On Wednesday afternoon, Curtis Beimborn discovered a Yellow-throated
Warbler and a Northern Parula along a section of Boulder Creek just below
the university, about 100 yards east of 17th Street in Boulder. Both birds
were still present this evening at about 6:00 PM. With the exception of a
24-hour disappearance by the Yellow-throated, both birds have been
consistently sticking to the same 50-yard stretch of creek.

This same stretch of creek has also been the center of activity for juncos,
goldfinches, nuthatches, Ruby-crowned Kinglets, and Yellow-rumped Warblers.
But if you walk more than a few dozen yards away from this spot in either
direction, bird numbers drop precipitously. This situation has remained
stable for the past three days, and so, Dave Leatherman-style, I decided
that the birdy spot must have some kind of food that is keeping all these
birds around.

I tried this evening to observe food habits. Interestingly, the two rare
warblers are engaging almost exclusively in flycatching -- especially the
parula, which sallies constantly. The Yellow-throated's sallies are less
frequent and possibly less successful, and it also gleaned some branches
while I was there. Whatever they are catching is too small for me to see in
the air. And most of the other birds present seem to be following more
typical foraging strategies for their species -- i.e. few of them are
flycatching.

The rare warblers are frequenting some dead branches over the creek as well
as some barely leafed-out elms, cottonwoods, and buckthorns. Dave, what do
you think they are going for? Flying adult aphids?

Why would the flying insects be so faithful to this one short stretch of
creek? And how long might this situation last? Can we expect other migrants
to join the fun in the coming days?

Nathan Pieplow
Boulder

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