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The Wings of Change

September 19, 2020 By Blake Goll

A male Black-throated Blue Warbler (after hatch year) banded 9.17.2020 at Rushton Woods Preserve. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

As wolfish northern winds set out on their hunt for summer, the tips of leaves begin to blush, and the night skies come alive with the wings of millions of birds coursing south through the inky darkness. Just before daylight breaks, these voyagers drop out of the unmarked cloud highway into obscure forested patches below. If they’re lucky, they’ve touched down in sanctuary like that provided by Rushton Woods Preserve where they can dine all day on seeds, berries, or insects and then hit the skyway again by night. Never remaining in one place for long, change is a part of being a bird.

Our banding station has been operating for fall migration for the past three weeks, and change is evident in the masked faces of visitors set back behind a purple rope. It looks like Harold from Harold and the Purple Crayon was busy drawing a line ten feet around our banding table between where our crew works and the visitors watch. One thing remains the same and is visible even on the half faces: the glittering light of fascination and awe that fills their eyes as volunteers bring the wild birds closer to them before release.

Common Yellowthroat being released after banding. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
Volunteer Victoria Sindlinger shows a cardinal to the visitors. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Rushton was full of life this week including visitors wanting to learn about the winged creatures with which we share this tumultuous earth and high numbers of migratory birds that rode the crisp fronts south. On Thursday our catch came to a total of 97 birds of a record-breaking 26 species! One net alone was vibrating with 14 birds, six of which were Northern Parula warblers.

Measuring the wing of a Northern Parula banded on 9.17.2020 at Rushton Woods Preserve. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

The other Thursday highlight was the infamous Connecticut Warbler; we catch one to three of these skulkers this time of year each year, which brings the avid birders flocking. Largely a Canadian breeder preferring open larch-spruce bogs, this staid bird graces us with its presence on its way to the tropics, but it is rarely seen because of its habit of lurking among the leaves of dense thickets.

A female Connecticut Warbler banded on 9.17.2020 at Rushton Woods Preserve. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Tuesday of last week brought gems including a dashing young male Black-throated Green Warbler, lovely Magnolia Warblers, flashy American Redstarts, and a young Cooper’s Hawk! We also got our first shipment of Swainson’s Thrushes joining ranks with high volumes of our other thrushes including Veery and Wood Thrush. September 3rd brought our major highlight of the season so far: our first ever Blue Grosbeak and the 100th species for the station!

A male American Redstart (after hatch year) banded 9.15.2020 at Rushton Woods Preserve. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
A male Magnolia Warbler (after hatch year) banded 9.15.2020 at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
A male Black-throated Green Warbler (hatch year) banded on 9.15.2020. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
Chestnut-sided Warbler banded 9.8.2020. Photo by Kirsten Snyder
A Cooper’s Hawk (hatch year) captured at Rushton Woods Preserve on 9.15.2020. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
Veery banded on 9.15.2020. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
Brown Thrasher (hatch year) banded on 9.17.2020 at Rushton. Photo by Jennifer Mathes
Blue Grosbeak (second year male) banded on 9.3.2020 at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Fall migration is in full swing, and we’ll be tracking the wings of change through the last week of October. If you’d like to visit us on a Thursday to see firsthand how our conserved land is helping migratory bird species, please register on our events page.

No matter where you are in life—whether making your way across dark skies or enjoying rest in a green oasis—remember there’s a lot going on in the woods.

Blake

A very young Gray Catbird (hatch year) banded last week. Photo by Jennifer Mathes

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Conservation, Bird ecology Tagged With: Bird banding, Connecticut Warbler, fall migration, land conservation, migration

Community Supported Avifauna

October 22, 2019 By Blake Goll

Volunteer, Kelly Johnson, in awe of a Blue Jay banded October 10th. Photo by Blake Goll

Rushton Woods Preserve is a place where people gather in celebration of abundance. Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) members gather for their share of the soil’s bounty each week, and myriad groups from the community, schools, and universities gather at the songbird banding station to witness the bounty of the sky. Much like the agricultural harvest, our bird catch follows seasonal patterns that can help a visitor (or bird bander) develop a deep connection to the rhythm set forth by Earth’s 23.5 degree tilt.

