Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Peter Saracino
Thank you!
Pete

On Wed, Jan 3, 2024, 12:34 PM Tim Gallagher  wrote:

> Get in touch with the collection manager, Mary Margaret Ferraro.
> mmferr...@cornell.edu
>
> On Jan 3, 2024, at 9:52 AM, Donna Lee Scott  wrote:
>
> 
> 
> 
> Lab of O building is closed for renovation, so unless you know the right
> person to phone, you can’t drop off a dead bird right now.
> I don’t have any other info.
>
> Donna Scott
> Kendal at Ithaca-377
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jan 3, 2024, at 8:43 AM, Robin Cisne  wrote:
>
> 
> I've always frozen them, and then just dropped them off at the front desk.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 5:31 PM Peter Saracino 
> wrote:
>
>> My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned
>> hawk (I think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or
>> research purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or
>> somewhere else? He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
>> Many thanks.
>> Sar
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Jane Leff
Lime Hollow is a great idea.
Another is to find out who replaced Charles Dardia as Collections Manager
of Cornell Museum of Vertebrates & ask that person.

Janie, in Leyva, Colombia

On Wed, Jan 3, 2024 at 2:57 PM Maryfaith Miller 
wrote:

> I didn't mention it sooner because it seems like a long way to travel...
> But if the frozen bird can get a ride to Lime Hollow Nature Center in
> Cortland, NY, I would use it for education in the preschool. What a rare
> opportunity to examine a wonderful bird up close.
> Maryfaith Decker
> 646-369-2653
> Director, Lime Hollow Forest Preschool
>
> On Tue, Jan 2, 2024, 5:31 PM Peter Saracino 
> wrote:
>
>> My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned
>> hawk (I think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or
>> research purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or
>> somewhere else? He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
>> Many thanks.
>> Sar
>> --
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Maryfaith Miller
I didn't mention it sooner because it seems like a long way to travel...
But if the frozen bird can get a ride to Lime Hollow Nature Center in
Cortland, NY, I would use it for education in the preschool. What a rare
opportunity to examine a wonderful bird up close.
Maryfaith Decker
646-369-2653
Director, Lime Hollow Forest Preschool

On Tue, Jan 2, 2024, 5:31 PM Peter Saracino  wrote:

> My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned hawk
> (I think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or
> research purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or
> somewhere else? He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
> Many thanks.
> Sar
> --
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> 
> Rules and Information
> 
> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> 
> *Archives:*
> The Mail Archive
> 
> Surfbirds 
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> *Please submit your observations to eBird
> !*
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Re:[cayugabirds-l] Canvasback on count day

2024-01-03 Thread Paul Anderson
Thanks for this Dave. If Dan Watkins or the unnamed partner are reading
this list, I'd love to hear from them.

Also, ICYMI, a Tufted Duck was reported through ebird on Jan 2nd. I've
added it (and the details) as a count week bird to the spreadsheet.

-Paul

On Wed, Jan 3, 2024 at 12:13 PM Dave Nutter  wrote:

