N.Y. County -in N.Y. City- including Manhattan, Randalls, Governors, and 
Roosevelt Islands and the adjacent waters and skies above -
thru Tuesday, March 11 -

A Wild Turkey was lingering, as it had all winter, at Roosevelt Island, where 
some modest migration has been observed recently as well. There are also at 
least some of the more-regular waterfowl off the shores of Roosevelt in this 
week, and some raptors have shown there as well.

The very-long-lingering Snow Goose has continued on thru the weekend and at 
least to Monday 3-10, at Central Park, where it has been most-regular very 
recently at the Harlem Meer in that parks northeast quadrant, with recent daily 
sightings there and-or on adjacent lawns, however this goose has been mobile 
within that park, having visited many locations in the park over its lengthy 
stay. - - - NOTE that the Snow Goose -may have- departed, off to more-northern 
localities, on Tuesday March 11 with the only sightings of the Snow Goose from 
the early-morning at the n. end of Central, then that goose plus a small number 
of Canada Geese seen headed off north, and not-coincidentally also seen moving 
north were the same goose-combo, with the one Snow, headed out of Manhattan and 
likely far-far off in the southerly winds of Tuesday - so long SnowGoo, nice to 
have you visit and be seen by thousands of watchers all this past winter. Now 
bring on the other all-white big-birds, perhaps an egret before this month is 
gone...

There was another very strong fly-out of Canada Geese, many flying out from 
farther-south than N.Y. City, and making their ways north, on Monday, 3-10 in 
particular, the total numbers of geese flying over and beyond N.Y. County that 
morning were into the thousands, at-least the 2nd such major flight of that 
species moving north this season.

These recent days have also featured large morning flights of American Robins, 
Red-winged Blackbirds - females and males, and Common Grackles, along with 
smaller numbers of some other migrant birds. Fair numbers of geese as well, 
still moving-off on Tuesday.

The overwintered Pine Warbler as well as a Yellow-rumped Warbler -of the 
expected Myrtle form- were each seen by large numbers of participants to the 
Linneaean Society of N.Y. not-for-profit org’s guided bird-walk, over the 
past weekend, and there were also multiple independent observers of each of 
those warblers in the Central Park Ramble. More than 200 observers over this 
winter have observed the lingering, and increasingly vocal and suet-nibbling 
male Pine Warbler at the Central Park Ramble. Some watchers have had to wait 
lengthy times to observe that wintering warbler while some have lucked on to 
seeing it rapidly and easily there. It was initially not very regular at the 
suet feeders, then started to visit a bit more often.
....
This is not the first, nor second -ever- of Pine Warblers to have wintered, and 
nor to have visited suet feeders in the Central Park Ramble in the 
recent-modern era of birding. There also were more-historic sightings and 
documentation of previous Pine Warblers having wintered, precisely there in 
Central in the pre-internet age. However it is worth watching any trends for a 
variety of American warblers, all considered migratory here in NY, to see if 
some species look to be wintering more and more frequently, which may or may 
not be occurring. We also have vastly more observers and photographers - or 
simply, folks with camera-equipped phones - in the field and everywhere nearly 
all-year-round, than was so in decades past. And much more regular reporting, 
and increased photo-video documentation with many of the current eras 
reporting. One species seemingly far more inclined to winter, and also at least 
somewhat more-numerous in this county, is Orange-crowned Warbler, a 
phenological trend that seems to have been trending-upward numerically for some 
time by now. That most-likely is not simply due to an increase in 
observer-effort - by numbers, time put in, etc.

A Northern House Wren was a rare ongoing overwintered individual at Randalls 
Island - thru last weekend and beyond. It sometimes has been vocal, and 
slightly more obliging in the warmer weather of recent. Other lingering birds 
on Randalls Island have included Pine and Orange-crowned Warblers, Chipping, 
Savannah, Field, and other sparrow species, Belted Kingfisher, and many other 
lingering-overwintered birds, while gulls of any-other than the usual-three 
species have not been noted very lately from Randalls.

An apparent Iceland Gull was seen and photod from Inwood - Dyckman St. pier 
area.

Other N.Y. County waterfowl aside from a Snow GoneGoose were ongoing in some 
locations as well, with Green-winged Teal maintaining their long-duration 
presence at The Pool in Central Park, and Wood Ducks ongoing both at Central 
Park as well as Inwood Hill Park, and occasional elsewhere, while some Greater 
Scaup - and from last Saturday, also Lesser Scaup, as well as Common Goldeneye 
were still in the vicinity of Randalls Island, with some scaup and Com. 
Goldeneye also in N.Y. Harbor, off Governors Island. Atlantic Brant are 
continuing in various locations as they have for the winter.

