wednesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Then came the morning’s fun puzzle, a confusing fall warbler species that Rushton banders had never had in the hand before.  After happily poring over various warbler guides and bander references, we concluded that this was a first year female Cape May Warbler! She was beautiful with her delicate streaking and yellow auricular patches; breeding males are even more handsome with tiger stripes and chestnut cheeks.  This is a fascinating and poorly understood warbler that breeds in the conifers of the boreal forest and winters in the West Indies where it sips nectar from a semi-tubular tongue that no other warbler has.

Cape May Warbler banded Wednesday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Thursday saw the last of the Gray Catbirds, lots more warblers including another Blackpoll, thrushes and white-throats, and our first spunky Golden-crowned Kinglets.  We processed 56 new birds, 7 recaps, and a total of 16 species.  An additional  handful of Purple Finches set another record for Rushton and validated the official finch forecast, which called for an irruption year.  This means the pine cone seed crop up north was poor, so finches and other boreal seed-eating birds like Red-breasted Nuthatches will flood south for the winter.  You’ll likely see Purple Finches, Red-breasted Nuthatches, and Pine Siskins at your feeders this fall and winter.

Golden-crowned Kinglet banded Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

There’s a lot going on in the woods,
Blake

Black Swallowtail caterpillar on dill at Rushton Farm on Tuesday. Photo by Blake Goll

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird ecology, migration Tagged With: Bird banding, bird migration, Cape May Warbler, fall songbird migration, purple finch, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

You Look Like a Tall Glass of Waterthrush

September 6, 2018 By Blake Goll

Northern Waterthrush banded at Rushton today. Photo by Blake Goll

The sallow leaves fell slowly through the visible cloak of humidity, dark silhouettes of jays pierced through the gray overhead, blood red berries on spicebush sparkled in the dew,  and wet bumblebees sleepily clung to their violet thistle trundles.    Crickets twinkled through the morning fog as big ripe walnuts thudded to the damp ground.  Gazing out over the farm, I spied the bright cream-colored flowers of okra atop their tall green stalks, like a string of globe lights bringing cheer to the gloom. There were some birds around as well.
We caught 25 birds of only 8 species before cautiously closing early again at 9:30 am.  The highlight was the Northern Waterthrush pictured above.  A lover of wet bogs, forests, and streams, this sprightly tail-bobbing warbler can be found in backyards during migration on its way to Central America.  We also caught our commoners including Common Yellowthroats, cute Carolina Wrens, Gray Catbirds, Wood Thrush, and American Robins.

Carolina Wren banded at Rushton today. Photo by Blake Goll

Holly showing how to release a young catbird. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

I love the photo below because it captures a different kind of “farm to table” (banding table, that is).  These are our banding staff who also work tirelessly on the 6-acre farm of Rushton, helping to produce 30,000 pounds of sustainably grown food, annually.  “In the face of today’s rapid population growth, you can’t do agriculture without conservation anymore,” said Lisa Kiziuk, Director of our Bird Conservation Program.  “We just try to make sure that if you have to take land, at least it’s usable by wildlife.”

Our “farm to table” staff: Todd and Caitlin (pictured at the banding table aging a robin) also work hard on the farm for the rest of the day. Photo by Blake Goll

The way we do farming at Rushton is how they did it in the old days—leaving unkempt hedgerows and wild meadows surrounding the farm fields rather than clearing everything.  Here, we leave space for the finches, salamanders, and caterpillars while satisfying the community’s appetite for food and feathers.   If food is the entrée for connecting people to the wild as Lisa says, then I’d say birds are the amuse-bouche.
There’s a lot going on in the woods,
Blake

Brown-hooded owlet caterpillar on goldenrod. Photo by Blake Goll

Filed Under: agroecology, Bird Banding, migration Tagged With: Bird banding, bird migration, Carolina Wren, fall songbird migration, northern waterthrush, sustainable farming

Last Days of October Produced The Season’s First Juncos, First Snowfall, and A Bunch of Halloween Owls

November 3, 2011 By Communications Team

2 sawwhets BINNS IMG_1910 copy
2 of our Saw-whet Owls of 2011 by Adrian Binns. Notice the one on the left has a more complete white ring around its face than the one on the right. The one on the left is older.

I haven’t brought you up to date on last week or this week yet because it has been pretty hectic for us sleep-deprived, cranky bird banders.  This is the time when we are working hard banding back to back: nights for Saw-whet Owls and mornings for the last fall songbird migrants.  This sounds crazy, I know;  why don’t we just quit the songbird banding and focus on the owls?  The reason is because it is very important to gather as much songbird data as we can up until the very end when the flight peeters out so as to flesh out the entire picture of the fall migration.  Quitting songbird banding too early could mean we miss the unexpected migrants on the periphery of the fall movement.  So we soldier on for the love of birds and the loyalty of scientific research.

lisa & cardinal BINNS IMG_2128 copy
Lisa Kiziuk soldiers on with songbird banding after a long night of owl banding and apple/ finger peeling that made her more vulnerable to the fury of blood thirsty Northern Cardinals. Photo by Adrian Binns.