> Canvasback was missing from the count compilation, but there was a
> reported sighting of the species on count day. This is the story of 2 eBird
> lists at the same place on the same morning.
>
> Jay McGowan & Paul Rodewald did a tremendous amount of work for the count,
> submitting multiple eBird lists together or separately. They started one
> eBird list at Stewart Park when there was just enough light at 7:11am and
> continuing until 8:18am during which they traveled .28 mile. Their
> “complete” list (all the species they could ID) included 19 species, 13 of
> which were associated with the water, while the other species may have
> flown across their field of view or been audible to them. Their task was to
> figure out all the birds on the lake before the birds naturally left to
> feed elsewhere or were disturbed by hunting starting around 8am. The water
> birds were:
>
> 55 Canada Geese
> 32 Mallards
> 500 Redheads
> 150 Greater Scaup
> 350 Lesser Scaup
> 3 Common Mergansers
> 45 American Coots
> 25 Ring-billed Gulls
> 175 Herring Gulls
> 24 Great Black-backed Gulls
> 1 Lesser Black-backed Gull
> 6 Double-crested Cormorants
> 2 Bald Eagles
>
> Clearly some of their numbers were estimates, including the crowded raft
> of Aythya ducks, the crowded gray gulls, and perhaps the geese which may
> have been a flyover flock. I think there was a bit of NW wind which could
> create enough waves to make the more distant Aythya ducks bob in and out of
> view in front of each other. That would drive me nuts, but Jay & Paul are
> better birders than I am. I believe there was a different list for Stewart
> Park later concentrating on land birds.
>
> Eight minutes after Jay & Paul quit their eBird list of lake birds at
> Stewart Park, Dan Watkins and an unnamed partner started an eBird list
> there, also concentrating on the lake. I don’t know if Dan was
> participating in the count and visiting Stewart Park in addition to his own
> territory, or whether he was a birder coincidentally visiting this great
> spot as well as some other places farther north along the lake. Compared to
> Jay & Paul, Dan spent less than a third as much time at Stewart, traveled 4
> times as far, and observed 10 species, also a “complete” list. This is no
> criticism of Dan’s abilities. I think Jay & Paul would find twice many
> species as I or most birders would, especially given that lead time. I
> think there were changes in the conditions and the birds present, and if
> Dan stayed in his car or didn’t walk all the way to the shore, then some
> birds may have been hidden to him. His complete list included these water
> birds:
>
> 8 Mallards
> 1 Canvasback
> 9 Redheads
> 3 Greater Scaup
> 4 Lesser Scaup
> 3 Ring-billed Gulls
> 8 Great Black-backed Gulls
> 5 Double-crested Cormorants
>
> I think the Canada Geese were missing from this list because they have not
> been roosting on the south end of the lake since hunting season began
> shortly after Christmas, which is why I thought Jay & Paul’s
> counted-by-fives geese might be a flyover flock. Their Common Mergansers
> and most of their Mallards may have stayed close to shores or moved to the
> shelter of the mouth of Fall Creek where hunters aren’t allowed. The gulls
> may have largely flown off to feed, or Dan may have only counted the easily
> identifiable Great Black-backed and a few of the Ring-billeds, who tend to
> stay closer to land. The wintering Cormorants are obvious resting on logs
> or the Red Lighthouse Breakwater, often 5 visible while the 6th is out on
> the lake fishing.
>
> What about the Aythya raft? Jay & Paul estimated them to be a thousand
> ducks, half Redheads and the rest Scaup, fewer Greater than Lesser.
> Although Jay & Paul were trying to ID & count everything on the lake,
> including finding that Lesser Black-backed Gull, I have to assume they
> spent some time scanning the Aythya raft for other species among them, such
> as the rare Tufted Duck and common Ring-necked Ducks seen on Christmas,
> expected Canvasbacks, and various other duck species or grebes who tend to
> join such flocks. But considering that I found a single male Ring-necked
> Duck in the Aythya raft there both on December 30th and January 2, but it
> was not reported by anyone else since Christmas, maybe Jay & Paul couldn’t
> afford to concentrate only on the Aythyas long enough. I think a male
> Canvasback or Tufted Duck could have eluded me in the rough weather on the
> 30th but that was less likely on the calm 2nd.
>
> Anyway, on Count day that Aythya raft may have skedaddled en masse when
> gunfire started from nearby blinds or parked boats, and only 17 birds
> returned or 

Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Tim Gallagher
Get in touch with the collection manager, Mary Margaret Ferraro. 
mmferr...@cornell.edu

On Jan 3, 2024, at 9:52 AM, Donna Lee Scott  wrote:




Lab of O building is closed for renovation, so unless you know the right 
person to phone, you can’t drop off a dead bird right now.
I don’t have any other info.

Donna Scott
Kendal at Ithaca-377
Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 3, 2024, at 8:43 AM, Robin Cisne  wrote:


I've always frozen them, and then just dropped them off at the front desk.






