A report came thru for Friday, April 5th of a Pileated Woodpecker seen at 
Morningside Park, which is fairly small for such a bird, but has some habitat 
that could be utilized by the largest of our woodpeckers - rare, but actually 
more regular in particular season on Manhattan island than commonly realized, 
most of past reports are from the more-northern wooded areas and especially 
from areas adjacent to or not-far from the Hudson river shore and nearby. The 
Friday report gives a straightforward descriptor of this large species, and 
this is about prime-time locally for this species to be more mobile, as some 
are now starting to get interested in courtship and finding or marking off 
territory, and, as that occurs, some of the younger birds of the species may 
become -dislodged- from an area where they had been feeding. All adjacent 
areas, which would easily include Central Parks northern parts and also much of 
Riverside Park and, more-typical with this species, a number of larger parks in 
northern sections of Manhattan might all be checked - smaller parks as well - 
including any tell-tale fresh signs of fallen wood-chips and such on larger or 
other suitable trees.

In more definite, and repeat-news, the Virginia Rail at Bryant Park in 
mid-Manhattan was still there all day and into evening hour on Friday, April 
5th, lingering on now for some days.
- - - - -
Central Park, Manhattan, N.Y. City - Friday, April 5th -

Up to 75+ species of birds were recorded in Central Park and skies-above just 
on April 5th, by -collectively - far more than 100 observers, many 
independently birding, not an unusually large number for a day, even an 
after-earthquake-jitters day -!!- locally, and even in blustery cooler early 
spring weather ahead of a weekend. The waterthrush as noted below was alerted 
via the groupme system which a vast many birders use now and in preference to 
some other, less-used-now older forms of bird alerts - and, again - and 
as-ever, increasingly thru alerts and regular reports to the eBird system, 
which takes in the Macaulay Library for archiving photos, videos, and 
audio-sound files.

For a reliable report of most-any bird and often, and its accompanying 
photographs or even the occasional videos and audio files - from a 
hugely-popular and constantly-birded location, as Central Park is - one often 
need look no further than reporting in eBird, and, as just one sample, an array 
of photos added to the Macaulay Library via that - here is one such, of a 
Louisiana Waterthrush, which report and photo came thru in mid-day of April 5th 
- about 2 hours after the tremor from the regions earthquake which was centered 
in north-central New Jeresy and widely noted all around the greater NYC region 
and a bit beyond. Thanks to A. Simmons for this photo and report. 
https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/616955855

That particular waterthrush was among at-least 4 warbler species seen on the 
day -by various many observers- for Central Park, and, as is typical, by 
multiple and reliable reporters. Additional photographs were taken - by many- 
of many of the birds seen there on the day. The other 3 warbler spp. additional 
to the waterthrush were Palm, Pine, and Myrtle Warblers, again found on Friday 
at Central Park.

Northern Rough-winged Swallows were again seen over Central Park water-bodies, 
some at the Meer and by multiple observers on Friday - also seen over Central 
Park, and from many, many other locations over Manhattan were numbers of Turkey 
Vultures on their migrations and also Ospreys in the multiple, moving across 
throughout Friday. Some other raptors seen from Manhattan also included 
multiple Northern Harriers, and some other raptor species on the move, 
not-least including multiple Bald Eagles.

A further report Central Park note of interest was that of a ---possible tern 
sighting--- flying thru on Friday, however it may be that it was -one that got 
away too quickly- ... Terns of any species are unusual for Central Park and it 
is also still a bit on the early-ish side for most species in our region - but, 
in the realm of at-least-possibilities are several tern species. -N.B., a 
couple of early but confirmed Common Tern sightings came on April 5th to the 
southwestern-most county in NY state, via eBird. Early, but not altogether 
unprecedentedly.-

Good birding - and thanks as always to all of the many keen and quiet observers 
who find, and report so many sightings, and do so reliably,

Tom Fiore
manhattan




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