A lot of people have been asking about what the recent fires causing much of 
the smoke along the Front Range and out on the eastern plains are having on 
birds.  While it is normal for many mountain species to be undergoing dispersal 
and altitudinal migrations at this time of year, I think it is fairly safe to 
say one species that has been impacted by the upper montane zone fires (upper 
reaches of ponderosa pine/Douglas-fir, lodgepole pine and lower reaches of 
spruce-fir) is Mountain Chickadee, and maybe so some extent Black-capped 
Chickadee.  Pretty much everywhere I have been in the last two weeks has them: 
Lamar, Eaton Cemetery, Cherry Creek Reservoir, Jackson Reservoir, Grandview 
Cemetery in Fort Collins, Crow Valley.  Reports from birders on COBIRDS and 
eBird have reported them at many other low elevation sites.  This feels like 
more of them down low and out east than is normal.

Jays are another group that historically wanders at this time of year, so it is 
tough to say about them being influenced by the fires.  But if we get reports 
of things like Clark's Nutcrackers and Canada Jays out east, more reports of 
Pinyon Jays way east of I-70, large numbers of Woodhouse's Scrub-Jays 
continuing down and east all winter, then maybe it would be somewhat safe to 
speculate about an influence on them from the fires, too.

This type of thing is good to document, so I encourage the continuation of 
reports.

And if anyone hears the results of autopsies conducted on the dead birds found 
in New Mexico and elsewhere in the West, please share that information on 
COBIRDS.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins

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