We went for songbirds last Tuesday (10-25) and Wednesday (10-26) morning and were surprised by large numbers of migrants still moving through.   We banded 59 birds on Tuesday, including a feeding flock of snarly Chickadees and Tufted Titmouse.  Wednesday was the  notable fallout day, with migrant birds virtually dripping from the trees and carpeting the fields;  the hedgerows were alive!  A large flock of Cedar Waxwings eluded us all morning by staying high in the canopy, but we banded 70 birds that day, including a late Nashville Warbler, several Yellow-rumped Warblers, lots of White-throated Sparrows, a handful of lovely little pink-billed Field Sparrows,  a flock of young Hermit Thrush, and the first batch of Dark-eyed Juncos of this year!  It was good to see the Juncos again… to hear their familiar metallic chipping in the shrubs, and to watch the flash of white outer tail feathers as they jovially flit about the hedgerow….almost like welcoming old friends back for the holidays.  Of course, Juncos are the first sign of impending snow, and they indeed brought the snow with them.

Yellow-rumped warbler
Female Yellow-rumped Warbler Fall 2011. (Blake Goll)

Hermit thrush
Hermit Thrush Fall 2011. (Blake Goll)

Perhaps last Wednesday was so busy because all the birds knew  they had to get a move on before the rain of last Thursday and the snow of Saturday.   In the calm before the storm they can feel the pressure changing and thus sense what is to come.  In any case, Wednesday was a day to be remembered.

I went home briefly for lunch after morning banding and stepped out of my car in my driveway to a birder’s paradise.  There were birds EVERYWHERE.  I think I left the keys in the ignition with the car running and the door wide open as I grabbed my binoculars from the dashboard and excitedly scanned the yard.  A Brown Creeper was creeping 5 feet away from me in a magnolia tree, and a Ruby-crowned Kinglet was flitting around hunting insects in an ornamental tree 2 feet in front of me.  Further into the yard was a Hermit Thrush distinctively bobbing its tail up and down under the blue spruce.  Suddenly a woodpecker whizzed past the spruce and into the arborvitae next to the house.   Could it be?  It was!  A beautiful male Yellow Bellied Sapsucker, only seen in my yard during migration!  I ventured further into the shallow woods behind my house, lured by the restless flurry of birds.  There I saw about 20 Robins, the Hermit Thrush (which followed me and was spying on me as I find they often do),  an abundance of Yellow-rumped Warblers, a Golden-crowned Kinglet, lots of White-throated Sparrows, and yet another Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (a juvenile) tap tap tapping on an oak.  What a day!

  yellow bellied sap male
Male Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (from Cornell All About Birds website)

Juvenile Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Juvenile Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (from Cornell All About Birds website)

Speaking of Golden-crowned Kinglets, on that same Wednesday (10-26) we had an interesting catch, if you can fairly call it a catch.  Lisa, Lou, Doris and I were about to disperse for another net run when a little Golden-Crowned Kinglet came careening into the banding lodge and flew up into the skylight.  She didn’t have enough speed to injure herself fatally because in order to hit the skylight she had to dip down and then up.  However, she did bump her head unexpectedly and then sat on the railing totally stunned.  I saw the whole transaction and am still not sure who was more stunned: me or the bird.  As Lisa and I were standing there staring at the bird in disbelief, Doris quickly reacted and said, “Grab it and band it!”    Lisa and I looked at each other in shock and then looked at the bird.  She seemed okay, so I gently picked her up and banded her.  She perked up and flew away after we processed her, but she didn’t fly far.  We saw her perched in a tree 5 feet away looking at the banding shelter and then at her ankle as if thinking, “What on earth just happened to me?  One minute I was flying and the next I was stopped by an invisible wall and then picked up by a giant who stuck this shiny thing on my ankle!”  She got over it fast and soon went back to foraging.

Male Golden crowned Kinglet
Male Golden-crowned Kinglet (Blake Goll)

That day, we also got a recap White-throated Sparrow, which was exciting because the band looked like an old band.  Getting a recapture songbird from someplace else is very unusual; most all the recaps that we get are our own birds that we banded just a few days ago at Rushton  (they either haven’t moved on yet or are here to stay).  This White-throated Sparrow ended up being  our own as well.  However, looking back at the records, Doris discovered that it was first banded at Rushton as an After Hatching Year (AHY) bird in December of 2009.  This means the bird is over 3 years old and probably spends its winter in Rushton Woods Preserve every year!  Interesting example of winter site fidelity.

