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Spring 2007
Notes and Highlights for
May 22-27
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We banded 272 birds of 42 species
during the week and processed 97 recaptures. Our total effort
for the week was 1,665 net hours, giving a rather poor capture rate of
just 16.2 birds/100 net-hours. It also was our impression that there
were few migrants present in the banding area on any given day during the
week, due probably to the lack of any weather systems to concentrate and
ground them. Our best day in terms of banding total, species diversity,
and capture rate was Tuesday, 5/22, when we banded 70 birds of 27 species
at a rate of 19 birds/100 net-hrs. Species contributing most to our
total this week were Cedar waxwing (87 banded), American Goldfinch (31),
Gray Catbird (19), Indigo Bunting (16) Ruby-throated Hummingbird (13),
Common Yellowthroat (12), Northern Waterthrush (8), Swainson's Thrush (8),
"Traill's" Flycatcher (7), and five each of Magnolia and Canada Warbler.
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Among the 32 visitors who signed
our guest book this week were members of the Delaware Nature Society (photo
below) on a field trip to Powdermill led by Joe Sebastiani (kneeling at
right).
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We also enjoyed a visit from a group
of six interns from Hawk Mountain Sanctuary on 5/25, led by HMS Research
Biologist and Intern Coordinator, Lindsay Zemba (photo below, standing
at left). In the photo below, the six HMS interns from Veracruz,
Venezuela, Cambodia, and the U.S. are joined by Molly McDermott (PARC's
temporary bander-in-charge; back row, third from right) and two PARC interns
from the Dominican Republic, Danilo Mejila (back row, second from right)
and Maria Paulino (in front, far left).
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The Powdermill banding crew this
week was led by Molly McDermott, who is standing in as bander-in-charge
during the latter part of the spring and all summer for Adrienne Leppold,
who is away supervising a a field crew working on a seabird study for the
Maine Coastal Islands National Wildlife Refuge. Helping Molly were
her spring banding assistant, Pam Ferkett, the Powdermill Bobs (Mulvihill
and Leberman), and volunteers Mary Shidel, Lauren Schneider, and Matt Shumar.
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As mentioned above, Cedar Waxwings
dominated our catch this week. Large flocks remained in the banding
area all week, attracted by the flowering trees and shrubs, especially
hawthorns and willows, whose flower parts they greedily consume at this
time of year. A double-decker net just outside the banding lab accounted
for the majority of our waxwing captures. With more than 80 banded,
we observed the usual array of waxwing plumage variations, including wholly
or partly orange tails (a result of the incorporation into developing tail
feathers of rhodoxanthin, a red pigment found in the Tartarian Honeysuckle
berries that are frequently consumed during molt, along with normal yellow
carotenoid pigments). This variation is much more frequently seen
in the juvenal tail feathers of young waxwings, because their tail feathers
are grown in the nest when adults are feeding nestlings extensively on
the early ripening (mid-June to July) honeysuckle berries. At Powdermill,
at least, these same berries are much less widely available later in the
fall when adults are molting their rectrices, and we rarely if ever see
orange tipped rectrices in adult birds.
The bird pictured below,
however, is an adult (ASY) bird, one that must have increasingly
fed on honeysuckle berries as the molt of its tail proceeded centrifugally
(i.e., from the central tail feathers to the outer ones). The
same bird showed another infrequent plumage variation: small wax tips on
its tail (especially the yellow central pair) in addition to those present
on the tips of its adult secondary wing feathers.
The above-pictured bird's tail
wax tips were nothing, though, compared to an adult male waxwing banded
on 5/26 that had what may well be the most well developed tail wax tips
we have ever seen!
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The second most commonly banded
bird this week after waxwings were American Goldfinches. A little
known but useful means for separating SY and ASY goldfinches in spring
is the existence of a prealternate molt limit among the greater coverts.
The lack of any such partial molt of greater coverts in adult (ASY) goldfinches
was first reported by Alex Middleton in his classic study of the molt of
this species published in The Condor in 1977 (vol. 79: 440-445).
The photos below illustrate
this: the top photo is of a SY female that has replaced one inner
greater covert (GC 9); the middle photo is an ASY female showing no prealternate
molt of greater coverts; the bottom photo is an SY male that has molted
three inner coverts (GC 6-8). Although the molt limit is not as conspicuous
in the male due to the black color of the retained juvenal GCs, the prealternately
molted GCs 6-8 can be seen to be even blacker and far less worn than the
adjacent unmolted (juvenal) GCs. The description of molt in AMGOs
in Pyle (1997) is not entirely correct. It states that HY goldfinches
molt 4-10 GCs during the first prebasic molt (they do not molt any) and
0 (35%) to six during the 1st PA molt (at Powdermill ca. 90% or more molt
at least one GC), and that ca. 30% adults can molt up to two GCs in spring.
