Re: [cayugabirds-l] Crows mobbing Great Horned Owl on nest

2013-02-18 Thread nutter.dave
I'm thinking more about crows and owls. It's a substitute for actually knowing, so please chime in, Anne, or anyone else who knows better than I do what really goes on. I've been impressed by how much the Great Horned Owls in Renwick have withstood crows' harassment, and that impression flavored my earlier comment.A big purpose of the harassment of owls by crows ought to be to drive the predators away so the owls will cease being a danger to the harassing crows. But it doesn't look to me like it would work very well. Great Horned Owls are low-light, quiet, fairly slow (I think), stealth hunters, and in the daytime they are not a danger to crows nor to anyone else. A roosting owl might be convinced to move, but would it move far enough to shift its nighttime hunting area? Where would it not be in some crows' territory? At some point the owl has to stop being driven, and I have heard crows quit. Nesting owls, if they are to be successful, and obviously sometimes they are successful, must not be ousted by crows for several months, starting in early winter, when (I assume) crows are not defending territories nor clearing them of owls starting a nest. Last spring's crow nest can make a nice owl nest, which must be a disheartening discovery, to find owls living smack-dab in the middle of the territory when the crows return at the end of winter. In autumn and winter crows may travel for miles to roost during the night when owls are hunting. By gathering thousands of crows out of outlying owls' hunting territories, crows might improve their individual odds, but I would think that any owl residing near the massive crow roost, or who came to visit, would have easy eating. Maybe the crows make a special effort to clear owls from the crow roosting neighborhood, but the roost is so obvious that I wonder how much good it would do. In the crow nesting season, of course, the crow female and young are stuck and vulnerable. Again, the crows have a good reason to try to drive an owl away, but I would think that a Great Horned Owl can still travel a long distance to hunt, and a crow nest which I can see in a tree during the day is probably similarly obvious to the owl at night. The crow nesting season starts after the owls are well underway. Do crows choose not to nest near Great Horned Owls? I bet the owls' hunting ranges so large as to encompass several crow nests anyway. I assume that the harassment of owls has some direct benefit in terms of predation reduction, but I doubt it's very large. I think either crows harass owls so much because that's one of the few things they can do to reduce predation when they can afford the time and energy, or else there are other benefits, such as getting to know what a Great Horned Owl looks like, or showing off for other crows, or crow family bonding, or being generally useful to the crow flock, or socializing, or getting exercise, or even having fun. Crows' lot looks very frustrating - and dangerous - regarding Great Horned Owls. I sympathize with the crows, too, but also I find their situation more complex and hard to figure.--Dave NutterOn Feb 16, 2013, at 03:18 PM, Anne Clark  wrote:Right--and come mid-April, some person might just pick up a partly eaten, headless, tagged female crow under her nest and think...it was her first nest--what a short life, only 5 years, her nestlings gone, too!  She could have had 6 more years at least, or more.Boredom probably doesn't describe why the crows leave off (have seen them harrying owls for at least 6 hours)...nor a lack of memory for why they start over the next day.  The crows aren't moving on...they are trying to move a dangerous thing out of their neighborhood, where their own kids need a chance at life.Yup--I took the bait.  The story is all in your perspective, but I always find US interesting in siding with the one who has the kids at the time! Holding no grudges against owl-lovers, AnneOn Feb 16, 2013, at 2:05 PM, Mona Bearor wrote:I'll be thinking of your explaination when I visit the nest again, and I'll be watching for that owl to sigh and plan its nightly menu!Mona Bearor
So. Glens Falls, NYOn 2/16/2013 12:21 PM, nutter.d...@me.com wrote:I think this is the sort of crap that Great Horned Owls have to put up with, and they get used to it. I suspect that what you saw is probably the pattern. Every day some crow "discovers" the owl, still in the same place on its nest, and raises the alarm, just as it would for an owl roosting in a new spot every day. All the other crows join in for awhile, so the whole crow community is aware of its presence, and the younger crows learn, "We don't like these guys." When they're satisfied and bored with lack of reaction from the owl on the nest, they move on. The owl sighs, reminds itself to eat some of those bastards come nightfall, and continues incubating, brooding, or guarding its young.--Dave Nutter On Feb 15, 2013, at 06:29 PM, Mona Bearor  wrote: Yesterday morning I observed about 50 crows mobb