Numbers of American Black Duck and Red-breasted Merganser have been a bit 
higher in the month of March, perhaps starting in late February for some 
increases. A couple of Common Mergansers were still persisting at Central Parks 
reservoir - rather long-staying, and there are also multiple Hooded Mergansers 
in Central Park with at least one regularly at The Pond in the parks southeast 
corner, while other Hoodies are in the other waterbodies.

One of the recent multiple American Woodcocks - including multiples of the 
species for Randalls Island and for Central Park over more than last weeks 
duration included the individual woodcock photographed in the Central Park 
Ramble on Sunday, thanks to D.B. Yolton, via the Macaulay Library archives. 
Many many more observers of the sane bird over more than one day at that 
location, the first finder being J. Wooten, as previously noted in the 
reporting to this list. Additional Amer. Woodcocks have been arriving, with one 
or more seen at Bryant Park in mid-Manhattan having multiple admirers, as with 
the Central Park Ramble sightings. There have been multiple other woodcocks 
coming in to the county this past week, also.

There was at least one -of several- E. Phoebe lingering at one site in Central 
Parks far n. end, while at least a few Killdeer had already passed thru at that 
end of Central Park - multiple other Killdeer had been found somewhat regularly 
in sites such as on Governors and Randalls Islands, and at Sherman Creek in 
northern Manhattan and occasionally elsewhere for the days of winter. More are 
likely to appear at any time this month in this county.

Eastern Bluebirds have passed thru in recent days, with a couple of them in 
Central Park as well as at the tip of Inwood Hill Park’s n.w. edge, and 
on Randalls Island most-recently. More might show in any part of upcoming 
spring - learning their call notes may be helpful in recognizing the passage of 
that often rather subtly-vocal species.

A partially leucistic White-throated Sparrow has been in the Loch area of 
Central Park this winter, seen and photographed by many - one of the photos 
taken of this bird recently ws thanks to R. Li, via the Macaulay Library 
archive, and many many many observers have seen and also photographed this odd 
individual here over recent weeks. An uncommon but hardest unprecedented sight, 
we get birds with leucitic plumage on a regular basis and if such will be 
noticed and widely-photographed, Central Park has long been one of the 
locations where such documentation takes place, and has for at least a 
half-century with some of such oddly-plumaged individual birds.

Some of the many species of recent days in N.Y. County birds - with all that 
have been in or over Central Park designated with C.P. - not meant as an 
exhaustive listing -