View of Rushton Farm in Fall from Fred’s wagon. Photo by Blake Goll

As this was my first year participating in the Rushton Farm CSA, I noticed some interesting correlations between the harvest and the catch. My favorite crisp spring vegetables like kale, radishes, turnips, broccoli, leeks, and little gem lettuces have all made an encore appearance now that the cool fall weather is here. These I liken to our butterflies of the bird world, the “special” warblers, that we can only expect to see during spring and fall migration: Black-throated Blue Warblers, Chestnut-sided Warblers, Magnolia Warblers, Northern Parulas, Black-and-white Warblers, and American Redstarts.

  • American Redstart banded in September. Photo by Blake Goll
  • Black-and-white Warbler banded in October. Photo by Celeste Sheehan
  • Male Chestnut-sided Warbler banded in September. Photo by Blake Goll
  • Northern Parula banded in September. Photo by Jim Moffett
  • Black-throated Blue Warbler banded in September. Photo by Jim Moffett

Throughout the summer, I was overwhelmed with tomatoes and zucchini. These prolific crops mirror our common birds that breed at Rushton all summer long like Gray Catbirds and Common Yellowthroats. Catbirds are a bander’s tomatoes making up the bulk of our catch August through September; they even ironically dwindled in numbers at about the same time as the tomato harvest finally ended a couple of weeks ago. And just like the tomatoes, we miss them when they’re gone.

Rushton Nature Keeper releasing a banded Gray Catbird October 10th. Photo by Blake Goll

Now CSA members are enjoying the hardy winter produce like squash and sweet potatoes, while our avifauna has shifted to tough winter birds from the north like White-throated Sparrows, kinglets, and Hermit Thrush.

  • First White-throated Sparrow of the season (10/1) Photo by Celeste Sheehan
  • Golden-crowned Kinglet Oct 16th. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Recent highlights include a young male Rose-breasted Grosbeak on October 10th, our third Yellow-breasted Chat on October 1st (thanks to our new reduced mowing regime), a couple of young female Sharp-shinned Hawks in September, and a young male Scarlet Tanager on September 23rd.

  • Rose-breasted Grosbeak banded October 10th. Photo by Blake Goll
  • Yellow-breasted Chat (third of the season!) banded October 1. Photo by Jim Moffett.
Young female Sharp-shinned Hawk banded September 17. Photo by Jessica Shahan.
Young male Scarlet Tanager banded September 23. Photo by Blake Goll

Black-throated Blue Warbler numbers are back up this year from our previous year’s alarming slump. One little female got our silverware on October 1st and decadently dined for five days, increasing her body weight by 22%. A handsome male Black-throated Blue checked in on October 10th as our one-thousandth bird of the season, making this fall our most productive yet by almost double our past records.

Our 1,000th bird banded of the season on October 10th: a Black-throated Blue Warbler. Photo by Jodi Spragins

This local boom may seem peculiar in the wake of the recent article in Science, citing the devastating loss of 3 billion birds in the past 50 years as a result of habitat loss, pesticides, climate change, and other human threats. However, the majority of our birds are hatch year birds that have yet to complete the most perilous journey of their lives: their first migration in the Anthropocene. Thank goodness we can offer them temporary sanctuary within a community of people who care about open space and the abundance it supports.

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

The Rushton banding crew with No.1,000 (a Black-throated Blue Warbler). Photo by Jodi Spragins

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Conservation, Farm Tagged With: Bird banding, Black-throated Blue warbler, Community supported agriculture, CSA, fall migration, Scarlet Tanager, Sustainable Agriculture

For the Love of Birds

November 14, 2018 By Blake Goll

Golden-crowned Kinglet banded on October 30th. Photo by Blake Goll

On the morning before Halloween, the hedgerows and meadows of Rushton were teeming with migratory birds that had descended on the preserve in the pre-dawn chill.  Banders skillfully processed a rush of 60 birds in just the first two hours of opening; the sun was high by the time Alison and I finally had the chance to look at each other and exchange morning greetings after those blurred hours of poring over birds side-by-side behind the banding table.  During the lulls in activity, cold banders could be seen standing in the meadow thawing in the morning sun—some dressed in ridiculous (and awesome) bird onesies in the spirit of the holiday.

