Posts Tagged ‘Elegant Tern’

WHAT THE FLOCK IS HAPPENING AS WINTER APPROACHES?

November 14, 2014

ASHLAND, OREGON, US, NORTHERN HEMISPHERE, JUST ABOUT HALF-WAY FROM EQUATOR TO NORTH POLE

For some birds this is the season of togetherness. Parents and juveniles, families and cousins, unrelated birds of same species, even several species ganging together. What the flock?4 abreast
Here is a small group of female Hooded Mergansers near a pair of sleepy female Bufflehead on Ashland Pond. A common winter sight that is not to be found during breeding season.

TUNDRA-RUN2Above, Tundra Swans on Emigrant Lake (they are no longer there) showing three adults and four gray-headed juveniles. Parents and offspring? Here are Snow Geese (still at Emigrant Lake today). Two white adults, two grayish juveniles who may be their off-spring. SNO-GO FLOK Below, small flock of Green-winged Teal; they even fly in tight formation when they take off.GWT IN POOL (1280x960) Covey of California Quail. Historically these coveys included numerous family groups and would grow to the hundreds in food-rich habitats before gunners and feral cats came on the scene. Before Europeans arrived Native Americans could hunt quail with nets because the flocks were so dense. qwale

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This is a Solitaire in Harney County, OR. At the Sage Hen Rest Stop on US20 where I took this shot there were also Starlings, Cedar Waxwings, Robins, Mountain Bluebird and Varied Thrush all sharing the healthy juniper berry crop. Very mixed flock.

ELEGNT CROWD2Above, a group of Elegant Terns loafing in Monterey after breeding season is over.
There are many working theories about why birds of a feather flock together. None are more together than some small shorebirds or Cedar Waxwings. The latter often be identified in flight at great distances simply by the cohesion of the flock. Mutual alert system? More eyes to find the food source? Safety in numbers? We should ask the birds…but maybe they have little self-awareness. Among Corvids there is “deliberate” or at least instinctive food-sharing rather than secretiveness. Again this may insure more survival for more individual birds. Fifty Ravens have a better chance of finding a fresh carcass than any single bird, then the croak goes out and the flock gathers to feed.

Certain families of birds in North America are almost always in flocks when not breeding: Acorn Woodpeckers (even putting all their eggs into one basket), Bushtits, most sparrows (except Song), finch family members from siskin to Evening Grosbeak, swallows, Robins, Icterids (blackbirds and meadowlarks), most Corvids (magpies to Crows), chickadees, Golden-crowned Kinglet, pipits, starlings, swifts, Burrowing Owls, nightjars, waterfowl, shorebirds, cormorants, gulls and terns, pelicans, grebes.

Some other families of birds may join mixed species flocks but aren’t highly tolerant of their fellows from the same species: tyrant flycatchers#, nuthatches, most raptors*, hunting herons and egrets (though many nest in colonies), vireo, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, shrikes, cuckoos, many woodpeckers, most owls.

For some interesting musing on mixed-species flocks, check out this piece by Jack Connor in Cornell’s LIVING BIRD magazine.

* There are colonial members of the falcon family that flock together: caracaras, Little Kestrel in Europe, Eleanora’s Falcon. But DNA tells us falcon have more in common with woodpeckers than with a Red-tailed Hawk or Osprey.

# When was the last time you saw ten Black Phoebe sitting on a telephone wire lined up like Tree Swallows or blackbirds?

CALIFORNIA COASTING

September 24, 2014

Can birding the California Coast be called “coasting?” That’s what I was doing last week with a group of clients from Partnership for International Birding.CATO GLANCCalifornia Towhee…in California.

CATO PREEN

curl in fog (2)Curlew in the fog, Morro Bay.

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Diving Elegant Tern, Morro Bay.
pelican rock
Pelicans on rock northof Gorda, where we also saw a passing California Condor pursued by Peregrine.
pelican slope

sleeping sausagesThus is what a sleeping sausage would look like…these happen to be only young elephant seals on the beach near Piedras Blancas.

waterfall
Pfeiffer-Burns waterfall into the sea.
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White-crowned Sparrow adult.
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whale spoutThe spouting whale off Pfeiffer-Burns State Park in Big Sur. It was a humpback whale surrounded by attending Heermann’s Gulls and Sooty Shearwaters.
Above the park we saw a pair of soaring condors, giving us three on the day.
California zebra, a rare breed…actually exotic livestock on the Hearst Corporation property at San Simeon.
zebra

TRULY ELEGANT

September 22, 2014

Our recently-completed PIB birding trip along the California Coast had many highlights…here are about five hundred in one single frame. Elegant Terns loafing on a sandbar at Moss Landing in Monterey County.
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No far from the madding crowd with its squawks and boistrous shoving, there was this contemplative soul having a snooze on the incoming tide:
OTTEREST2

CALIFORNIA GALLERY #1

September 17, 2012

Some more images from our PIB birding trip in northern California.
Red-shouldered Hawk, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco. This modest sized buteo is well-adapted to urban hunting where rats can be caught from a perch, not requiring a lot of soaring around. This bird’s frequent loud screams are a commonplace sound in California city parks.

The large dark bird on the right is a first-year Western Gull. The medium-sized dark bird on the left is an adult Heermann’s Gull. The crowd consists of basic plumage Elegant Terns. Ocean Beach San Francisco.



This is America’s only member of the babbler family, a Wrentit, in the Marin Headlands just off the Golden Gate Bridge.


Brown Pelicans in flight. The young birds have pale bellies, the adults have pale faces. It takes three or four years for this species to reach maturity and breeding plumage.


A snowdrift of sleeping White Pelicans in Marin County. In some marshes we saw both Brown Pelicans fishing with dives, and the larger White Pelicans seining the same water while afloat.