RE: [nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

2020-10-14 Thread rc...@nyc.rr.com
Willie, that is very interesting. I had a quick look at CBC results - for NJ 
rather than NY, so as to avoid including any "Niagara Falls concentration 
effect," and the recent trend does appear to be a decline (with a few 
‘exception’ years mixed in). In this graph "120" is 2019, and numbers extend 
back to turn of century. I know "birds per party hour" is a rough measure (I 
was a CBC compiler for > 25 years, potential party-hour reporting vagaries 
acknowledged), but the numbers do suggest either a decline in population or a 
shift in wintering behavior.

Sorry, this was a quick take, now back to the ol’ day job…

Rick



-Original Message-
From: bounce-125036389-3714...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Willie D'Anna
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2020 9:34 AM
To: '& [NYSBIRDS]' 
Subject: RE:[nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

I have enjoyed the recent posts about Bonaparte's Gulls. Some of the highest 
concentrations of Bonaparte's Gulls in the world occur along the Niagara River, 
with estimates of 50,000 to 100,000 on some days. It is a spectacle to witness 
this blizzard of gulls on the Niagara but it seems that numbers have declined, 
particularly in the last ten to 20 years. It is unfortunate that the only 
evidence that I can offer for this are my own subjective observations. Counts 
of gulls on the Niagara have been done sporadically and it is only in recent 
years that organized counts have been conducted on a yearly basis, with three 
counts per season (late fall/winter), by the Canadian Wildlife Service.

Numbers of Bonies, as they are affectionately called here, month to month along 
the Niagara, are highly interesting. Twenty to fifty years ago, numbers would 
begin to build on the Niagara in late July with most of these birds consisting 
of one-year-olds. By mid August, there would be a significant influx of adults, 
only just finished with their breeding activities in Canada. Hundreds of 
individuals could be seen at the source of the river (Buffalo/Fort Erie) and 
below the falls or in the Lewiston/Queenston area. At times there would be well 
over a thousand, particularly when there was a good southwesterly blow that 
would push more of them to the eastern end of Lake Erie. These numbers more or 
less continued, perhaps with a slight decrease, into October, although whenever 
there was a southwesterly blow numbers would spike considerably. The big 
numbers would arrive in late October/early November and reach their highest 
levels later in November. Numbers would then slowly decrease into January when 
at some point, ice formation would cause most of them to depart. During some 
milder winters, several hundred would remain through the season. In a typical 
winter, only a handful would remain. Starting in February, numbers would slowly 
start to increase and by late March they would be abundant again. Numbers would 
dwindle during April and they would be completely gone by about the third week 
of May, save for a variable number of non-breeding birds. June and July have 
been the nadir of the Bonies occurrence on the Niagara, although there were 
usually some immatures around, particularly on Lake Erie.

To me, the most dramatic change with the Bonies here has been the numbers 
during spring. Whereas their spring numbers used to be very comparable to those 
during late fall, there have been some springs recently where peak numbers were 
barely into the hundreds, as opposed to the multi-thousands we were accustomed 
to. August through October numbers are also much lower these days, with counts 
of over 100 usually only occurring now when there is a bog blow off of Lake 
Erie. Peak numbers now seem to occur later than in the past, in December rather 
than November.

One change that birders have enjoyed is that numbers of wintering birds are 
seen more consistently now, likely due to our warming climate.

The Bonies are one reason that the Niagara River has been designated an 
important bird area (IBA). It is obvious that the Niagara River has played an 
important part in the life cycle of a significant proportion of the species 
numbers since the 1960s. Whether or not that will continue remains to be seen.

Good birding!
Willie





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RE: [nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

2020-10-14 Thread rc...@nyc.rr.com
Willie, that is very interesting. I had a quick look at CBC results - for NJ 
rather than NY, so as to avoid including any "Niagara Falls concentration 
effect," and the recent trend does appear to be a decline (with a few 
‘exception’ years mixed in). In this graph "120" is 2019, and numbers extend 
back to turn of century. I know "birds per party hour" is a rough measure (I 
was a CBC compiler for > 25 years, potential party-hour reporting vagaries 
acknowledged), but the numbers do suggest either a decline in population or a 
shift in wintering behavior.