One of our banding volunteers as a Scarlet Macaw on October 30th Banding Bender. Photo by Blake Goll

We could not have picked a better day for Rushton’s first 24-hour long banding big day or bird banding bender as some called it.  The purpose of this endeavor was to understand how the bird community shifts throughout the day at Rushton, whether foraging strategies change toward dusk, and if different species are active later in the day.  Banders took shifts throughout the 24 hours until dawn of Halloween.  The resulting catch was 115 songbirds of 22 species and 12 Northern Saw-whet Owls.

Northern Saw-whet Owl banding at the end of the big day, October 30th.  This owl was not amused by the costumes.  Photo by Amanda Dunbar

Analysis of the results led to some interesting finds.  Most of the activity occurred during the first few hours after sunrise, as we suspected; this is when birds’ energy demands are highest after a long night of traveling or simply resting and metabolizing body fat for warmth.  There was a drop in activity mid-day followed by a surge of activity from 4pm until sunset, such that banders had to finish processing the catch with headlamps lighting the feathers.

Banding birds at sunset on October 30th. Photo by Fred de Long

The top species from the banding bender included sparrows (White-throated, Song, and Swamp), American Robins, and Ruby-crowned Kinglets.  Interestingly, the sparrows were only captured during the morning and evening rushes, whereas the kinglets were captured consistently throughout the day.  We suspect  this is because the kinglets have such high metabolisms that the mid-day siesta is not an option for them; they must forage all day long to meet their energy demands, gleaning mostly insects and spiders along with some seeds and berries.

Ruby-crowned Kinglet getting banded. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Visitor releasing a Ruby-crowned Kinglet. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Golden-crowned Kinglet getting banded on October 30th. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Hermit Thrush banded October 30th. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Banders were most excited about a White-crowned Sparrow, Brown Creeper, and a Sharp-shinned Hawk (banded at dusk).  After operating the owl station through the night, we began catching songbirds again around 5:30 am, well before dawn.  These were probably incoming migrants, dropping out of the night sky to rest their wings in the habitat that Rushton offers before the morning feeding frenzy.

Brown Creeper banded October 30th. Photo by Alison Fetterman

Leg gauging a Sharp-shinned Hawk for size at the end of the big day, October 30th. Photo by Amanda Dunbar

After the monumental effort of the big day, banders were back at it on November 1st for what was to be the last day of songbird banding for 2018.  However, it didn’t quite feel like the end of the bell curve that we are trying to capture by working the entire season of avian migration.  There was no tapering off of migrants, no time for stretching and yawning and reflecting on how great of a season it was.  The only quiet moments were stolen during the opening of the station in the pre-dawn—hands reaching up to set the black nets against navy skies under the white moon, as sparrows twinkled and stirred in the hedgerows.

White-throated Sparrow banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

The morning rush hour on November 1st. Photo by Blake Goll

Then it was all hands on deck, bird bags weighing down our rack, nets sagging under the weight of birds, and leaves replaced by wings.  Everywhere we looked, small balls of energy were flitting about; kinglets darted and hovered in the shrubs within an arm’s reach, the meadow was alive with sparrows, young White-throats babbled their beginner songs from every corner,  robins streamed overhead, and flocks of geese sailed through the blue skies.

Rushton Farm sunrise on November 1st. Photo by Blake Goll

Banders extracting birds on November 1st. Photo by Blake Goll

There was a palpable migratory energy in the unseasonably warm air.  There was plentitude, multiplicity, and joy.  Psychologists claim that the human mind derives joy from abundance, round things, and color.  I realized that morning why birds bring people so much joy.  They are all of these things and more.  We’re in this business to try to keep them abundant.