Snow Goose - C.P. - perhaps last-seen for March 11, see above, time will tell...
Canada Goose - C.P. and many more locations.
Atlantic Brant - regular in some county inshore waters and on land in select 
sites.
Mute Swan - few, mainly being noted from the upper East River area.
Wood Duck - multiples in multiple locations incl. - C.P.
Gadwall - C.P. and elsewhere.
American Black Duck - C.P. and elsewhere.
Mallard - C.P. and in. many more locations.
Northern Shoveler - C.P. and occasional at other locations in recent days and 
weeks.
Green-winged Teal - ongoing pair all winter long at C.P.
Ring-necked Duck - seen in early March in C.P. reservoir.
Greater Scaup - ongoing in fair numbers in county waters.
Lesser Scaup - smaller nos. in a few locations, esp. off Randalls Island.
Bufflehead - C.P. and all around the waters of this county.
Common Goldeneye - ongoing in a few areas of county waters.
Hooded Merganser - C.P., including at The Pond in the parks s-e quadrant.
Common Merganser - a very few flybys in various locations, and seen by 
many-hundreds of observers almost all winter long at C.P.
Red-breasted Merganser - f. numerous lately in county waters, an increase from 
midwinter.
Ruddy Duck - C.P., and occasionally in multiple other county 
waters.Red-throated Loon - modest to fair numbers in county waters and a few 
flyovers on some days.
Common Loon - modest numbers on select parts of county waters.
Pied-billed Grebe - C.P., and very-rarely noticed elsewhere recently.
Horned Grebe - last sightings of these now older, with no very recently noted 
on county waters.
Great Cormorant - ongoing only from a few select sites off of Manhattan, esp. 
from Randalls or Governors Island, but the next species increasing recently.
Double-crested Cormorant - C.P. and many more as flyovers and often in other 
parts of the county on or over the waters.
Great Blue Heron - C.P., where at least one was regular in winter, plus more 
sightings from Manhattan and elsewhere in the county.
Black-crowned Night-Heron - multiple sightings at C.P. this month, also a few 
sightings at other county locations this month.
Black Vulture - increased sightings, partly by observer-efforts but also a 
likely true increase in recent weeks and including over C.P.
Turkey Vulture - increased a bit and on some days, obvious passage migrators 
going north, including at C.P.
Osprey - first of the year have arrived, with more certain to follow in coming 
weeks.
Bald Eagle - all winter long sightings off Manhattan and some over and IN C.P., 
including landings at the Central Park reservoir, many flyovers all thru the 
county.
Northern Harrier - few so far, some seen in flight around the county in recent 
weeks to this week.
Sharp-shinned Hawk - rather few so far, some in flight and also occ. hunting, 
incl. at C.P.
Cooper's Hawk - regulars all winter long including multiples in C.P., 
ongoing.Red-shouldered Hawk - rather rare but some winter sightings, incl. 
photos taken of perched birds in C.P., and elsewhere in the county.
Red-tailed Hawk - C.P. and everywhere else in the county at times.
American Kestrel - C.P. and many many more locations, esp. in all parts of 
Manhattan island.
Merlin - C.P. - including partly or wholly overwintered, C.P. and now-again 
semi-regular but not common, also in other county locations.Peregrine Falcon - 
C.P. and many other locations in all of the county.
American Coot - C.P. all winter and still around, plus a few sightings from 
other county locations.
Killdeer - C.P., where some seen esp. at North Meadow and elsewhere, including 
flyovers, and also regularly in select county locations.
American Woodcock - C.P. - nice arrivals this month, with some perhaps having 
lingered a longer time, from early March, and lately in multiple county 
locations.Bonaparte's Gull - one report, with ideally some photo-documentation 
for a fairly-rare —report-- on Central Park reservoir. Other very-small 
gulls would be rarer.
Ring-billed Gull - C.P. - and everywhere else around the county all 
winter.American Herring Gull - this is now the full name for the regularly seen 
and breeding-here species of Herring Gull, regular in C.P., and everywhere else 
in county.
Iceland Gull - photographed in flight off n. Manhattan and others seen earlier 
this month in multiple locations, incl. at C.P.
Lesser Black-backed Gull - some recent sightings, not all reports documented, 
but those which were with photos are confirmed.
Great Black-backed Gull - C.P. and almost everywhere else at times, throughout 
the county.
Feral Rock Pigeon - C.P., and ubiquitous in this county.
Mourning Dove - C.P., etc.
Owls - an update in owl-dom for this past winter may be made in the month of 
May - a very good winter for owl-diversity here, many in C.P. too.
Belted Kingfisher - slight increase, with some fairly regular in a few 
locations including Inwood Hill Park area, and Randalls Island, etc., also C.P.
Red-bellied Woodpecker - C.P., etc.
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker - MANY overwintered, and those being seen now are 
likely ALL overwintered individuals. Numbers in C.P., and all around the county.
Downy Woodpecker - C.P., etc.
Hairy Woodpecker - C.P. and elsewhere - some are probably visitants for the 
winter.
Yellow-shafted Flicker - C.P., etc. - just a modest number so far this year.
Eastern Phoebe - at least one persisting in the far-north end of C.P. for some 
recent days. Others came thru as well, in v. small no’s so far.
Common Raven - C.P., and many many more locations including nesting-sites in 
this county.
American Crow - C.P. and all over the county.
Fish Crow - C.P. and select locations in parts of the county. Much less-common 
overall than American Crow.Blue Jay - C.P. and all around the county.
Tree Swallow - C.P. - already a few passing by, also from other sites, now 
including over the other islands of the county.
Black-capped Chickadee - C.P. and in many other areas of the county, a very 
good winter of this species occurrence here.
Tufted Titmouse - C.P., and many many more locations around the county. As with 
chickadees, a very populous winter for these in the county.
Red-breasted Nuthatch - C.P., where a small number overwintered, also in a 
select number of other county locations.
White-breasted Nuthatch - C.P., etc.
Brown Creeper - C.P. etc. - multiple county locations.
Carolina Wren - C.P. etc. - and some singing thru winter, more so recently in 
many locations.
Northern House Wren - perhaps the most-notable of the OVERWINTERED species of 
passerine birds in the county this year. Randalls Island… this bird was 
seen on multiple occasions there, with some sightings from late fall when not 