Older White-throated Sparrow recap
Older White-throated Sparrow recap of this year. (Blake Goll)

Yesterday (11/2) was pretty slow for songbird banding, with only 34 birds, which is probably how it will be from here on out as fall migration comes to a close.  Tuesday (11/1) yielded 58 birds including a gorgeous male Golden- crowned Kinglet, an exquisite Brown Creeper, the first handsome Fox Sparrow of the season, and a bizarre White-throated Sparrow with bright orange lores instead of the usual yellow  (referring to the area right in front of the eyes).   There are still Palm Warblers moving through the area in decent numbers as well; they were at Rushton yesterday, and I saw one at Okehocking on Sunday while walking in the snow with my pug.  Next week will most likely be the last week of songbird banding before we close for the season.  As always, you’re welcome to come out and observe Tuesday and Thursday.

Brown Creeper
Brown Creeper (Blake Goll)

As for the Northern Saw-whet Owl (NSWO) banding, the season is well underway.  We are going out every night this week to take advantage of the peak of the season and the relatively dark nights before the full moon thwarts our efforts next week.  (Moonlit nights are not good for catching NSWO because they can see the nets better and tend to move less because they know they are more visible to predators like Great Horned Owls, Screech Owls, and Barred Owls.)

lou blake lisa sawwhet BINNS IMG_1932 copy
Lou, Me (Blake), and Lisa observing the wing of a Saw-whet to age. (by Adrian Binns)

I believe our total for this season so far is 23  Saw-whets. The season started out a couple of weeks ago with a very slow trickle of none, 1, or 2 owls a night until All Hallow’s Eve when we got 7 ferocious Halloween NSWOs.  They were especially feisty that night with talons flailing and beaks clapping…maybe they knew it was the Devil’s night!  Tuesday night (11/1) we got 8 Saw-whet owls including a recapture banded a few nights ago by us.  Last night, we banded 4 new Saw-whets.  This week we also banded a gorgeous red-phase Eastern Screech Owl, which brings our screech total of this season to 4 (3 red and one gray).  Screech Owls can be predators to Northern Saw-whet Owls, but so far (knock on wood) our resident Screeches have been behaving themselves.   We enjoyed hearing them singing last night amidst the meowing contact calls of the Saw-whets in the hedgerows.

eastern-screech-owl-thermal-vision-BINNS-IMG_1855-copy
Eastern Screech Owl next to a thermal camera. The yellow areas represent the warmest temperatures of the body, which appear to be his giant eyeballs! (Photo by Adrian Binns)

Screech Owl wing
Screech Owl wing (by Blake Goll)

All of the other Saw-whet banding stations nearby are starting to get the owls in greater numbers as well, but no one is seeing the abundance of last year.  Even Scott Weidensaul’s 3 stations near Schuylkill Haven, PA (“the Big Boys”) have only about 31 owls as of November 1, which is slightly behind their worst season in 2006, when they had 33 for the date, and well below their 10-year average of 64 for the date.   This year is definitely not an irruption year for the little fuzzballs.  Perhaps there are too many rodents up north to warrant many of the owls to migrate south or perhaps the breeding owls were not as successful this summer.

In any case, this is shaping out to be the best week this year so far for migrant Saw-whets to reach Rushton and jump into our nets.  If you would like to observe the mistnetting and banding process of these wondrous little creatures of the night, remember that you must contact Lisa Kiziuk first (lkr@wctrust.org) to make an owl appointment. Nights are getting frigid so layer up!

kyra & sawwhet BINNS IMG_1806 copy

Please note that this Friday (Nov 4th) is the PA Young Birder meeting at Rushton from 7-9pm, so owl banding will be closed to the public during that time, unless you have RSVPed your child for the event.  The night should be a wild one, with Saw-whet Owl banding and presentations, owl ‘Seek and Find’ in the farmshed, owl art with Adrian Binns,  s’mores and owl stories around the bonfire, and even short night hikes for those brave souls that really want to get a feel for the natural world at night!

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

~Blake

blake & sawwhet BINNS IMG_1879 copy
Me with Saw-whet (by Adrian Binns)

P.S. Our bird conservation program has really taken flight this past year, and we love being able to connect the public with our birds in such an intimate way.  The Willistown Conservation Trust’s main goal remains protecting the land we love, but we have found that birds (in addition to farm fresh food) are a great way to get people to appreciate the land on a deeper level.  Furthermore, our bird banding research contributes to global bird conservation efforts while guiding local habitat management for the benefit of birds and other wildlife.  We appreciate all the help we can get as we are a non-profit organization with big dreams!  If you  have benefitted in some way from any of our programs or if we have provided you with a life-changing moment with one of our wild birds, please consider giving back.  Anything helps!

sawwhet at  donation box $5 & $20 BINNS IMG_1947 copy
                                                “Hooo Hoo Hoo will help me?”                                                        Northern Saw-whet Owl perched on our donation box before release. Wood carving by Peter Hausmann. Photo by Adrian Binns.

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events, Owls Tagged With: Bird banding, bird migration, Brown Creeper, Hermit Thrush, Northern Saw-whet Owl, PA Young Birders, Palm warbler, White-throated sparrow

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925 Providence Road
Newtown Square, PA 19073
(610) 353-2562
land@wctrust.org

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