Cedar Waxwing in the hedgerow on November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

When all was said and done, we  processed 97 new birds on November 1st (during the normal banding hours).  A total of 14 species were caught including 32 Ruby-crowned Kinglets, 10 Purple Finches, 27 White-throated Sparrows, and 2 White-crowned Sparrows. It was a strange day for the first of November with dragonflies, milkweed bugs, and butterflies active again, taking advantage of the last warm day.  “If you can live, LIVE,” Alison said matter-of-factly.  That struck me.  All any of us creatures have is today, this season, and the beauty of this moment.  And so we soldier on.

White-throated Sparrow release. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

White-crowned Sparrow banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Todd Alleger determining the age of a Tufted Titmouse banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Palm Warbler banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Male Purple Finch banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Female Purple Finch banded November 1st. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

It didn’t feel right shutting down the station with such a high capture rate and key bookend species missing including the Dark-eyed Juncos and Fox Sparrow.  Though we were all tired from a long season, we decided to open the station again last week for one final day.  “Can’t stop, won’t stop,” Holly said.

Holly Garrod taking “light box” photos of the birds on October 30th  for feather study. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

For the love of birds, we operated last Thursday, November 8th.  We processed 73 new birds and 14 recaps of 17 species, including the Dark-eyed Juncos and another Brown Creeper.  The juncos are our snowbirds, breeding in the western mountains and Appalachians as well as throughout Canada, and gracing us with their white-tailed beauty all winter long.  Like other overwintering sparrows, they enjoy feeding on the seeds of native perennials like goldenrod that we have available in the wild meadows of Rushton.  For this reason, we do not mow our meadows until spring.

Dark-eyed Junco banded last Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

Brown Creeper banded  last Thursday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Brown Creepers are one of our favorites as well.  These bark-colored birds use their down-curved bills to probe under furrowed bark of large trees for insects and other arthropods.   Methodically working their way up from the base of the tree, they use their rigid tail feathers as a kickstand, much like woodpeckers.
We concluded the season appreciating a few of our common residents including a Carolina Wren and a White-breasted Nuthatch.

White-breasted Nuthatch banded last Thursday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Carolina Wren banded last Thursday. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Aging a Tufted Titmouse. Photo by Celeste Sheehan

Swamp Sparrow banded last Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

Last Gray Catbird banded last Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

All in all, it was an extraordinary season, thanks to an exceptional team of licensed banders, ornithologists, volunteers, visitors, students, photographers, and bird lovers.  The grand total was 1,010 new birds and 162 recaps of our own.  We’ll be out there again next spring, for the love of birds.
There’s a heck of a lot going on in the woods,
Blake

Golden-crowned Kinglet released after banding last Thursday. Photo by Blake Goll

P.S. Stay tuned for a special owl report coming to a blog near you.
 

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird ecology, migration Tagged With: Bird banding, Bird Conservation, Brown Creeper, fall migration, Golden-crowned kinglet, kinglet, songbird migration

Put the Lime in the Chestnut-side

September 13, 2018 By Blake Goll

 

Chestnut-sided Warbler (Hatch Year male) banded at Rushton today. Photo by Blake Goll

Strikingly different from the deep calico colors it flaunts during breeding season, the fall Chestnut-sided Warbler is still a sight to behold.  Sporting a stunning lime green poncho and snow white underparts, it bears an uncanny resemblance to the present meadow landscape of Rushton, in which the rich yellow blanket of goldenrod is broken up by fluffy white seed tufts.  Banders were thrilled to have two of these birds in the hand this morning to compare plumages of two different ages and sexes; this species has been absent from our banding records since September of 2015.

Comparing ages and sexes of two Chestnut-sided Warblers  banded at Rushton today. Photo by Blake Goll

As a foliage gleaner of small stature, the Chestnut-sided Warbler is a bird that must stop frequently during migration to build fat stores from foraged insects in order to make it to Central American wintering grounds.  The Veery on the other hand, like the one shown below, is a formidable athlete with powerful wings that can propel it 160 miles in one night —even over open ocean—on its way to central and Southern Brazil.  The orange glow in the photo below is a large amount of subcutaneous fat stored in the furcular hollow (wishbone area) of a Veery we banded today at Rushton.  It is the mighty four-cylinder engine that powers this ball of avian adrenaline.

