Hi, all.
 
Random comment. A friend of mine says that Caspian Tern is one of the
most characteristic night sounds where he lives in the Puget Sound area
of northwest Washington. He hears them well from waterways, for what
that's worth. Dunno if it's migration, or local birds moving around, or
what; but, at least, the birds are vocal and on the go at night in that
part of the continent.
 
Ted Floyd
[email protected]
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado
 
 
 
 

________________________________

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeff Wells
Sent: Tuesday, April 06, 2010 2:09 PM
To: Michael O'Brien
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [nfc-l] Night flight call station results-Maine-April 1-3



Very cool! Makes sense when you see large numbers of robins flying over
in the early morning hours that they would be birds that have been
moving at night. Funny though that over the years I don't recall picking
up any within the 10 PM-2 AM window that I think of as indicating birds
moving through the night as opposed to in the early morning hours when
it is not as clear whether they just started migrating or are
descending.

 

Speaking of birds that move through the night but are not as readily
detected, have any of you picked up terns other than Caspian Tern
migrating at night? It's obvious that they migrate at night based on the
way they just appear one morning in a location but it seems like you
don't hear them. Though at least Caspian Terns in the fall when they
have still-dependent young regularly call back and forth with the
trailing young birds at night.

 

Jeff

 

 

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