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Participate in the Global Great Backyard Bird Count this Sunday!

February 12, 2014 By Communications Team

WAIT! If you’re a subscriber reading this in email format, before reading any further, please click on the title of the post right above in order to view the blog in the glory it was meant to have on the actual blog website.
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Evening Grosbeak.   Photo by Jon Mularczyk .
Evening Grosbeak. Photo by Jon Mularczyk .

Children, teens and adults of all ages are invited to join us this Sunday February 16 at the Willistown Conservation Trust from 9-11am for our  annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC)!            Contact Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org) if you’re interested in participating.

The  Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s GBBC is a global, 4-day citizen science event during which people from all walks of life tally birds in order to help scientists discover important population patterns about birds.   Last year, GBBC participants in 111 countries counted over 33 million birds on close to 138,000 checklists, documenting some 4,200 species, which is more than one-third of the world’s species!!

Carolina Chickadee. Photo by Adrian Binns
Carolina Chickadee on suet. Photo by Adrian Binns

This participation represents an incredible effort that helps answer questions like: Where are the birds now?  How is climate change affecting populations? What are the patterns of irruptive bird species (those like winter finches that flood south in some years but not others based on food availability)? How is migration timing different from year to year?  How are diseases like House Finch Eye Disease or West Nile Virus affecting populations?

Carolina Wren.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Carolina Wren. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

For example,  one sad pattern scientists have discovered through GBBC data is that Carolina Wrens seem to disappear from northern checklists in cold winters like the one we are having now. These adorable little mouse-like birds are actually a more southern species whose range has expanded northward in the past decades because of our mild winters.  However, they do not migrate and so often perish during harsh winters; it can take up to 10 years for the population to return to the north after such cold-weather die-offs.  Keep those feeders filled if you notice one of these charming  brown “butterballs” in your yard, for they may not be as hardy as they look.

Winter.  Photo by Justin Thompson
Harsh Winter. Photo by Justin Thompson

GBBC participants enter their checklists online at gbbc.birdcount.org, which is a fantastic resource for learning more about the GBBC and birds in general.  Here you can watch a real-time map during the count (February 14-17) of checklists as they are submitted along with excellent photos of birds.  There’s a great interactive section where you can actually explore data compiled from past GBBCs, including year-to-year comparisons of ranges both within and between species.  It’s fun to play around with!

Contact Blake Goll (bhg@wctrust.org) if you’d like to attend our Great Backyard Bird Count this Sunday!

Carolina Chickadee and Downy Woodpecker.  Photo by Adrian Binns.
Carolina Chickadee and Downy Woodpecker. Photo by Adrian Binns.

This is an especially exciting GBBC with the crazy weather we’ve been having and the historic avian events such as the Snowy Owl irruption or “Snow Storm” as it’s now affectionately called.   Because of milder arctic weathers, the tundra rodent population boomed this past summer, creating a bumper crop of Snowies that have flooded south for overwintering territories.  Check out my recent blog post to learn more, or visit Project Snowstorm to learn about the incredible research underway to track these Snowy Owls with solar powered transmitters.

Besides a Snowy Owl, you also might be able to add a seldom-seen grebe to your GBBC checklist this year!  Grebes are handsome little loon-like birds that are highly specialized for diving; with their stubby legs set so far back on their bodies, they need large bodies of water to takeoff and are pretty much immobile on land.  Red-necked and Horned Grebes normally call the Great Lakes their winter home, but the icy polar vortexes that have been lurking in the Northeast this winter have caused massive freezing of the lakes, more than we’ve seen in decades.

Horned Grebe released from rehab after it crashed onto frozen ground in Central PA.  Photo by Alex Lamoreaux
Horned Grebe released from rehab after it crashed onto frozen ground in Central PA. Photo by Alex Lamoreaux.  Check out his article about the grebes on Nemesis Bird

The displaced Grebes are forced to move south toward the coast, hoping for large bodies of water along the way.  This is a dangerous journey with the frequent snow and ice storms that have been berating our region.  Many of these poor night travelers actually get iced over as they are flying and crash to the ground in sometimes fatal “wrecks”.  The lucky ones  land in a soft pile of snow or in a body of water, so birders should be on the lookout for these birds!  If you see one, report it to eBird  so that scientists can track this movement.  And if the bird needs help (like if it’s stranded in a parking lot or field) gently pick it up in a blanket, place it in a box and call Tri State Bird Research and Rescue!

