[nysbirds-l] Fork-tailed Flycatcher in Ashoken - no

2020-10-18 Thread Andrew Block
No sign of the Fork-tailed Flycatcher at the Ashoken Reservoir as of 2:30pm.  
Seems to have last been seen around 9:30am or so.  I was there from 10:30am to 
about 2:30pm with nothing.  Did have several Common Loons, a Common Merganser, 
Cooper's Hawk, Red-shouldered Hawk, Merlin, several Siskins, a few Purple 
Finches, a Red-breasted Nuthatch, 5 Eastern Bluebirds, and 2 Eastern Phoebes.
Andrew 
Andrew v. F. Block
Consulting Naturalist
20 Hancock Avenue, Apt. 3
Yonkers, Westchester Co., New York 10705-4780 
www.flickr.com/photos/conuropsis/albums
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[nysbirds-l] Central Park NYC: Sun. Oct. 18, 2020: 6 Species of Wood Warblers, Common Raven, Blue-headed Vireo, Pine Siskin

2020-10-18 Thread Deborah Allen
Central Park NYC
Sunday October 18, 2020
OBS: Robert DeCandido, PhD, Deborah Allen, m.ob. 

Highlights: Six Species of Wood Warblers, Common Raven, Blue-headed Vireo, Pine 
Siskin. 

Canada Goose - 9
Mallard - 6
Mourning Dove - around 10
Herring Gull - around 10 flyovers
Double-crested Cormorant - 2 flyovers
Cooper's Hawk - 2 flyovers
Red-tailed Hawk - 3 adults (2 flyovers, 1 parched at the Oven (Paul Curtis))
Eastern Phoebe - 4
Blue-headed Vireo - 3
Blue Jay - 10
Common Raven - 1 flyover Belvedere Castle
Black-capped Chickadee - 6
Tufted Titmouse - 20-25
Red-breasted Nuthatch - 5
White-breasted Nuthatch - 5
House Wren - 1 in Ramble
Winter Wren - 4
Carolina Wren - 3
Golden-crowned Kinglet - 5 (Ginny deLiagre)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 15
Swainson's Thrush - 2 (King of Poland (David Barrett), Maintenance Field)
Hermit Thrush - 11
American Robin - 15
Gray Catbird - 4
Northern Mockingbird - Winterdale Arch
Cedar Waxwing - flock of 8-10 Belvedere Castle
Purple Finch - 2 (Maintenance Field, Pinetum)
Pine Siskin - 15 (most of these at the Pinetum)
American Goldfinch - 4
Eastern Towhee - 5
Chipping Sparrow - a dozen
Song Sparrow - 10
White-throated Sparrow - 150
Dark-eyed Junco - 7-10
Baltimore Oriole - 1 Sparrow Rock (Sandra Critelli)
Common Grackle - around 90
Common Yellowthroat - hatch-year male south side of Turtle Pond
Northern Parula - 1 female Belvedere Castle Terrace
Magnolia Warbler - 1 hatch-year Tupelo Field
Blackpoll Warbler - Evodia Field (Paul Curtis)
Pine Warbler - 2 (Belvedere Castle, Pinetum (Kate Wodell)
Yellow-rumped Warbler - around 10
Northern Cardinal - 7
--
Saturday's Hooded Warbler was refound at the Source of the Gill (NE of Azalea 
Pond) along with a Black-throated Blue Warbler by Kate Wodell. 
--

Deb Allen
Follow us on twitter @BirdingBobNYC & @DAllenNYC. 





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[nysbirds-l] Painted Redstart- Brooklyn

2020-10-18 Thread Rob Bate
Richard Payne found a Painted Redstart at Floyd Bennett Field art the Ecology 
Village. This area is technically off limits so be extra respectful if you go. 
Park over by the gardens and walk there rather than park in the off limits 
area. 

