Thought the group might like to see a comparative set of lists from the
Waterton area (Jefferson & Douglas Cos) recorded 50 years apart, to the
day, on Denver Field Ornithologists (DFO) field trips.  We met early
Saturday morning (29 Apr.’23) to recreate my very first birding trip which
was led by Hugh Kingery on April 29th, 1973 - Hugh joined us for the first
part of our walk which made for a very special day. 

 

First things first, we found a few good birds including a nice male BLACK-
THROATED GRAY WARBLER at the Audubon Nature Center and four (4) EASTERN
PHEOBEs in three different spots.  We also had GREAT HORNED OWLs on nest
with a couple of very cute downy owlets, MOUNTAIN BLUEBIRDs and TREE
SWALLOWs jockeying for position at nest boxes, and a very bright male
WILSON’S WARBLER.  Here are our eBird lists for the day if interested:

 

Waterton Upstream from Bridge:  <https://ebird.org/checklist/S135571343>
eBird Checklist - 29 Apr 2023 - Waterton Canyon--from Waterton Rd to
overhead pipes - 40 species (+2 other taxa)

Platte Canyon Reservoir/Highline Canal:
<https://ebird.org/checklist/S135571434> eBird Checklist - 29 Apr 2023 -
Platte Canyon Reservoir - 36 species (+2 other taxa)

Waterton Downstream from Bridge:  <https://ebird.org/checklist/S135571590>
eBird Checklist - 29 Apr 2023 - Chatfield SP--Audubon Center & Trails - 30
species (+1 other taxa)

 

Now the comparison.  I kind of expected to see a dramatic shift in species
and numbers (don’t know why), but aside from the Eastern Pheobes
graduating from super rare to now being regular, most everything else was
within expected daily variability.  We had a few species which have been
doing better since the early ‘70s thanks to conservation measures, namely
Wood Duck, Osprey, and Bald Eagle, but also the cormorants, pelicans,
ravens, and particularly “Rufous-sided” Towhees are now much more
numerous.  We had several species with notably fewer individuals than 50
years ago including Mourning Doves, both Downys and flickers, as well as
magpies (we got skunked!), starlings (yeah), and grackles, though in these
cases don’t think the two data points make a solid trend.  To see the
species and their numbers for yourself, just scroll down.

 

If you have any questions or comments about the days both current and past
trudging around Waterton, please let me know.  Here’s to the next 50 years
(yeah right).

 

Good Birding,

Doug

Denver

 

PS - Remember when looking at the 1973 list, Chatfield didn’t exist yet,
so some of the stuff would be from range land and gravel pits that would
eventually be flooded by the lake - dam was almost finished though.

 


Waterton - DFO Trips  5 Decades Apart

                

Date:

4/29/2023

        4/29/1973


Effort Data

                        

Start Time:

6:30am

        6:00am


Total Hours:

8.0

        7.5


Observers:

9

        14


Miles Walked:

9.0

                

Weather:

Clear, initially breezy, ~40-75˚F

        Cloudy. Cool. Windy.


Species (2023 taxonomy)

                        

Canada Goose

6

 

2


Wood Duck

4

 

 


Blue-winged Teal

1

 

 


Northern Shoveler

6

 

 


Gadwall

31

 

4


American Wigeon

4

 

 


Mallard

15

 

11


Ring-necked Duck

 

 

1


Lesser Scaup

2

 

2


Bufflehead

4

 

1


Common Merganser

6

 

 


Ruddy Duck

7

 

 


Ring-necked Pheasant

 

 

1


Horned Grebe

3

 

 


Eared Grebe

2

 

 


Western Grebe

5

 

 


Rock Pigeon

 

 

2


Mourning Dove

11

 

59


White-throated Swift

6

 

 


Broad-tailed Hummingbird

4

 

1


Killdeer

2

 

2


Marbled Godwit

 

 

53


Solitary Sandpiper

1

 

 


Ring-billed Gull

1

 

 


Double-crested Cormorant

6

 

 


American White Pelican

8

 

 


Great Blue Heron

1

 

19


Turkey Vulture

5

 

2


Osprey

1

 

 


Golden Eagle

 

 

2


Northern Harrier (aka "Marsh Hawk")

 

 

2


Sharp-shinned Hawk

 

 

4


Cooper's Hawk

2

 

 


Bald Eagle

1

 

 


Broad-winged Hawk

 

 

1


Red-tailed Hawk

5

 

2


Great Horned Owl

3

 

3


Belted Kingfisher

2

 

6


Downy Woodpecker

2

 

11


Northern Flicker - "Red-shafted"

2

 

10


American Kestrel (aka "Sparrow Hawk")

5

 

9


Eastern Phoebe

4

 

1


Say's Phoebe

7

 

2


Stellar's Jay

 

 

1


Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay

7

 

1


Black-billed Magpie

 

 

16


American Crow

3

 

6


Common Raven

14

 

 


Black-capped Chickadee

12

 

12


Horned Lark

 

 

1


Northern Rough-winged Swallow

1

 

 


Tree Swallow

7

 

4


Violet-green Swallow

9

 

19


Barn Swallow

6

 

8


Cliff Swallow

 

 

4


Ruby-crowned Kinglet

6

 

2


Red-breasted Nuthatch

 

 

3


White-breasted Nuthatch

1

 

 


House Wren

6

 

2


European Starling

6

 

45


Mountain Bluebird

4

 

 


Townsend's Solitaire

2

 

5


American Robin

21

 

190


House Finch

7

 

2


Lesser Goldfinch

1

 

 


American Goldfinch

9

 

 


Chipping Sparrow

3

 

 


Dark-eyed Junco                  - "Oregon"

3

 

7


- "Grey-headed"

2

 

1


White-crowned Sparrow

27

 

1


Song Sparrow

3

 

10


Spotted Towhee (aka "Rufous-sided")

29

 

8


Western Meadowlark

10

 

42


Red-winged Blackbird

11

 

14


Brown-headed Cowbird

3

 

6


Common Grackle

 

 

14


Orange-crowned Warbler

 

 

2


Yellow-rumped Warbler      - "Myrtle"

22

 

6


- "Audubon's"

27

 

62


- "Myrtle X Audubon's"

1

 

 


Black-throated Gray Warbler

1

 

 


Wilson's Warbler

1

 

 


TOTAL SPECIES

64

        53


TOTAL INDIVIDUALS

440

        707

 

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