quite as unexpected, then very-unexpected in mid-winter, and onward - a 
survivor of frigid spells and snows.
Winter Wren - C.P. and eleswhere in the county, particularly in many other 
larger parks and greenspaces - all are overwintered birds.
Golden-crowned Kinglet - very few that fully-wintered, but present in some 
locations well into winter with scarcer sightings recently - including at C.P.
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - C.P. and MULTIPLE OTHER locations in the county, all 
fully-overrwintered survivors. Some which could were visiting some suet feeders 
on occasion.
Eastern Bluebird - C.P. passage migrants but also can linger a bit, these in 
the past week and recent days, also found in migration in a few other locations 
recently, incl. on Randalls Island and northern Manhattan. Not too unusual to 
find some wandering thru this early in the season, and as some are on their 
migrations already regionally.
Hermit Thrush - C.P. and in many many other county locations, esp. overwintered 
in Manhattan, all being seen to this week almost certainly overwintered here in 
the county.
American Robin - C.P., etc. - good arrival flights with increases all around 
the county, some locations more obviosuly-so, and in active diurnal flights on 
many many mornings.
Gray Catbird - C.P. and much more-so in select sites in various smaller parks 
and greenspaces of Manhattan, including in downtown to midtown parks and 
unexpected spaces.
Northern Mockingbird - C.P. and many more locations.
Brown Thrasher - C.P. - the usual few skulkers and also in some other 
locations. All seen now are overwintered individuals and not new-arrivals.
European Starling - C.P. and everywhere else.
Cedar Waxwing - C.P. - and elsewhere, mostly uncommon this winter but some 
lingered in some select locations, still not at all common in the county now.
House Sparrow - C.P. and everywhere else, one of the most-common of N.Y. City 
birds.
Eastern Towhee - C.P., etc., in select sites in some parts of the county mainly 
on Manhattan island now.
American Tree Sparrow - a few were still being seen on Governors Island this 
week, otherwise scarcer now after a spate of sightings over the winter.
Chipping Sparrow - C.P., at the n. end but scarcely noted by now, and regularly 
on Randalls Island including in recent days - ALL are overwintered, for now.
Field Sparrow - C.P. and mostly being seen elsewhere recently, esp. on Randalls 
Island, also in n. Manhattan.
Savannah Sparrow - recent sightings at Randalls Island, may also be ongoing at 
Governors Island this week.
Red Fox Sparrow - C.P., etc., with scattered locations all thru the county, and 
esp. noted from Central Park due to the hundreds of observers there all winter.
Song Sparrow - C.P., and almost anywhere else thru the county now, a lot were 
wintering, but some arrival has taken place, and many are singing regularly.
Swamp Sparrow - C.P., etc. - some occ. singing a bit, some are overwintered, 
with perhaps a very small no. having moved in from points-south recently.
White-throated Sparrow - C.P. and many more locations in the county - 
overwinters annually by the many-hundreds in this county, and some are singing 
lately. Virtually none of these being seen have been recent arrivals, this is 
one of the more-common wintering species of this county, and large numbers are 
found even in small parks and greenspaces all winter long in Manhattan, and 
around the county in select other places. This is not at all a new trend, the 
species has long wintered-thru in numbers, in this county.
Dark-eyed Junco - the slate-colored form, at C.P., etc. - still commonly 
wintering and possibly a v. modest bit of movement in recent days.
Northern Cardinal - C.P., etc.
Red-winged Blackbird - C.P., etc. - good passages of many in flight, plus some 
stopovers feeding and roosting-resting, plus a smaller no. which will try 
nesting. Some females have pushed in and passed along with many males of this 
species, county-wide.
Rusty Blackbird - v. Small nos in select sites incl. in particular Central 
Park, with one having fully-ovwintered at the n.end of Central, and others in 
other areas of Central Park.
Common Grackle - thousands of these have passed by and thru in recent days, and 
are also set up for nesting possibilities in some areas of the county. Central 
Park had many thru the late winter and also was starting to see some as early 
as January 1st.
Brown-headed Cowbird - C.P., etc., but not at all numerous - yet.
House Finch - C.P., etc. - not-rare in select locations, some are singing 
around the county, including in city-street locations.
American Goldfinch - C.P., etc. - modest numbers for the winter and still 
around the county.
-
Orange-crowned Warbler - ongoing at least in 2 locations in the county, both 
fully-overwintered successfully, at Randalls Island and in Carl Schurz Park in 
Manhattan - it is also fairly likely that a few more have wintered successfully 
and are not being noticed in recent days. This species has had a marked 
increase in the Eastern states over recent decades, and is now not-rare in 
east-coastal locations even for winter, with many wintering in N.Y. City and 
the region, particularly in the most-coastal counties and areas. While 
never-common, for a relatively inconspicuous warbler among all American Warbler 
species, this is notably more regular in peak migration as well as wintering 
more regularly in recent decades, and not all due solely to an increase of 
observer effort and awareness, although that can be a factor in greater numbers 
of reports noticed of recent years. The commonness of photos including 
phone-photos these days also makes this a type of bird more readily apparent in 
occurrence, relative to some sight-reports-only of the past.
-
Yellow-rumped Warbler - C.P., etc. - all are of the expected Myrtle form in the 
county, this winter had a small number wintering including on Manhattan and at 
Randalls Island, and a few recent sightings - by many observers - from Central 
Park as well as multi-observers of elsewhere birds of this form and species. 
Never a ver-common wintering species in this county, some small newer plantings 
of Myrtle or Bayberry shrubs in several larger sites, such as at Randalls and 
more-so at Governors Island, may have helped this species to attempt 
overwintering in these locations and in the county generally. The 
Orange-crowned Warbler has been as-regular or even a bit more so as a wintering 
species in this county, compared with Myrtle Warbler, a slightly unusual 
juxtaposition in wintering warbler expectations, for most of the region.