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[nysbirds-l] Brooklyn Bird Club Virtual Presentation

2020-10-18 Thread Jennifer Kepler
Please join the Brooklyn Bird Club, Virtually! Registration is free but
required to join. Spaces are limited!Carolyn Monastra Presents Climate
Concerns
*This meeting will take place via Zoom*

*Bio:* A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Carolyn Monastra received her MFA in
photography from The Yale School of Art. For the past twenty-five years her
work has focused on creating and discovering mystery in the natural world.
She has been awarded numerous artist residencies including at Ucross,
Caldera Arts, The Djerassi Foundation, Blue Mountain Center, and The
Saltonstall Foundation. A 2009 residency at the Skaftfell Visual Arts
Center in Iceland inspired her to begin focusing on the critical issue of
climate change in her artwork.

*Talk Summary:* Working at the intersection of art and ecology, artist and
activist Carolyn Monastra has spent the past ten years focusing on one of
the most critical issues of our time: climate change. She will present work
from two projects: The Witness Tree (begun in 2010) and Divergence of Birds
the latter of which was inspired by the Audubon Society’s recent Climate
Reports. She will discuss her different approaches to these two bodies of
work and suggest direct actions everyone can take to combat the climate
crisis and protect endangered wildlife.

Register in advance for this meeting:

*https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJIqdeivpjIrGdyInj7WyyNtJjTBha5GISRP
*

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing
information about joining the meeting.

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Re: [nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

2020-10-18 Thread david nicosia
 This comes from the official Canada website that Bonaparte's Gull has "large 
increases" and they come to this conclusion with CBC data!  Based on your 
accounts they are completely wrong, but I thought it was a credible site since 
it was from the Canadian Government. My bad. 
see 
https://wildlife-species.canada.ca/bird-status/oiseau-bird-eng.aspx?sY=2019&sL=e&sM=c&sB=BOGU



On Sunday, October 18, 2020, 10:04:07 AM EDT, Richard Veit 
 wrote:  
 
 I dont think this is correct.  the "increase" in Maine is up from a few 
hundred birds in the entire state to a couple of thousand (on all counts), and 
that was only in one year.  Similarly, most of the "increase" in North Carolina 
is due to a single data point.  Counts of many tens of thousands have been 
recorded on the Great Lakes, on the USA/Canadian border in the Campobello 
Island, in Massachusetts and in North Carolina, mostly in the 1970s and 1980s, 
but with a few counts of this magnitude into the 1990s.  There have been no 
records of any concentrations othis magnitude (tens of thousands) anywhere as 
far as we can tell, and I do not see how relatively small increases in Maine 
and North Carolina can account for these birds.  i dont know what the basis of 
a "big increase" in Canada is, but that seems to conflict with the opinions of 
everyone in the USA who was followed these Bonapartes flocks for 20-40 years.
On Sat, Oct 17, 2020 at 4:56 PM David Nicosia  wrote:

In Canada, they list Bonaparte's Gulls as having a "large increase".  
In Shai's graph of CBC you can see a definite decline of wintering BOGUs from 
the 70s, 80s and 90s to the 2010s in the RI and LI areas.  
https://www.flickr.com/photos/96951581@N02/50482248298/
I ran sea surface temperature departures from normal for the last 10 years and 
you can see that the area centered around Nova Scotia/Maine has warmed 1-2C in 
this time period. To see if maybe the BOGUs are wintering farther north on the 
east coast, I looked at CBC data from Maine and indeed there is a significant 
increase in BOGUs for their CBCs which matches the declines that Shai showed. I 
couldn't get the Nova Scotia data to work for some reason.  I also looked 
farther south and in NC, for instance, there also has been significant 
increases in CBC data for BOGUs too. So the decline at least around LI and 
maybe even around Niagara Fall's probably is related to the warming climate. 
Birds are shifting their wintering ranges farther north.  In the Great Lakes 
area, if the waters remain open farther north some birds just don't make it 
down. The same is for the northeast coast.  In NC, I don't have much of an 
answer other than the sea surface temperatures haven't warmed as much there.  
 