Veery banded yesterday at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll

Checking the fat stores on a Veery. Photo by Blake Goll

Incidentally, the Veery pictured here weighed a whopping 47 grams, which was a good 12 grams or so more than the other Veeries we banded yesterday.    The Rose-breasted Grosbeak, a hefty bird with a heavy seed-eating bill, only weighed 43.8 grams if that gives you a better idea of the size of this Veery.  This extra weight is strictly from the stored fat, which birds only carry as fuel for migration.
All in all, we had a nice catch this week, despite having to cancel Tuesday because of the abnormally wet conditions and swampy net lanes.  Our “make-up day” yesterday produced 40 birds of 13 species, and today’s total was 45 birds of 16 species. Enjoy the photo highlights below.

Wood Thrush banded at Rushton today. Photo by Blake Goll

Trail’s Flycatcher banded yesterday at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll

Banders comparing ages of American Redstarts banded yesterday at Rushton. Photo by Blake Goll

As a reminder, visitors are welcome to join us at Rushton Woods every Tuesday and Thursday morning through November 1st from 6:30- 10:30 am.  If it’s raining, you will not find us there.
There’s a lot going on in the woods,
Blake

Dewy spiderweb “dream catcher” with the new Rushton Conservation Center in the background. Photo by Blake Goll

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird ecology, migration Tagged With: American Redstart, Bird banding, Chestnut-sided warbler, fall migration, songbird conservation, veery, wood thrush

Monitoring Songbirds On the Move: Rushton Banding Station's Eighth Autumn

September 11, 2017 By Bird Conservation Team

Red-eyed Vireos banded last October. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Red-eyed Vireos banded at Rushton last October. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

The last day of August was the inauguration of our eighth fall banding season at Rushton Woods Preserve.  Aside from the hemispheric wave of billions of songbirds south on the heels of the retreating summer, there is another local rhythm of which we banders are lucky to be a part.  If an extraterrestrial being were to observe this banding production from above, it might resemble some sort of strange amusement park.  In the central meadow, goldfinches  ride the tall purple meadow thistle down to the earth like dumbwaiters and then launch off using the rebounding stems like slingshots.  As this entertainment  goes on, the banders ride the carousel every thirty minutes around the peripheral hedgerows, checking the nets for winged goodies.   After getting their wristbands at central ticketing, the birds get ejected back out into the park while eager human visitors stream in through the turnstiles from the farm fields.

School children helping to harvest peppers at Rushton Farm last October. You can see the fields of goldenrod and Rushton Woods in the background. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
School children helping to harvest peppers at Rushton Farm last October after visiting the bird banding station. You can see the fields of goldenrod and Rushton Woods in the background. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Banding reveals what birds are using this unique 86-acre nature preserve, the heart of which is actually a sustainable small-scale farm.  Rushton Farm will be celebrating its 10th anniversary this month— 10 years of proving that farms can support both people and surrounding habitat without feeding the stereotype that farming is the most polluting industry on earth.  We have seen an increase in the number of bird species over the years using the “green fences” of early successional trees and shrubs that have matured around the farm. There was our first Yellow-breasted Chat banded on September 10th of last fall, a bird that is seldom seen outside of the breeding season due to its skulking habits and preference for dense shrubby thickets.
 
Last fall we also banded our first Yellow-billed Cuckoo after being taunted by their milky cooing high in the caterpillar-filled canopy of the hedgerows for seven years.  Our captive cuckoo was most likely hatched that summer from a nest we found in dense honeysuckle shrubs and was still clinging to its nursery hedgerow on its banding date of October 25th, making it one of the latest Chester County cuckoo records.  We said a prayer upon release as we knew he had a long and treacherous nocturnal migration ahead of him to his South American wintering grounds.

Yellow-breasted Chat banded last September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Yellow-breasted Chat banded at Rushton last September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Yellow-billed Cuckoo banded at Rushton on October 25, 2016. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Yellow-billed Cuckoo banded at Rushton on October 25, 2016. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

In addition to species diversity and abundance, banding gives us finer details of our bird population including individual longevity and site fidelity.  For example, during our MAPS (Monitoring Avian Productivity and Suvivorship) banding program this summer, we recaptured a handsome Northern Flicker originally banded by us as a Third Year adult in 2013.  That makes him 7 years old now, so he has theoretically been returning to the summer woods of Rushton ever since we first blazed the original net lanes and completed the rigorous habitat survey to become one of the 1200 MAPS stations providing long-term vital rates of North American landbirds to the Institute for Bird Populations.