We have not observed normal PA molt of GCs in any adult AMGOs at Powdermill,
although asymmetrical adventitious replacement of GCs sometimes occurs.
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We couldn't resist snapping a quick
side-by-side photo of two small, mostly yellow, black-capped birds (Wilson's
Warbler, left; American Goldfinch, right) banded during the same net round
on 5/23.
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In our early May highlights we showed
a closeup picture of dark "gunk" on the tip of the beak of a White-crowned
Sparrow. Like the WCSP, the photo of the female American Goldfinch
below belies this species' fondness for dandelion seeds. When
probing into the unopened seed heads, birds that feed on dandelions in
spring encounter the gooey white substance found in the plant's hollow
stems, a substance that dries to a rubbery consistency and which
apparently is difficult for the birds to clean off from their bills.
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We banded just our second Yellow-bellied
Flycatcher of the season this week, an SY bird, on 5/24. A more usual
spring total by this date would be 20 or more. Some of you will recall
that we consider the YBFL to be literally the "cutest" of the eastern Empidonax
flycatchers, because of its comparatively infantile proportions (i.e.,
disproportionately big head and eyes; small bill and body).
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For the same reasons, a Philadelphia
Vireo banded on 5/24 looked far cuter than the Red-eyed Vireo caught with
it on the same net round.
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Speaking of vireos, an encounter
with another vireo species reminded us on 5/24 of why our banding station
protocol encourages examination of the breeding condition of birds at the
net and allows for selected birds, e.g., previously banded females with
fresh brood patches and/or in gravid condition, to be recorded and released
at the net and not brought back to the central banding lab for banding
or full processing.
A White-eyed Vireo retrapped
early in the morning on 5/24 was bagged by a less experienced volunteer
and returned to the banding lab where it was discovered that she had laid
in the bag an egg she undoubtedly was on her way to a nest to lay when
she was caught in our mist net. Her elongated, sparsely spotted egg
weighed 2.2 grams. Interestingly, the bird still appeared very gravid
despite having just laid an egg. And, at 14.9 grams, her weight after
having already laid one egg showed that she did indeed have a second very
well-formed egg in her oviduct (this notwithstanding the fact that birds
lay just one egg a day).
A WEVI with little or no fat
and no egg might weigh 11-13 grams. Considering the added weight
of the egg that she laid in the bag, this female WEVI must have weighed
an amazing 17.1 grams when she was caught in our mist net. The highest
body mass recorded in Mulvihill et al. (2004,
Relationships among body
mass, fat, wing length, age, and sex for 170 species of birds banded at
Powdermill Nature Reserve, EBBA Monograph No. 1) based on 685 WEVI
banding records is 16.8 grams, and this was for a bird with maximum fat
deposits.
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What is undoubtedly one of the last
Lincoln's Sparrows of the spring season was banded on 5/24. The LISP
is a especially finely marked bird whose neatly tailored appearance rarely
comes across well in field guide illustrations or photographs. The
photo below is our latest attempt, and we think it's a bit closer to doing
justice to the understated beauty of this bird than any we've taken before.
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We observed a couple of unusual
cases of eccentric wing molt this week: an SY female Scarlet Tanager
banded on 5/23 (top photo below) had replaced (presumably during her first
prealternate molt) three outer primaries (note the darker gray color and
blacker shafts) and four inner secondaries on both wings (as well as all
of her rectrices); on 5/27 we banded an SY female Indigo Bunting (bottom
photo below) that appeared to have undergone a very nearly complete first
prebasic molt including all but the innermost (juvenal) primary and several
inner primary coverts.
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On 5/22, we banded this unusually
dull SY male Canada Warbler that had just a trace of a black "necklace."
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Female Black-throated Blue Warblers
arguably are among the most confusing fall and spring warblers.
But many of them are substantially less well marked than this SY female
banded on 5/24, with her very prominent white wing spot and eye markings.
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It has been a good spring flight
of Mourning Warblers at Powdermill. This ASY male and SY female banded
on 5/26 brought our spring total to 21 (our long-term spring average is
14).
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It's also been a very good spring
migration for Indigo Buntings (51 banded through 5/27 compares with a long-term
spring average of about 30). We couldn't resist taking yet another
photo of a brilliant ASY male, this one banded on 5/26.
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On the last banding day of the week,
we caught what surely is the quintessential blue bird: an ASY male
Eastern Bluebird.
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Last Updated on 05/27/07
By Robert S. Mulvihill