Hope to see you this weekend!

There’s a lot going on in the woods,

Blake

Hermit Thrush.  Photo by Mike Rosengarten
Hermit Thrush. Photo by Mike Rosengarten

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: Carolina Wren, Great Backyard Bird Count, Horned Grebe, Snowy Owl, winter birding

Valentine’s Day Fun: What Men Can Learn from Avian Romance

February 14, 2013 By Communications Team

Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)
Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)

The natural world is filled with romance, beauty and enchantment, and every day seems to be Valentine’s Day outside if you look around.  This time of year, in particular, the male waterfowl are beginning to perform their elaborate courtship displays on ponds and lakes in our area, as the handsome Hooded Merganser, pictured above, is doing.  Do you see any resemblance in his hairdo to heart throb Elvis Presley’s famous hair?  Guys, Elvis and mergansers may be on to something…Lesson # 1: A voluminous hairdo is sure to elicit female swooning.

Geese and swans are the ultimate romantics, with most pairs mating for life.  Dabbling ducks, like mallards, and diving ducks, like mergansers, are generally more promiscuous and consequently have a wider variety of male displays.  No matter their marital status though, all ducks and geese, like many other birds, spend a lot of energy on performing wonderfully ritualized mating displays to impress the females.  This is lesson # 2, guys: Put effort into impressing your woman every day!

Don’t get complacent about attracting her, even if you are already married or have been together for decades.  This could involve  you getting back into using that gym membership that keeps shamefully showing up on your billing statement each month, buying her flowers for no reason or some other grand display of affection.  If you’re having trouble thinking up something that will ‘wow’ her, take notes from this male Red-capped Manakin.  Borrowing some of his moves is sure to put the steam back into your relationship!

Youtube video of moonwalking Red-capped Manakin

Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com
Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com

If that’s a little too flamboyant for your style, observe the suave Emperor Penguin’s quiet, deeply romantic courtship ritual in the  “March of the Penguins” (a great date night movie!).  This is lesson # 3, guys:   Make time for and ritualize those intimate moments of romance.  

Emperor Penguins
Emperor Penguins

Jane Austen depicted this provocative avian display in the following love poem.  To spice things up, try reading this to your mate this Valentine’s Day over a glass of wine with Barry Manilow playing softly in the background:

“The Penguin” by Jane Austen

With a single indecorous groan

a glacier calves an iceberg the size

of a cathedral into the christening sea.

Along the icefoot, ritual courtship

flurries the frigid air into squawks

and plumage, the shuffled chase

that observers, stomping their feet for warmth,

call dance.  And after?

After a belle’s dance card filled twice over

and a wallflower wilted with watching

territory staked step by measured step,

and the pecking order of kisses?

After the final bow,

after swallow-tailed males swooped

over the shimmer, the shiver

of jewel-and-sweat-scaled females?

Up from the bed of lost feathers, 

the mating for life.  Under a sky

literate with M’s, littered

with scavengers’ winged W’s,

two months stand still on the ice for him,

egg cradled on his melting feet.

For her the miles to retreating sea

to feed, then the longer walk back.

O cotillions and calling cards,

clergy waddling in wedding vestments,

marriage of property to title, awaiting issue,

how roughly do you compare?

Lesson #4 can also be gained from the male Emperor Penguin:  Be sure to hold up your end of the parenting deal and then some! Check this out: clip from BBC’s “Planet Earth”.   A male Emperor Penguin may incubate the egg for up to two frigid months while the female travels hundreds of miles to sea to feed.  He loses up to half of his body weight while guarding the egg and fasting all winter, patiently awaiting her return in howling winds that can reach 120 mph.  How’s that for parental dedication?  Next time your wife asks to go on a vacation for two months while you watch the kids, remember the selflessness of the emperors and say yes!

Lesson # 5:  Let go of your inhibitions and macho inclinations and dance with her!  What woman doesn’t enjoy dancing with her man?  Take ballroom dance lessons with her if you’re unsure and need more confidence before stepping out onto the floor.  For a little avian inspiration,  watch this video from BBC’s “Life” of Western Grebes performing their beautiful courtship ballet.  If that doesn’t make you want to dance, I don’t know what will!

