I did a breeding bird survey at Montezuma today. We had 27 Yellow Warblers on 
Esker Brook. Just one example but other birds in good numbers including Gray 
Catbirds, Willow Flycatcher. Goldfinch ,Cedar Waxwings. I have had Black-billed 
Cuckoo on all three surveys I have done this spring.  Janet Akin

From: David Nicosia 
Sent: Sunday, June 18, 2017 8:40 PM
To: Cayuga birds 
Subject: Re: -[cayugabirdsl] Lack of birds

I have noticed that breeding species seem to be in fairly typical numbers in 
Broome Co. neotropical species included.  
Neotropical migration was poor and mostly likely related to a cool and chilly 
May 1-16 with a 2 day warm period with  very
strong southwest winds on May 18th and 19th. Many of our usual migrants, like 
the ones seen at the Hawthorn's for example,
simply overshot our area these two days. As for your lack of breeding species 
like chipping sparrows, yellow warblers, 
baltimore orioles and others, could this be due to the severe drought your area 
had last summer? We didn't have it nearly as bad down here
in Broome Co. Do drought conditions hurt insectivores like breeding birds due 
to less insects, harder to find earthworms (for robins) etc so
that nesting success drops?  This is the only thing that I can think of since 
the species that Chris T-H mentioned originally
winter in different locations (some in the tropics and others in the southern 
U.S) and have different migration timetables. 
These  species are also usually fairly tolerant of humans and disturbed 
habitats. Maybe it was last year's drought leading to poor nesting success
across many different songbird species. And given songbirds high mortality 
rates, this could lead to a noticeable drop in numbers from last year
to this year. Just a thought. Hopefully they will bounce back, this year is 
pretty wet, and in fact it could be too wet!  



On Sun, Jun 18, 2017 at 9:48 AM, Glenn Wilson <wil...@stny.rr.com> wrote:

  In Union Center (Endicott), do not have any Tree Swallows that I know of.

  BUT the Spring Street feeders are very active with Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks, 
Cardinals, Juncos with young, White and Red breasted Nuthatches, Mourning 
Doves, at least two Hummingbirds, one pair of nesting Bluebirds, two nests of 
Prairie Warblers, calling Ovenbirds and Towhees, and a very vocal Phoebe. Can't 
forget Purple Finches, nesting House Finches, and two active House Wren nests

  Other than Tree Swallows, I would say this location is pretty normal. No 
Great Blue or Green Herons after the goldfish yet but no doubt they will come.

  Glenn Wilson
  Endicott, NY
  www.WilsonsWarbler.com

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