[cayugabirds-l] Syracuse RBA

2013-02-18 Thread Joseph Brin
RBA
 
*  New York
*  Syracuse
* February 18, 2013
*  NYSY  02. 18. 13
 
Hotline: Syracuse Rare bird Alert
Dates(s):
February 11, 2013 - February 18, 2013
to report by e-mail: brinjoseph AT yahoo.com
covering upstate NY counties: Cayuga, Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge
and Montezuma Wetlands Complex (MWC) (just outside Cayuga County),
Onondaga, Oswego, Lewis, Jefferson, Oneida, Herkimer,  Madison & Cortland
compiled:February 18 AT 6:30 p.m. (EST)
compiler: Joseph Brin
Onondaga Audubon Homepage: www.onondagaaudubon.org
 
 
#342 -Monday February 18, 2013
 
Greetings. This is the Syracuse Area Rare Bird Alert for the week of 
February 11 , 2013
 
Highlights:
---

BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERON
SMEW  (Extralimital)
TUFTED DUCK
SURF SCOTER
NORTHERN HARRIER
ICELAND GULL
GLAUCOUS GULL
LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL
NORTHERN SHRIKE 
TOWNSEND’S SOLITAIRE(Extralimital)
BOHEMIAN WAXWING  
HOARY REDPOLL
GREATER REDPOLL


Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge (MNWR) and Montezuma Wetlands Complex (MWC)


 No reports this week.


Onondaga County


 2/12: ICELAND and LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL were seen at the inner Harbor 
in Syracuse.
 2/15: NORTHERN SHRIKES were seen at Three Rivers WMA north of 
Baldwinsville and on East Mud Lake Road north on Beaver Lake Nature Center.
 2/16: A single BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT-HERON was seen on the Creekwalk on 
Onondaga Creek near Carousel Center in Syracuse. SNOW GEESE were seen on an 
Onondaga Audubon field trip to Beaver Lake Nature Center.


Madison County


 2/12: HOARY and GREATER REDPOLLS were seen in a large flock of Common 
Redpolls at a feeder on Carpenter Road east of DeRuyter. They were reported 
again on 2/14.


Oswego County


 2/13: The female TUFTED DUCK was relocated at Oswego Harbor. The last 
positive report was on 2/16. Also seen was one ICELAND GULL and two GLAUCOUS 
GULLS. 50+ BOHEMIAN WAXWINGS were spotted at the corner of Rt.57 and Great Bear 
Road north of Phoenix.
 2/16: A flock of 80+ BOHEMIAN WAXWINGS (probably the same group seen for 
over a week) were seen at Great Bear Recreation Area off of Rt. 57 north of 
Phoenix.


Cayuga County


 2/11: 15 species of waterfowl and a NORTHERN HARRIER were the highlights 
of a trip to Fairhaven State Park.


Extralimital


 The last positive sighting of the TOWNSEND’S SOLITAIRE being seen at 
Sampson State Park on the east side of Seneca Lake was on 2/5.
 2/16: An extremely rare sighting of a female type SMEW was reported from 
Lisbon Beach on the Saint Lawrence River eight miles east of Ogdensburg in 
Saint Lawrence County. Unfortunately by the time other birders were able to 
arrive the bird had moved on. Luckily photos were taken.

  

     

--  end report



Joseph Brin
Region 5
Baldwinsville, N.Y.  13027  U.S.A.
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[cayugabirds-l] Ithaca Crow Roost

2013-02-18 Thread Lee Ann van Leer
Nearly 2,500 crows so far amassed between Emerson Power Plant & uphill from 
Friendly's.  More headed in. 
A heads up for those that like to view the roosts.  Not sure how long they will 
stay there. 

-Lee Ann van Leer
Crow lover 

Sent from my iPhone
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[cayugabirds-l] Mt Pleasant SHORT-EARED OWL!!!

2013-02-18 Thread Marie P Read
Wow! As I drove home just a few minutes ago there was a Short-eared Owl flying 
over the fields at the eastern end of Mt Pleasant Road. It flapped and glided 
around the field on the north side of the road, apparently hunting, and I 
watched it for several minutes until it disappeared behind the crest of the 
hill.
Only the second time I have ever seen one up here...last was at least a decade 
ago.

Marie


Marie Read Wildlife Photography
452 Ringwood Road
Freeville NY  13068 USA

Phone  607-539-6608
e-mail   m...@cornell.edu

http://www.marieread.com

***NEW***  Music of the Birds Vol 1 ebook for Apple iPad now available from 
iTunes

http://itunes.apple.com/us/book/music-of-the-birds-v1/id529347014?mt=11

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