Sorry, this was a quick take, now back to the ol’ day job…

Rick



-Original Message-
From: bounce-125036389-3714...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Willie D'Anna
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2020 9:34 AM
To: '& [NYSBIRDS]' 
Subject: RE:[nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

I have enjoyed the recent posts about Bonaparte's Gulls. Some of the highest 
concentrations of Bonaparte's Gulls in the world occur along the Niagara River, 
with estimates of 50,000 to 100,000 on some days. It is a spectacle to witness 
this blizzard of gulls on the Niagara but it seems that numbers have declined, 
particularly in the last ten to 20 years. It is unfortunate that the only 
evidence that I can offer for this are my own subjective observations. Counts 
of gulls on the Niagara have been done sporadically and it is only in recent 
years that organized counts have been conducted on a yearly basis, with three 
counts per season (late fall/winter), by the Canadian Wildlife Service.

Numbers of Bonies, as they are affectionately called here, month to month along 
the Niagara, are highly interesting. Twenty to fifty years ago, numbers would 
begin to build on the Niagara in late July with most of these birds consisting 
of one-year-olds. By mid August, there would be a significant influx of adults, 
only just finished with their breeding activities in Canada. Hundreds of 
individuals could be seen at the source of the river (Buffalo/Fort Erie) and 
below the falls or in the Lewiston/Queenston area. At times there would be well 
over a thousand, particularly when there was a good southwesterly blow that 
would push more of them to the eastern end of Lake Erie. These numbers more or 
less continued, perhaps with a slight decrease, into October, although whenever 
there was a southwesterly blow numbers would spike considerably. The big 
numbers would arrive in late October/early November and reach their highest 
levels later in November. Numbers would then slowly decrease into January when 
at some point, ice formation would cause most of them to depart. During some 
milder winters, several hundred would remain through the season. In a typical 
winter, only a handful would remain. Starting in February, numbers would slowly 
start to increase and by late March they would be abundant again. Numbers would 
dwindle during April and they would be completely gone by about the third week 
of May, save for a variable number of non-breeding birds. June and July have 
been the nadir of the Bonies occurrence on the Niagara, although there were 
usually some immatures around, particularly on Lake Erie.

To me, the most dramatic change with the Bonies here has been the numbers 
during spring. Whereas their spring numbers used to be very comparable to those 
during late fall, there have been some springs recently where peak numbers were 
barely into the hundreds, as opposed to the multi-thousands we were accustomed 
to. August through October numbers are also much lower these days, with counts 
of over 100 usually only occurring now when there is a bog blow off of Lake 
Erie. Peak numbers now seem to occur later than in the past, in December rather 
than November.

One change that birders have enjoyed is that numbers of wintering birds are 
seen more consistently now, likely due to our warming climate.

The Bonies are one reason that the Niagara River has been designated an 
important bird area (IBA). It is obvious that the Niagara River has played an 
important part in the life cycle of a significant proportion of the species 
numbers since the 1960s. Whether or not that will continue remains to be seen.

Good birding!
Willie





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ARCHIVES:
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2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

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[nysbirds-l] Recall: Again, not zipped

2024-04-01 Thread rc...@nyc.rr.com
rc...@nyc.rr.com would like to recall the message, "Again, not zipped".

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[nysbirds-l] Recall: ID qn

2024-04-01 Thread rc...@nyc.rr.com
rc...@nyc.rr.com would like to recall the message, "ID qn".

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[nysbirds-l] Recall: Here is...

2024-04-01 Thread rc...@nyc.rr.com
rc...@nyc.rr.com would like to recall the message, "Here is...".

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