A seven year-old Northern Flicker banded at Rushton during MAPS this July. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
A seven year-old Northern Flicker (showing considerable feather wear) banded at Rushton during MAPS this July. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Banding recaptures also give us valuable insight into local post-fledging movements, a previously understudied part of the avian life cycle that is now gaining more attention from scientists. Our MAPS breeding banding occurs in the open woodland of Rushton where many of our babies are hatched in June and July.   At the end of August when we begin fall migration banding back in the shrubby hedgerows bordering the farm, we often recapture some of our woodland youth —a testament to the importance of such  early successional shrub habitat.  This unkempt habitat is profoundly significant for the survival of young birds because it offers high food density along with lower density of predators as compared to the open woodland.  Post-fledging recaptures of this type over the years have included Ovenbirds, Wood Thrush and Veery to name a few.

Juvenile Wood Thrush banded at Rushton this July during MAPS. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Juvenile Wood Thrush banded at Rushton this July during MAPS breeding banding. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Another important reason why we band is to understand stopover ecology, or how migratory birds use Rushton to optimize fuel loads.  Birds only carry fat during migration, which is assigned a numerical score (0-6) during the banding process.  Recaptured birds within the same migration season can give us rates of fat gain, which can tell us something about the quality of our habitat.  For example, last fall a Black-and-white Warbler that we banded on September 11th with only trace fat (rated 1) was recaptured at Rushton ten days later with a fat score of 5.  “Its flanks, thighs and furculum all with buttery glow,” said Doris McGovern who holds our Master permit from the USGS Bird Banding Lab, allowing us to band birds protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

Black-and-white Warbler banded last fall. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Black-and-white Warbler banded at Rushton last fall. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Last but not least, the Rushton Banding Station provides an intimate connection for the people of our community to birds and nature.  We invite people under the eaves of our banding station to learn about the importance of birds as the glue that holds the biological web in balance and to understand the global nature of the incredible migration phenomenon that connects all of us beyond country lines.  They learn what they can do to help slow the alarming decline in birds.  Of course, nothing we preach to them about the wonders of birds and why they should care can compare to what the birds themselves inspire in their hearts after leaving their hands.  These pictures show what I mean.

Saint Joseph's University student helping to release a Gray Catbird this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Saint Joseph’s University student helping to release a Gray Catbird this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Drexel University student helping to release a catbird this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Drexel University student helping to release a catbird this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

One of our Junior Birding Club members releasing a Common Yellowthroat at this spring's open house. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
One of our Junior Birding Club members releasing a Common Yellowthroat at this spring’s open house. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Elementary school student admiring a Northern Cardinal this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Elementary school student admiring a Northern Cardinal this spring. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Dick Eales, Chair of the Willistown Conservation Trust's Bird Conservation Committee admiring a Gray-cheeked Thrush before release this May. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Dick Eales, Chair of the Willistown Conservation Trust’s Bird Conservation Committee, admiring a Gray-cheeked Thrush before release this May.  Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Visitor releasing a Gray Catbird at Rushton this May. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Visitor releasing a Gray Catbird at Rushton this May. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

The opening day of this fall (8/31) produced 57 new banded birds of thirteen species including residents, migrants and many young of the year in their very first fall.  This is more birds in one day than we had total for the first two weeks of banding last September; the warm weather and unproductive wind patterns of that September made for a slow start to migration.  In comparison, the cool weather and north winds of this fall have ensured an explosive start to migration.   Notably, our best day last fall once cooler nights became the norm was on October 11th when a record 104 birds were banded!
Even with the slow start, we still closed out last fall season with a grand total of 1,247 birds (100 more than our best fall) in part thanks to the addition of two new nets, which were installed where we noticed high densities of birds.  The new nets are working hard for us again this season.  One near the compost pile catches goldfinches, warblers and sparrows that are dining in the farm edge, and the other in the middle of the wild meadow catches other migrants that may be traveling to and from our shrub habitat demo area. In all, our 14 nets give us a thorough picture of Rushton’s avifauna.