Clark's Grebe by Bob Dyer
Clark’s Grebe by Bob Dyer

And did you catch the other lesson in that video clip?  Shower her with fish!  Er, I mean gifts.  It’s probably not a good idea to shower her with raw fish unless she likes sushi.  Otherwise, surprise her every now and then with little gifts that make her feel special (Lesson # 6!).

I hope everyone has a wonderful Valentine’s Day filled with love and birds!

And don’t forget to show how much you care about birds and their conservation by participating in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend!  Visit the website to register and for more information.  All that is required of you is that you identify and count birds for at least 15 minutes anytime from Feb 15-18 and enter your results online. 

Have fun!

~Blake

P.S.  Since Valentine’s Day is about love and all things precious,  be sure to read George Armistead’s excellent article about the top ten cutest birds in North America on the ABA blog! It’s sure to brighten your day.

Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)
Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)

 

Filed Under: Bird Banding, Bird Events Tagged With: ABA, Emperor Penguin, Great Backyard Bird Count, Hooded Merganser, Red-capped manakin, Valentine's Day, Western Grebe

Reminder to PA Young Birders- Change of dates

February 17, 2012 By Communications Team

American Robin fluffed up.  Photo by Mark Lewer
American Robin fluffed up. Photo by Mark Lewer

Greetings Jr. Birders!

 I just wanted to remind you that since this is a holiday weekend and many little birders might have flown the coop, the PA Young Birder meeting that was scheduled for this Saturday February 18th has been rescheduled to next Saturday February 25, 9:30-11am.  We will be investigating adaptations of winter birds…look for more information to come next week;  as of now, we will meet at the Trust headquarters (925 Providence Rd, Newtown Square PA).  Please RSVP to Lisa Kiziuk (lkr@wctrust.org).
Bluebird & House Finch by Stephen Staedtler (PA-Birds)
Bluebird & House Finch by Stephen Staedtler (PA-Birds)
If you have time this weekend, be sure to participate in Audubon’s Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC)!  All you need to do is count birds for at least 15 minutes in your yard one day this weekend to help scientists gain a national snapshot of winter bird distribution (and a glimpse into the beginning of spring migration, believe it or not).  Here’s the website for GBBC instructions, data entry, and fun stuff for kids: http://www.birdsource.org/gbbc/
Have a great, long weekend!
~Blake

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: Bluebird, Great Backyard Bird Count, House Finch, PA Young Birders, Robin

Valentine’s Day Fun: What Men Can Learn from Avian Romance

February 15, 2012 By Communications Team

Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)
Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)

The natural world is filled with romance, beauty and enchantment, and every day seems to be Valentine’s Day outside if you look around.  This time of year, in particular, the male waterfowl are beginning to perform their elaborate courtship displays on ponds and lakes in our area, as the handsome Hooded Merganser, pictured above, is doing.  Do you see any resemblance in his hairdo to heart throb Elvis Presley’s famous hair?  Guys, Elvis and mergansers may be on to something…Lesson # 1: A voluminous hairdo is sure to elicit female swooning.

Geese and swans are the ultimate romantics, with most pairs mating for life.  Dabbling ducks, like mallards, and diving ducks, like mergansers, are generally more promiscuous and consequently have a wider variety of male displays.  No matter their marital status though, all ducks and geese, like many other birds, spend a lot of energy on performing wonderfully ritualized mating displays to impress the females.  This is lesson # 2, guys: Put effort into impressing your woman every day!

Don’t get complacent about attracting her, even if you are already married or have been together for decades.  This could involve  you getting back into using that gym membership that keeps shamefully showing up on your billing statement each month, buying her flowers for no reason or some other grand display of affection.  If you’re having trouble thinking up something that will ‘wow’ her, take notes from this male Red-capped Manakin.  Borrowing some of his moves is sure to put the steam back into your relationship!

Youtube video of moonwalking Red-capped Manakin

Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com
Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com

If that’s a little too flamboyant for your style, observe the suave Emperor Penguin’s quiet, deeply romantic courtship ritual in the  “March of the Penguins” (a great date night movie!).  This is lesson # 3, guys:   Make time for and ritualize those intimate moments of romance.  

