This is not fully comprehensive but it covers a lot. There's another place
where a lot of tracking projects are collated but I can't remember what it
is at the moment.  It's Friday afternoon :)
http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/

Scott Somershoe
Littleton CO


On Fri, Jul 10, 2020 at 2:29 PM 'The "Nunn Guy"' via Colorado Birds <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Scott
>
> Know of an aggregator website that has all project maps of all tagged bird
> species to view real-time various species locations?
>
> Thanks, Gary Lefko, Nunn
> http://www.friendsofthepawneegrassland.org
>
> https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/birds-and-more-of-the-pawnee-national-grassland
>
>
> On Friday, July 10, 2020 at 12:38:46 PM UTC-6, Scott Somershoe wrote:
>>
>> I'll just add a couple notes on these "early" shorebirds.  They are right
>> on time, like others have noted.  The summer solstice is when southbound
>> birds start arriving (yup, June 21 or so). There are always a few birds
>> where you're not sure if they are going south or just didn't go to the
>> arctic or what their direction/status is.  Anyway, as a crazy example, I
>> helped with the Georgia Breeding Bird Atlas in summer 2000 and had a
>> Greater Yellowlegs on Cumberland Island about 24 June (can't find exact
>> date at the moment, but it was just after the 22nd, which I
>> distinctly remember for a couple reasons).
>>
>> Willets, Marbled Godwits, and other prairie breeders discussed in this
>> thread definitely fail and bail (as I say), much like arctic breeders.
>> When I run my BBS routes in the prairies of north central Montana usually
>> between 7-13 June, I'll see groups of 60+ Marbled Godwits.  They likely all
>> had failed nests or didn't nest. I've still never seen a godwit chick,
>> which is concerning since I see young of everything else when I'm
>> stomping around the prairie for a week or more.  I'm sure I've been near
>> some as if you're anywhere near a nest or young, they circle and attack you
>> constantly, sometimes following you for over a mile. This does provide some
>> great photo opps though!
>>
>> In the case of Long-billed Curlews, several satellite tagged females from
>> Idaho have been on their winter sites in southern Calif for nearly 3
>> weeks!  A couple eastern WY breeders passed through CO already and are in
>> far south Texas and in northern Mexico just south of Brownsville, TX.
>> Another WY breeder is down in the southern end of the Chihuahuan desert in
>> central Mexico!
>>
>> LB Curlew females bolt and leave the males with parental duty! Adult
>> females get into little groups and head out together. However males arrive
>> back on breeding grounds first.
>>
>> I've probably shared this page before, here's info on tagged curlews.
>> This is a great organization and partnership. IBO has done a fantastic job
>> on curlew work and outreach in Idaho where they had a lot of tagged curlews
>> shot.
>> https://www.curlewcrew.com/
>>
>> Scott Somershoe
>> Littleton CO
>> Co-Author of *Birds of Tennessee: A New Annotated Checklist
>> <http://www.amazon.com/Birds-Tennessee-New-Annotated-Checklist/dp/1507815751/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1453317221&sr=8-3>*
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Jul 10, 2020 at 9:32 AM Allison Hilf <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> There have been some satellite tagged shorebirds heading south for a few
>>> weeks.  Just on schedule.   As Joe mentioned, they are often birds that
>>> failed to nest   Because the time frame for nesting in much of their
>>> preferred arctic habitat is very short, if a first nest fails the adults
>>> often leave; sometimes they attempt a second brood and the female will stay
>>> and try to raise the young on her own.   Those males seem to take care of
>>> themselves!!  Just kidding, it is survival of the fittest out there in the
>>> bird world despite sex.
>>>
>>> Allison Hilf
>>> Aurora, CO
>>>
>>> On Jul 10, 2020, at 8:40 AM, Joe Roller <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> .
>>>
>>>
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