On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 5:31 PM Peter Saracino 
mailto:petersarac...@gmail.com>> wrote:
My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned hawk (I 
think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or research 
purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or somewhere else? 
He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
Many thanks.
Sar
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[cayugabirds-l] Canvasback on count day

2024-01-03 Thread Dave Nutter
Canvasback was missing from the count compilation, but there was a reported 
sighting of the species on count day. This is the story of 2 eBird lists at the 
same place on the same morning. 

Jay McGowan & Paul Rodewald did a tremendous amount of work for the count, 
submitting multiple eBird lists together or separately. They started one eBird 
list at Stewart Park when there was just enough light at 7:11am and continuing 
until 8:18am during which they traveled .28 mile. Their “complete” list (all 
the species they could ID) included 19 species, 13 of which were associated 
with the water, while the other species may have flown across their field of 
view or been audible to them. Their task was to figure out all the birds on the 
lake before the birds naturally left to feed elsewhere or were disturbed by 
hunting starting around 8am. The water birds were:

55 Canada Geese
32 Mallards
500 Redheads
150 Greater Scaup
350 Lesser Scaup
3 Common Mergansers
45 American Coots
25 Ring-billed Gulls
175 Herring Gulls
24 Great Black-backed Gulls
1 Lesser Black-backed Gull
6 Double-crested Cormorants
2 Bald Eagles

Clearly some of their numbers were estimates, including the crowded raft of 
Aythya ducks, the crowded gray gulls, and perhaps the geese which may have been 
a flyover flock. I think there was a bit of NW wind which could create enough 
waves to make the more distant Aythya ducks bob in and out of view in front of 
each other. That would drive me nuts, but Jay & Paul are better birders than I 
am. I believe there was a different list for Stewart Park later concentrating 
on land birds. 

Eight minutes after Jay & Paul quit their eBird list of lake birds at Stewart 
Park, Dan Watkins and an unnamed partner started an eBird list there, also 
concentrating on the lake. I don’t know if Dan was participating in the count 
and visiting Stewart Park in addition to his own territory, or whether he was a 
birder coincidentally visiting this great spot as well as some other places 
farther north along the lake. Compared to Jay & Paul, Dan spent less than a 
third as much time at Stewart, traveled 4 times as far, and observed 10 
species, also a “complete” list. This is no criticism of Dan’s abilities. I 
think Jay & Paul would find twice many species as I or most birders would, 
especially given that lead time. I think there were changes in the conditions 
and the birds present, and if Dan stayed in his car or didn’t walk all the way 
to the shore, then some birds may have been hidden to him. His complete list 
included these water birds: 

8 Mallards
1 Canvasback
9 Redheads
3 Greater Scaup
4 Lesser Scaup
3 Ring-billed Gulls
8 Great Black-backed Gulls
5 Double-crested Cormorants 

I think the Canada Geese were missing from this list because they have not been 
roosting on the south end of the lake since hunting season began shortly after 
Christmas, which is why I thought Jay & Paul’s counted-by-fives geese might be 
a flyover flock. Their Common Mergansers and most of their Mallards may have 
stayed close to shores or moved to the shelter of the mouth of Fall Creek where 
hunters aren’t allowed. The gulls may have largely flown off to feed, or Dan 
may have only counted the easily identifiable Great Black-backed and a few of 
the Ring-billeds, who tend to stay closer to land. The wintering Cormorants are 
obvious resting on logs or the Red Lighthouse Breakwater, often 5 visible while 
the 6th is out on the lake fishing. 

What about the Aythya raft? Jay & Paul estimated them to be a thousand ducks, 
half Redheads and the rest Scaup, fewer Greater than Lesser. Although Jay & 
Paul were trying to ID & count everything on the lake, including finding that 
Lesser Black-backed Gull, I have to assume they spent some time scanning the 
Aythya raft for other species among them, such as the rare Tufted Duck and 
common Ring-necked Ducks seen on Christmas, expected Canvasbacks, and various 
other duck species or grebes who tend to join such flocks. But considering that 
I found a single male Ring-necked Duck in the Aythya raft there both on 
December 30th and January 2, but it was not reported by anyone else since 
Christmas, maybe Jay & Paul couldn’t afford to concentrate only on the Aythyas 
long enough. I think a male Canvasback or Tufted Duck could have eluded me in 
the rough weather on the 30th but that was less likely on the calm 2nd.

