I found the same phenomenon on 52d Street between Nicollet and Lyndale on Sunday. Feeding on the curb and in the street were Blackburnian Cape May (male and female) Yellow Palm Nashville Yel-rumped Tenn
As well as Chipping Sparrows and White-crowned sparrows Warren -----Original Message----- From: mnbird-boun...@lists.mnbird.net [mailto:mnbird-boun...@lists.mnbird.net] On Behalf Of Diana Doyle Sent: Monday, May 16, 2011 11:02 AM To: MOU-NET@LISTS.UMN.EDU; mnbird Subject: [mnbird] Ground-feeding warblers The ground-feeding of canopy warblers under elm trees continues: This morning Lake Nokomis's sidewalks included large numbers of yellow, palm, yellow-rumped, tennessee, black-and-white, magnolia, and chestnut-sided all feeding on the pavement. Within the past couple of days I've also seen common yellowthroats, cape may warblers, and even northern waterthrush pavement-feeding. So this morning I checked where a large flock was feeding. I could see very tiny oblong gray insects moving on the concrete. They were very very tiny. Perhaps this is what the warblers are eating? Anyone have any ideas what kind of insect they may be? Presumably they are associated with the elms? Diana Doyle S. Minneapolis _______________________________________________ mnbird mailing list mnb...@lists.mnbird.net http://lists.mnbird.net/mailman/listinfo/mnbird Unsubscribe: %(user_optionsurl)s ---- Join or Leave mou-net: http://lists.umn.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=mou-net Archives: http://lists.umn.edu/archives/mou-net.html