Pine Warbler - C.P. etc. - multiple fully-wintering individuals, including one 
at the Central Park Ramble from late autumn -continuously- in the Ramble thru 
now, and also at Randalls Island continuously where at least several had been 
wintering but lately mostly-one at a time seen there, into this week. There may 
have been a few more of this species also wintering in various areas of the 
county, including possibly more than just the one seen by hundreds of observers 
thru late winter at Central Park, that thanks to the visits by that individual 
Pine Warbler to suet-feeders of the C.P. Ramble and its many birder-devotees on 
any and all days of the winter to now. This species has always been a potential 
wintering bird of the larger region, mainly very-coastally, but in recent times 
more may be attempting to winter in NY in Long Island including the counties of 
Suffolk, Nassua, Queens and Kings all four of which are a part of Long Island, 
NY and in Richmond County NY which is the southernmost county of NY state - 
with Pine Warbler long having been a semi-regular and not-rare-wintering 
species of New Jersey, in that states southern counties. This species is one of 
the only warblers in the Americas (or Caribbean) which is nearly-exclusive to 
N. America and mostly north of Mexico, with the populations of the Caribbean 
thought by some to be genetically-distinct. Most of all Pine Warblers of North 
America are found in the U.S. and in Canada, for parts of the year, and very 
few wander any farther south, such as to Central America or farther, as do so 
many of the migratory American warblers which we await the returns-of as spring 
progresses in our NY and northern regions. We can anticipate potential -new- 
arrivals of some of the earliest-moving Pines to show this month in this county 
and in this region. There could be a very few additional warbler species that 
overwintered in this county, certainly some species had started to, and may 
have survived, but of those survivors amongst warblers it also is possible some 
moved far-south by midwinter if not sooner, and avoided some of the harsher 
parts of the past few months in weather. Then-again, even the Gulf Coast 
including the city of New Orleans had deep plowable snow and ice, and a 
deep-freeze for the southern U.S. this past winter, a very rare weather event 
for that region, indeed an unprecedented event for some states and communities 
in all of the long-kept weather records of over a century. A very through and 
close look thru many different sites on all of the four main islands of N.Y. 
County could reveal a few surprise-wintered birds, including, potentially, a 
few other warbler species still surviving.

Additional species to the above listing are and were likely from the past week. 
Certainly some new arrivals will be anticipated on coming days and nights, with 
any warm-fronts.

Thanks to the many quiet, courteous, and keen observers and photographers who 
have been out in all types of late-winter weather, for so many sightings and 
reports via non-X alerts and as-always, via eBird and that with the Macaulay 
Library for media archiving.

- -
We have had a couple of milder days here in N.Y. City and New York County, and 
with those days, a few butterflies had emerged including the expected Mourning 
Cloak as well as Eastern Comma, each of those capable of and normally 
overwintering as adults and now emerging in mild sunny days. More butterflies 
are at-least possible in March, if sun and warmth allow. Many other insects in 
many families have also been starting to emerge in their adult forms, and of 
course much of that insect emergence becomes food for hungry new-migrants as 
well as resident birds seeking more to the diet as courtship and breeding-times 
come along. The arrival of swallows is a nice indicator that more insect life 
is available to birds.

Good birding to all,

Tom Fiore
manhattan




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