Intended for this go out to everyone and just sent it to Doug Ward.  DL

________________________________
From: DAVID A LEATHERMAN <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 30, 2022 9:12 AM
To: Doug Ward <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Rio Blanco Take 2

Doug et al,
We have at least 27 species of cicadas in Colorado, several of which occur in 
the habitat types and geographic part of the state where you were.  Some can be 
locally abundant and quite loud.  I suspect the dominant one was in the genus 
Okanagana.

The Mormon Cricket is actually a type of katydid.  They are flightless and 
famous for their periodic population explosions and mass movements.  They are 
forever tied to California gulls in legend because of the big white birds 
emanating from Great Salt Lake being credited with saving crops from the 
"crickets" in 1848.

To be picky, the tarantulas in southeastern and southwestern CO do not 
"migrate".  The phenomenon observed in autumn is males out cruising fairly 
short distances for females.  The females remain at the mouths of their 
burrows.  In order to find potential mates the males must check out as many 
possible sites as possible in their quest to be invited inside.

On a related note, my BBS routes named Villagreen and Ninaview are also plagued 
with a mimicry issue, but in the case of these routes it is mockingbirds 
imitating pinyon jays.  Since pinyon jays DO occasionally occur, did one hear 
them or not is always the question?  I did not run my routes this year due to 
their distance from Fort Collins and gas prices.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins

________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Doug 
Ward <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, June 29, 2022 8:47 PM
To: 'cobirds' <[email protected]>
Subject: [cobirds] Rio Blanco Take 2


The post I just sent was more of a “Rare Bird Alert” while this one is simply 
general interest, particularly for bug lovers – talking to you Dave.



I’ll start with birds, however.  This portion is for Scott (Somershoe), our 
resident PINYON JAY aficionado, and certainly expert.  Scott, I found some, 
pert near 200 (!), of the Pinyon Jays you and your extensive crew are hunting.  
I hadn’t stumbled on such a large flock in a VERY long time and immediately 
thought of you.  I actually didn’t pick them up during BBS working hours, but 
on the return as I was hoping to confirm a couple of Clark’s Nutcrackers I 
thought I heard during the survey proper.  This is where it gets weird.  I went 
back to the area, listened for a while for the Nutcrackers, nothing, then the 
flock of Pinyon Jays took to the air at once giving their typical “laugh”, 
silent and undetected until then, before settling back down.  During this 
foray, thought I heard a Nutcracker again and searched through the flock to see 
if they were toting one along – nope.  I then heard emanating from the group 
while settled and feeding a Magpie, a Scrub Jay, another Nutcracker, then a 
fairly respectable Steller’s Jay – WTF?!?  I have never heard nor read about 
corvids mimicking each other, just typically raptors, so the question for you 
Scott, what were these Pinyons doing?  Not only this, I thought I heard a 
Scrub-Jay earlier in the morning during the survey where I had a couple of 
Pinyons, but couldn’t confirm (hadn’t had a Scrub in that area before), so now 
I’m thinking it was actually the Pinyons! Very weird.



Now on to bugs Dave (Letherman).  I had another first for me on the West Slope 
and it probably cost me some BBS data.  Was at a spot with extensive scrubby 
serviceberry, mountain mahogany, and scattered small pinyon/juniper.  Got out 
to start my 3 minutes, heard a slight buzzing off in the distance, then all of 
a sudden a wave of sound rolled through the brush and engulfed the entire hill. 
Cicadas, at least that’s what I think!  It got so loud I couldn’t hear the 
birds well at all.  Having lived over here (running another BBS in the 
morning), I never recall cicadas being a thing other than a few in the city 
parks (Craig, Steamboat, and Meeker).  So Dave, what gives???



The last bug thing is Mormon Crickets.  Fortunately, it seems to have been 
relatively wet over here this year.  While I wouldn’t call it recovered, soil 
and vegetation health seems far better than at the same time last year.  With 
this rebound has come a bumper crop of Mormon Crickets.  I have not had the 
chance to Google the taxonomy of these big, interesting “crickets”, but I don’t 
think they are actually crickets at all – again, Dave please bale me out.  Over 
a roughly 30 mile stretch of HW 40 west of Maybell (Moffat Co.) the density of 
migrating crickets across the road was ~ 5-10/sq meter for much of the way, 
with a couple of patches so thick the dead bugs created a black slick ~ 50-100m 
wide!! (actually hazardous).  So for those of you who have not been 
indoctrinated into this Great Basin phenomenon, this year seems to be one to 
head West.  If you don’t get too creeped out by this event, then down to 
southeast Colorado with you for the tarantula migration.



That’s it.  Always something fun whenever we get out.  Please let ,me know if 
you’d like any other directions or information.



Good BBSing (Take 2),

Doug



PS – Joey, did my part in getting a couple of beautiful Great Basin Gopher 
Snakes off the road, one of which didn’t seem too grateful, hissing, and 
striking, and all.

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