Anyway, on Count day that Aythya raft may have skedaddled en masse when gunfire 
started from nearby blinds or parked boats, and only 17 birds returned or 
dribbled in, which were easier for Dan to sort through, interestingly in a 
similar ratio of species as Jay & Paul saw. Maybe a Canvasback was among birds 
flushed from elsewhere that temporarily joined this raft then went off again in 
search of other Canvasbacks. Alternatively, maybe there were more Aythyas 
bobbing there for Dan to see, and he only tried to ID the easier-to-see front 
row (thus the similar species ratio). When a 

[cayugabirds-l] Christmas Bird Count results

2024-01-03 Thread Paul Anderson
The results of the Christmas Bird Count are now available in this
spreadsheet: https://docs.google.com/.../1orJOduCB4GKq7JlF0jJM.../edit...

.
Quick summary: We got 97 species on the day, and we have another 4 count
week species so far. We had 46680 individuals, way up from our 10-year
average of 35740. . Three species were seen for the first time: Trumpeter
Swan, Northern Parula, and Wilson's Warbler. We had record high counts for
16 species, and ties for another 5 species. There were no surprise misses.
The most "exotic" sighting was of a European Goldfinch seen at a feeder in
Dryden.
Of course, these numbers are subject to revision as we eliminate duplicates
and as more information trickles in.
Thanks to all the leaders, counters, and everyone who helped with the most
excellent compilation dinner last night for which we had about 60 people.

-Paul

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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Donna Lee Scott


Lab of O building is closed for renovation, so unless you know the right 
person to phone, you can’t drop off a dead bird right now.
I don’t have any other info.

Donna Scott
Kendal at Ithaca-377
Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 3, 2024, at 8:43 AM, Robin Cisne  wrote:


I've always frozen them, and then just dropped them off at the front desk.






On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 5:31 PM Peter Saracino 
mailto:petersarac...@gmail.com>> wrote:
My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned hawk (I 
think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or research 
purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or somewhere else? 
He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
Many thanks.
Sar
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Suan Hsi Yong
With the Lab of O visitor center closed for renovations (until June),
there is no front desk to drop things off at, at least, not until June
:-).

Suan

On Wed, Jan 3, 2024 at 8:43 AM Robin Cisne  wrote:
>
> I've always frozen them, and then just dropped them off at the front desk.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 5:31 PM Peter Saracino  wrote:
>>
>> My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned hawk 
>> (I think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or 
>> research purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or 
>> somewhere else? He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
>> Many thanks.
>> Sar
>> --
>> Cayugabirds-L List Info:
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>> Rules and Information
>> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
>> Archives:
>> The Mail Archive
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>> ABA
>> Please submit your observations to eBird!
>> --
>
> --
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Re: [cayugabirds-l] Dead sharpie for donation

2024-01-03 Thread Robin Cisne
I've always frozen them, and then just dropped them off at the front desk.






On Tue, Jan 2, 2024 at 5:31 PM Peter Saracino 
wrote:

> My friend has  a window strike victim in the form of a Sharpe-shinned hawk
> (I think, vs Coopers). He'd like to see it get used for educational or
> research purposes. Any thoughts of a good contact person at the lab or
> somewhere else? He can transport it. Just needs a destination.
> Many thanks.
> Sar
> --
> *Cayugabirds-L List Info:*
> Welcome and Basics
> 
> Rules and Information
> 
> Subscribe, Configuration and Leave
> 
> *Archives:*
> The Mail Archive
> 
> Surfbirds 
> ABA 
> *Please submit your observations to eBird
> !*
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>

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