David and all,

The map in Sibley is not accurate.  There are breeding populations in eastern 
Montana, southwestern SD, eastern WY and western Nebraska (Wildcat Hills, 
etc.).  Birds of Nebraska by Sharpe et al list them as "fairly common breeders 
in the Panhandle".  Birds of Wyoming by Faulkner reports a count of 31 at Pine 
Bluffs on 3September2000.  Most of these areas have open grown ponderosa pine 
which looks a lot like the eastern Black Forest in Elbert and that is where I 
always figured our late September-early October Cassin's at places like the 
Pawnee Grasslands and Fort Collins come from.  There is also a patch of 
aberrant limber pine just south of where CO-NE-WY come together in CO that is 
private but may also support a breeding population.  Cassin's Kingbirds show up 
on the northeastern plains and along the Front Range pretty much every year 
about this time of year (later than Eastern and Westerns).  There seems to be 
more of them this year than most, but then, there are a lot more birders than 
there used to be.  I think the Cassin's Kingbirds are coming from somewhere 
north of us.


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins


________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of David 
Suddjian <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 4, 2017 3:45 PM
To: Colorado Birds
Subject: [cobirds] Cassin's Kingbird origins

I'll suggest an answer to my own question about where the recent Cassin's 
Kingbirds are coming from. I suggest this is a northward movement, similar to 
the "reverse" migration of Tropical Kingbirds in California, and now one from 
CO.  Looking at eBird patterns for Wyoming and Nebraska to the north, and CO 
counties that are north of or adjacent to the main CO breeding range of 
Cassin's (e.g., Jefferon, Boulder, Larimer, Weld, Adams), there is an increased 
frequency of occurrence in September that is not a continuation of a late 
summer presence but seems to result from migrants moving during September (and 
into early October). Since there is not really a pool of birds to the north 
during September or late August, it seems to me most likely that the Cassin's 
we are finding over the last few weeks have moved north in a "reverse" 
pattern... maybe from afar away.

Maybe this pattern is already obvious to others or established? Thoughts?

David Suddjian
Ken Caryl Valley
Littleton, CO

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