Emperor Penguins
Emperor Penguins

Jane Austen depicted this provocative avian display in the following love poem.  To spice things up, try reading this to your mate this Valentine’s Day over a glass of wine with Barry Manilow playing softly in the background:

“The Penguin” by Jane Austen

With a single indecorous groan

a glacier calves an iceberg the size

of a cathedral into the christening sea.

Along the icefoot, ritual courtship

flurries the frigid air into squawks

and plumage, the shuffled chase

that observers, stomping their feet for warmth,

call dance.  And after?

After a belle’s dance card filled twice over

and a wallflower wilted with watching

territory staked step by measured step,

and the pecking order of kisses?

After the final bow,

after swallow-tailed males swooped

over the shimmer, the shiver

of jewel-and-sweat-scaled females?

Up from the bed of lost feathers, 

the mating for life.  Under a sky

literate with M’s, littered

with scavengers’ winged W’s,

two months stand still on the ice for him,

egg cradled on his melting feet.

For her the miles to retreating sea

to feed, then the longer walk back.

O cotillions and calling cards,

clergy waddling in wedding vestments,

marriage of property to title, awaiting issue,

how roughly do you compare?

Lesson #4 can also be gained from the male Emperor Penguin:  Be sure to hold up your end of the parenting deal and then some! Check this out: clip from BBC’s “Planet Earth”.   A male Emperor Penguin may incubate the egg for up to two frigid months while the female travels hundreds of miles to sea to feed.  He loses up to half of his body weight while guarding the egg and fasting all winter, patiently awaiting her return in howling winds that can reach 120 mph.  How’s that for parental dedication?  Next time your wife asks to go on a vacation for two months while you watch the kids, remember the selflessness of the emperors and say yes!

Lesson # 5:  Let go of your inhibitions and macho inclinations and dance with her!  What woman doesn’t enjoy dancing with her man?  Take ballroom dance lessons with her if you’re unsure and need more confidence before stepping out onto the floor.  For a little avian inspiration,  watch this video from BBC’s “Life” of Western Grebes performing their beautiful courtship ballet.  If that doesn’t make you want to dance, I don’t know what will!

Clark's Grebe by Bob Dyer
Clark’s Grebe by Bob Dyer

And did you catch the other lesson in that video clip?  Shower her with fish!  Er, I mean gifts.  It’s probably not a good idea to shower her with raw fish unless she likes sushi.  Otherwise, surprise her every now and then with little gifts that make her feel special (Lesson # 6!).

I hope everyone has a wonderful Valentine’s Day filled with love and birds!

And don’t forget to show how much you care about birds and their conservation by participating in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend!  Visit the website to register and for more information.  All that is required of you is that you identify and count birds for at least 15 minutes anytime from Feb 15-18 and enter your results online. 

Have fun!

~Blake

P.S.  Since Valentine’s Day is about love and all things precious,  be sure to read George Armistead’s excellent article about the top ten cutest birds in North America on the ABA blog! It’s sure to brighten your day.

Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)
Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)

 

 

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: ABA, Emperor Penguins, Great Backyard Bird Count, Hooded Merganser, Jane Austen, Red-capped manakin, Valentine's Day, Western Grebe

Valentine's Day Fun: What Men Can Learn from Avian Romance

February 15, 2012 By wctbirds

Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)
Male Hooded Merganser displaying (by http://www.flickr.com/photos/newfoundlander61/)

The natural world is filled with romance, beauty and enchantment, and every day seems to be Valentine’s Day outside if you look around.  This time of year, in particular, the male waterfowl are beginning to perform their elaborate courtship displays on ponds and lakes in our area, as the handsome Hooded Merganser, pictured above, is doing.  Do you see any resemblance in his hairdo to heart throb Elvis Presley’s famous hair?  Guys, Elvis and mergansers may be on to something…Lesson # 1: A voluminous hairdo is sure to elicit female swooning.

Geese and swans are the ultimate romantics, with most pairs mating for life.  Dabbling ducks, like mallards, and diving ducks, like mergansers, are generally more promiscuous and consequently have a wider variety of male displays.  No matter their marital status though, all ducks and geese, like many other birds, spend a lot of energy on performing wonderfully ritualized mating displays to impress the females.  This is lesson # 2, guys: Put effort into impressing your woman every day!