Banders ageing a White-throated Sparrow last fall. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Banders ageing a White-throated Sparrow at Rushton last fall. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

The showstoppers of our opening day this fall were two Blue-winged Warblers.  The first was a stunning After Hatch Year female, and the second was an equally dashing male despite being in his hatching year.  Upon closer inspection of our photos, however, we discovered that the male is quite possibly a Brewster’s Warbler (a hybrid of Golden-winged Warbler and Blue-winged).  Notice the striking yellow wing bars on our male, which is a Golden-winged trait.  Otherwise, he looks like a regular Blue-winged.  Golden-winged Warblers have suffered one of the steepest population declines of any songbird species in the past four decades as a result of habitat loss and hybridization.  Our probable Brewster’s Warbler may be the closest Rushton ever gets to seeing a Golden-winged Warbler.

Female Blue-winged Warbler banded at Rushton this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Female Blue-winged Warbler banded at Rushton this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Male Blue-winged Warbler (Possible Brewster's Warbler) banded this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Hatch Year male Blue-winged Warbler (Possible Brewster’s Warbler) banded at Rushton this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Male Blue-winged Warbler (Possible Brewster's Warbler) banded this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Hatch Year male Blue-winged Warbler (Possible Brewster’s Warbler) banded at Rushton this August. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Last week, we only banded on Thursday (9/7) thanks to the rain.  We kept up our momentum with 46 new birds and 5 recaps, including the usual suspects like Common Yellowthroats and catbirds sticking around from the previous week.  Dapper Wood thrushes and Veery continue, while Ovenbirds and Magnolia Warblers were the new arrivals to the fairgrounds.  Some notable birds in the hand included a Veery with an overflowing fat of 6 —a true athlete that could have traveled 160 miles that following night at a chilly altitude of 1.2 miles on its way to southern Brazil.   An American Goldfinch had a big brood patch (the bare vascularized skin on the stomach used for regulating egg temperature during breeding), indicating that she is a busy mom right now!  Begging goldfinch chicks can now be seen and heard in chirping flocks bouncing all over the farm and upper meadows  of Rushton , tirelessly harassing their poor parents.

Magnolia Warbler banded this September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Magnolia Warbler banded at Rushton this September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

American Goldfinch brood patch. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
American Goldfinch brood patch. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Meanwhile,  some of our less ostentatious residents hide in the lower meadow behind the banding station where the morning mist is slow to retreat into the cool shadows of the wood: the iconic Monarch caterpillars.  They are a legion this year, with black and yellow stripes to be found on virtually every milkweed plant, despite the fact the plants are past their peak with more brown leaves than green now.  These are special caterpillars.  They are the fourth generation of this year. This means that once they become butterflies, instead of dying in 2-6 weeks like their brethren they will endure the 3,000 mile migration to Mexico’s fir forests and live 6-8 months to start the cycle again. We wish them luck on their journey and hope that they find enough pesticide-free habitat to sustain them along the way.

Monarch butterfly caterpillar on milkweed at Rushton this September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Monarch butterfly caterpillar on milkweed at Rushton this September. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

Our bird banding station at Rushton Woods Preserve is now open to the public every Tuesday and Thursday morning from 6am until we close the nets at around 10:30 or 11 am.  The season ends on November 2nd.  Please note the station is closed in the event of rain.  For those who cannot make it to the station during the week, we do have this Saturday, September 16th, open to the public for our annual open house (6-10:30 am).
As Doris was wont to say in her daily banding reports,  see you in the woods!
Blake

Monarch Butterfly flying over asters in the Willistown Conservation Trust's wildflower meadow on Providence Road. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff
Monarch Butterfly flying over asters in the Willistown Conservation Trust’s wildflower meadow on Providence Road. Photo by Blake Goll/Staff

 
 
 

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Conservation, migration Tagged With: Bird banding, early successional shrub habitat, fall migration, MAPS banding, stopover ecology, sustainable farming

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