My Tarryall BBS route (Park County ) was also well down in species this year 54 
versus the usual 65 to 68 .Waterbirds , shorebirds were  about normal , but 
missing were many ponderosa , spice/ fir species .So no sapsuckers,Hammond’s 
flycatcher , Townsends Solitaire , Cassin’s Finch ,Evening Grosbeak, Red 
Crossbill ,Hermit Thrush ,nuthatches , Mountain Chickadee just one Olive-sided 
Flycatcher.
Spruce/ fir forest showed increasing beatle dieback .
Survey run on June 15 .
John Drummond Colorado Springs


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On Friday, June 25, 2021, 11:49 AM, David Suddjian <[email protected]> wrote:

One of my Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) routes is Guanella Pass, beginning above 
Georgetown in Clear Creek and proceeding along the Guanella Pass Scenic Byway 
over the pass and down to Grant in Park County, and then up Park CR 60 to its 
end in the upper watershed of the North Fork of the South Platte. BBS routes 
have 50 stops along a 24.5 mile route, with 3 minute samples collected at each 
stop once each year.
I ran the Guanella Pass BBS route on June 22 this year, normal timing, with 
good weather conditions. It was the easiest ever because there were so few 
birds! The total species I detected was just 29, the lowest ever for the route 
and down from the 5 year avg of 46 species. The total number of individual 
birds was just 127, the lowest ever for the route, just 33% of the 5 year avg 
of 387 individuals. I detected no species at all on10 stops. It is highly 
unusual to record zero species during a 3 min. BBS sample when weather 
conditions are reasonable. In fact, barring stops with really loud water noise, 
I have never had zeros on a BBS stop, but 10 on this survey?!
19 Species that are expected on the route (i.e., found in 3-5 of the last 5 
years) were missed entirely. A number of these misses are species which were 
found in every year in recent history, such as Dusky Flycatcher, Steller's Jay, 
Red-breasted Nuthatch, Mountain Bluebird, Townesend's Solitaire, Pine Siskin, 
and Song Sparrow. Of the 29 species found, 15 species were found in numbers 50% 
or less than the recent 5-year avg. This included all of the species that form 
the core of the species assemblage of the route except for Warbling Vireo and 
Wilson's Warbler, which were the only core migrant species in near average 
numbers  this year. Spruce-fir forest and the alpine tundra near the Pass were 
the habitats that were the most empty of bird song. 

** A summary of missed species and those in low numbers is pasted below.
I haven't looked in detail at my other routes, but of the 4 others I've aready 
run all had notable low counts of many landbirds and more than the normal 
frequency of "missing" species. 
David SuddjianKen Caryl ValleyLittleton, CO

|  | % of  |
| Species | 5 yr avg |
| Broad-tailed Hummingbird | 22% |
| Red-tailed Hawk | Miss |
| Red-naped Sapsucker | Miss |
| Hammond's Flycatcher | Miss |
| Dusky Flycatcher | Miss |
| Cordilleran Flycatcher | 29% |
| Canada Jay | Miss |
| Steller's Jay | Miss |
| Clark's Nutcracker | Miss |
| Common Raven | 22% |
| Violet-green Swallow | 31% |
| Mountain Chickadee | 20% |
| Red-breasted Nuthatch | Miss |
| House Wren | Miss |
| American Dipper | Miss |
| Golden-crowned Kinglet | Miss |
| Ruby-crowned Kinglet | 24% |
| Mountain Bluebird | Miss |
| Townsend's Solitaire | Miss |
| Veery | Miss |
| Swainson's Thrush | Miss |
| Hermit Thrush | 16% |
| American Robin | 50% |
| Pine Grosbeak | Miss |
| Red Crossbill | Miss |
| Pine Siskin | Miss |
| Fox Sparrow | 16% |
| Gray-headed Junco | 36% |
| White-crowned Sparrow | 16% |
| Song Sparrow | Miss |
| Lincoln's Sparrow | 48% |
| Green-tailed Towhee | 42% |
| MacGillivray's Warbler | 50% |
| Audubon's Warbler | 32% |
| Total Species | 64% |
| Total individuals | 33% |




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