Mike--  A couple of questions:

 

1)      The Sparrow migration is steadier in spring.  Or is it that you have
had nearly constant winds this spring?  Are the winds nearly always more
constant in spring?

2)      Are WC and WT SP using a different migration path?  Where have they
shown up?  I have WC here already-as of 3 weeks ago.  No WT, but they don't
occur here.   

 

 

Totally cool plots.  Thank you!

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mike Farmer
Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2012 3:01 PM
To: NFC-L
Subject: [nfc-l] Austin, Tx - Listening stations - Through May 7, 2012

 

Well, the most fascinating thing about any new hobby is the surprises that
occur.  And this one is no different.   We first started recording on Sept
29th of last fall.   We had missed most of the fall migration by starting so
late.   Except we got a truly huge sparrow migration that came down after
each north front.   Several times, nights with 1000 to 2000 calls were
recorded.     So we were so sure that we would get 1000s upon 1000s in the
peak of spring.   Well, not quite.    

Instead we have just recorded a steady rise in more and more birds on each
night with favorable south winds as we went toward and now through the peak
of migration.   No night at any one of three stations giving more than 500
calls.   And the peak of migration seeing a steady 200 to 350 a night for a
period of 7 straight days.    

 

The sparrow migration is steadier in spring.   Not so erruptive, it seems.
But where are the White-crowns and the White-throated?   I guess they
decided not to migrate back this year.   We have almost no WTSP this spring.
And only 10% of the WCSP  fall migration.    And not near as many CHSP as
occurred in fall.    Or VESP, for that matter.   Maybe they are still to
come?  It's inscrutable.   Do they take another path north?

 

The attached graphs show what it's like to migrate in spring through Austin
as a sparrow.   They are remarkably smooth graphs when looking at each
species as a proportion of each day's flight.   Each species with enough
samples would seem to fit a bell-shaped curve just fine.  Or maybe a left or
right skewed one at least.   Especially if the north wind nights with small
flights are removed from the data.

 

-Mike Farmer

equipment

Mic - Oldbird 21c

Software - Oldbird tseep, thrush, GlassOFire, Raven Pro, Excel

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