Jay at al,
My assumption for the situation you describe would be diving ducks are absent 
because some of their staples, predominately animal items like crayfish, snails 
and small fish (like gizzard shad), are not present in sufficient/historical 
amounts.  Of course, the animals diving ducks feed on depend on bottom of the 
food chain things like plants, especially the "pond weeds" in the genus 
Potamogeton.  As for dabbling ducks, they eat mostly plant material.  If both 
diving and dabbling ducks/geese are absent, this may indicate an issue that 
killed plant life (probably not permanently but maybe for one growing season).  
That issue could be anything from water level, water temperature or a 
pollutant.  I do not think the issue is the apartment construction in terms of 
noise/commotion.  If the construction did something to interfere with inflow, 
pollute inflow, that might be a different matter.  The blackbirds depend on the 
cattails around the edge of the lake.  Cattails are notorious for being pretty 
tolerant of conditions other water-loving plants can't handle.  Don't put me on 
the stand, but these would be my thoughts.

For what it's worth, Windsor Lake has far fewer diving waterfowl this autumn 
than normal, and I have assumed rather than things just being late, the issue 
is a lack of schooling food fish (i.e., shad).  In the world of CO water birds, 
"money" is shad and crayfish.  Follow the money by finding the gulls.  Where 
the thieving gulls are is where the diving ducks/grebes/loons are, largely 
because that's where the shad/crayfish are.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins
________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Jay 
Hutchins <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, November 17, 2019 8:49 AM
To: Colorado Birds <[email protected]>
Subject: [cobirds] Missing Waterfowl, Jim Hamm Nature Area, Longmont Boulder Co

All:

Wanted to pose a question to the group on possible explanations for the missing 
(or severe lack) of waterfowl I HAVEN'T been seeing at Jim Hamm Nature Area on 
the east side of Longmont this fall. Based on personal observations for the 
past five years and the historical data from ebird 
https://ebird.org/barchart?r=L282352&yr=all&m= , there are "usually" many 
hundreds (500+) across multiple species on the water in the fall.  This year 
though?  Nada, zilch, goose eggs.  Other than a few Pied-billed grebes, coots 
and a few dabblers, it's strangely empty.

There was the expected bumper crop (50k+ birds) of red-winged/yellow-headed 
blackbirds, grackles and starlings in late Sept and early Oct, but the 
waterfowl are MIA.  Two variables this year that may or may not have an impact 
are:  an increase in the water level and new, multi-strory  apartment 
construction across the road on the SW corner of County Line Rd & 17th St.

Curious to ask if others are seeing a lack of waterfowl at your normally 
reliable local wetland?  I'm not sure if the new buildings across the street 
are scaring them off, or if something else is going on?

Jay Hutchins
Longmont, CO

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