Don’t get complacent about attracting her, even if you are already married or have been together for decades.  This could involve  you getting back into using that gym membership that keeps shamefully showing up on your billing statement each month, buying her flowers for no reason or some other grand display of affection.  If you’re having trouble thinking up something that will ‘wow’ her, take notes from this male Red-capped Manakin.  Borrowing some of his moves is sure to put the steam back into your relationship!

Youtube video of moonwalking Red-capped Manakin

Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com
Red-capped Manakin from scienceray.com

If that’s a little too flamboyant for your style, observe the suave Emperor Penguin’s quiet, deeply romantic courtship ritual in the  “March of the Penguins” (a great date night movie!).  This is lesson # 3, guys:   Make time for and ritualize those intimate moments of romance.  

Emperor Penguins
Emperor Penguins

Jane Austen depicted this provocative avian display in the following love poem.  To spice things up, try reading this to your mate this Valentine’s Day over a glass of wine with Barry Manilow playing softly in the background:

“The Penguin” by Jane Austen

With a single indecorous groan

a glacier calves an iceberg the size

of a cathedral into the christening sea.

Along the icefoot, ritual courtship

flurries the frigid air into squawks

and plumage, the shuffled chase

that observers, stomping their feet for warmth,

call dance.  And after?

After a belle’s dance card filled twice over

and a wallflower wilted with watching

territory staked step by measured step,

and the pecking order of kisses?

After the final bow,

after swallow-tailed males swooped

over the shimmer, the shiver

of jewel-and-sweat-scaled females?

Up from the bed of lost feathers, 

the mating for life.  Under a sky

literate with M’s, littered

with scavengers’ winged W’s,

two months stand still on the ice for him,

egg cradled on his melting feet.

For her the miles to retreating sea

to feed, then the longer walk back.

O cotillions and calling cards,

clergy waddling in wedding vestments,

marriage of property to title, awaiting issue,

how roughly do you compare?

Lesson #4 can also be gained from the male Emperor Penguin:  Be sure to hold up your end of the parenting deal and then some! Check this out: clip from BBC’s “Planet Earth”.   A male Emperor Penguin may incubate the egg for up to two frigid months while the female travels hundreds of miles to sea to feed.  He loses up to half of his body weight while guarding the egg and fasting all winter, patiently awaiting her return in howling winds that can reach 120 mph.  How’s that for parental dedication?  Next time your wife asks to go on a vacation for two months while you watch the kids, remember the selflessness of the emperors and say yes!

Lesson # 5:  Let go of your inhibitions and macho inclinations and dance with her!  What woman doesn’t enjoy dancing with her man?  Take ballroom dance lessons with her if you’re unsure and need more confidence before stepping out onto the floor.  For a little avian inspiration,  watch this video from BBC’s “Life” of Western Grebes performing their beautiful courtship ballet.  If that doesn’t make you want to dance, I don’t know what will!

Clark's Grebe by Bob Dyer
Clark’s Grebe by Bob Dyer

And did you catch the other lesson in that video clip?  Shower her with fish!  Er, I mean gifts.  It’s probably not a good idea to shower her with raw fish unless she likes sushi.  Otherwise, surprise her every now and then with little gifts that make her feel special (Lesson # 6!).

I hope everyone has a wonderful Valentine’s Day filled with love and birds!

And don’t forget to show how much you care about birds and their conservation by participating in the 16th annual Great Backyard Bird Count this weekend!  Visit the website to register and for more information.  All that is required of you is that you identify and count birds for at least 15 minutes anytime from Feb 15-18 and enter your results online. 

Have fun!

~Blake

P.S.  Since Valentine’s Day is about love and all things precious,  be sure to read George Armistead’s excellent article about the top ten cutest birds in North America on the ABA blog! It’s sure to brighten your day.

Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)
Mourning Doves in love (Photo by Eric on http://my.opera.com/CedarFox/)

 

 

Filed Under: Bird Events Tagged With: ABA, Emperor Penguins, Great Backyard Bird Count, Hooded Merganser, Jane Austen, Red-capped manakin, Valentine's Day, Western Grebe

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