Was it not the case that Colorado’s first record of Broad-billed Hummingbird 
from 2002 had previously been banded in Louisiana?

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Nathan 
Pieplow
Sent: Tuesday, October 2, 2018 10:13 PM
To: Brandon Percival <[email protected]>
Cc: Jason Beason <[email protected]>; cobirds 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Fwd: [WYOBIRDS] Fork-tailed Flycatcher

There are lots of cases of the exact same rare bird being seen hundreds of 
miles apart. The California Condor I found in Wyoming in July had been reported 
in central Utah ten days previously. In that case we know it was the same bird 
because it had a wing tag. And here are some other examples from a piece by 
Bill Schmoker and Jerry Liguori that we ran in Colorado Birds in 2010:

"Occasionally  a   rarity  is    tracked  photographically  over  a   
considerable  distance.  A    juvenile  Ivory  Gull  identifiable  by  its  
pattern  of    dark  spotting  spent  much  of  February  2009  in  Arcachon,  
France,  then  turned  up  in  Cork  County,  Ireland  in  early  March  
(Gantlett  2009).  Between  mid-August  and  October  2002,  a   juvenile  
Brown  Pelican  with  a   distinctive  hole  in  the  inner  web  of  its  left 
 foot  was  tracked  from  Michigan  though  Quebec  and  Ontario  and  finally 
 to  New  York  (Wormington  2002).  A  leucistic  Herring  Gull  found  in  
July  1996  at  Partridge  Creek  in  central  Yukon  was  spotted  on  23  
June  1997  at  Whitehorse,  southern  Yukon,  645  km  away.  In  addition  to 
 being  leucistic,  it   had  a   pattern  of  flecking  on  its  iris  that  
allowed  photographs  to confirm its identity (Sinclair et al. 2003)."

Source: 
https://cobirds.org/JournalArchives/2010-2019/2010%20Vol%2044/CB_2010_44_1_Jan.pdf<https://secure-web.cisco.com/1k6ujhwvxcJIdaCGZ99L1XNSDEvi0M9VsjApxdZHGfqCXPBUrm6ke8E1BbGc6P1agIph7oVTF2HleSH89-7ut8ZV0Gf9rmAJDBDFRSC8QdNMC-kEze-QSM-GAjkUs4Sv9oolHDLwtqtbUadRZCXFPphLyX5PepvEvKQ8gygYUNZmBs-EsAMVALnmF6QAo0bR5f6r2RWhB3DuTKLnm8HwK_ShSK0ZVP5RP6hP5fGCNV0ZKM9Z661XSLc1mHrtzLARC1LvktZrVJlFsnJFMrh8CVHVaDHg5RhxKLXcRx1A9b4XcNi86TRaQ3w47dziCfLpORpA7VDbW10y2E4olr6OCrMjniYcX9IBUeAqyS-pzo5GzZFXCht_9FArGIoWh3db9--rC1x00KvauFrNWL0QCVO_YKyA3gaPzLCiZpCVPfigxqNawmWJj3WYyfwnPYK81qerOb7WdEBN5mZMBbzNW6g/https%3A%2F%2Fcobirds.org%2FJournalArchives%2F2010-2019%2F2010%2520Vol%252044%2FCB_2010_44_1_Jan.pdf>

On the day the Fork-tailed was seen in Fort Collins, the south winds were so 
strong and sustained that it was widely assumed the bird had continued on to 
Wyoming. I'd love to see whether photos can demonstrate whether or not it might 
be the same individual.

Nathan Pieplow
Boulder

On Tue, Oct 2, 2018 at 9:59 PM Brandon 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I wouldn't think there would be more than one Fork-tailed Flycatcher this far 
north in the Colorado and Wyoming area, and since one was found north of Fort 
Collins, and the bird was likely moving north, I'm not surprised one showed up 
in Wyoming (I think several people thought it was heading to Wyoming, after it 
was briefly seen in northern Colorado a few weeks ago).  This is a rare 
southern species, I doubt there would be two of them in the Colorado/Wyoming 
area in the last few weeks, though I guess there could be an invasion going on, 
of two of them, though unless the photos show it is completely different 
looking, I'd bet on it being the same bird.

Brandon K. Percival
Pueblo West, CO

On Tue, Oct 2, 2018 at 9:51 PM Jason Beason 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
How can you assume this is the same bird? That seems like a pretty crazy 
assumption given distances between observation locations! Obviously, this is a 
rare bird this far north (for either state) but I think it would be nuts for 
the same bird to be found given the total amount of area and number of birders 
in the total amount of area. I may be way off here but just pointing out that 
we birders don't really cover a high percentage of the total landscape.

I chased this bird this evening and didn't find it. I live only about 15 miles 
from observation so had to try! Also, I just spoke with person who found bird 
and it was last seen at 5:30 pm today.

Jason Beason
Casper - Natrona County, WY

On Tue, Oct 2, 2018 at 8:34 PM Brandon 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Looks like the Fort Collins area Fork-tailed Flycatcher has appeared near 
Casper, Wyoming.  This almost certainly the same bird I would think.

Brandon K Percival
Pueblo West, CO


-----Original Message-----
From: Wyoming's Birder List 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Hustace Scott
Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2018 2:01 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: (EXT)[WYOBIRDS] Fork-tailed Flycatcher

I just saw a Fork-tailed Flycatcher in my fields SW of Casper. Zack has 
excellent photos and will post them to EBIRD. The flycatcher is at the very end 
of Shinn Rd, which is the road that heads east from 12 mile at the old tree 
farm. The road heads due south about a mile east of 12 Mile. He spent time on 
various posts and fence wires right around the cattle guard just north of the 
huge brick house, and right where it says No Trespassing. Any birder is welcome 
on Eagle Ridge Ranch land, and from that corner you can see most of the spots 
where the bird was seen. I am working near that area for the rest of the week, 
so I will know if he stays around. My phone number is 262-0055.

Stacey Scott
SW of Casper
__._,_.___




•

•

l



.


__,_._,___



--
Jason Beason
Environmental Resources/Specialist I
SWCA Environmental Consulting
Casper, Wyoming
Phone: 307-377-0303

(~};)


--
Brandon Percival
Pueblo West, CO
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