On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 10:14 AM  wrote:

Willie, that is very interesting. I had a quick look at CBC results - for NJ 
rather than NY, so as to avoid including any "Niagara Falls concentration 
effect," and the recent trend does appear to be a decline (with a few 
‘exception’ years mixed in). In this graph "120" is 2019, and numbers extend 
back to turn of century. I know "birds per party hour" is a rough measure (I 
was a CBC compiler for > 25 years, potential party-hour reporting vagaries 
acknowledged), but the numbers do suggest either a decline in population or a 
shift in wintering behavior.

Sorry, this was a quick take, now back to the ol’ day job…

Rick

P.S.  Hope the attached graph comes through - if now (and you're interested) I 
can send on the side.

-Original Message-
From: bounce-125036389-3714...@list.cornell.edu 
 On Behalf Of Willie D'Anna
Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2020 9:34 AM
To: '& [NYSBIRDS]' 
Subject: RE:[nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

I have enjoyed the recent posts about Bonaparte's Gulls. Some of the highest 
concentrations of Bonaparte's Gulls in the world occur along the Niagara River, 
with estimates of 50,000 to 100,000 on some days. It is a spectacle to witness 
this blizzard of gulls on the Niagara but it seems that numbers have declined, 
particularly in the last ten to 20 years. It is unfortunate that the only 
evidence that I can offer for this are my own subjective observations. Counts 
of gulls on the Niagara have been done sporadically and it is only in recent 
years that organized counts have been conducted on a yearly basis, with three 
counts per season (late fall/winter), by the Canadian Wildlife Service.

Numbers of Bonies, as they are affectionately called here, month to month along 
the Niagara, are highly interesting. Twenty to fifty years ago, numbers would 
begin to build on the Niagara in late July with most of these birds consisting 
of one-year-olds. By mid August, there would be a significant influx of adults, 
only just finished with their breeding activities in Canada. Hundreds of 
individuals could be seen at the source of the river (Buffalo/Fort Erie) and 
below the falls or in the Lewiston/Queenston area. At times there would be well 
over a thousand, parti

[nysbirds-l] Red Crossbill at West End, JBSP (Nassau Co.)

2020-10-18 Thread Ken Feustel
 Male observed and heard calling (Jip! Jip!) in median with Pine Siskins.

Sent from my iPhone

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Re: [nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls

2020-10-18 Thread Richard Veit
I dont think this is correct.  the "increase" in Maine is up from a few
hundred birds in the entire state to a couple of thousand (on all counts),
and that was only in one year.  Similarly, most of the "increase" in North
Carolina is due to a single data point.  Counts of many tens of thousands
have been recorded on the Great Lakes, on the USA/Canadian border in the
Campobello Island, in Massachusetts and in North Carolina, mostly in the
1970s and 1980s, but with a few counts of this magnitude into the 1990s.
There have been no records of any concentrations othis magnitude (tens of
thousands) anywhere as far as we can tell, and I do not see how relatively
small increases in Maine and North Carolina can account for these birds.  i
dont know what the basis of a "big increase" in Canada is, but that seems
to conflict with the opinions of everyone in the USA who was followed these
Bonapartes flocks for 20-40 years.

On Sat, Oct 17, 2020 at 4:56 PM David Nicosia  wrote:

> In Canada, they list Bonaparte's Gulls as having a "large increase".
>
> In Shai's graph of CBC you can see a definite decline of wintering BOGUs
> from the 70s, 80s and 90s to the 2010s in the RI and LI areas.
> https://www.flickr.com/photos/96951581@N02/50482248298/
>
> I ran sea surface temperature departures from normal for the last 10 years
> and you can see that the area centered around Nova Scotia/Maine has warmed
> 1-2C in this time period. To see if maybe the BOGUs are wintering farther
> north on the east coast, I looked at CBC data from Maine and indeed there
> is a significant increase in BOGUs for their CBCs which matches the
> declines that Shai showed. I couldn't get the Nova Scotia data to work for
> some reason.  I also looked farther south and in NC, for instance, there
> also has been significant increases in CBC data for BOGUs too. So the
> decline at least around LI and maybe even around Niagara Fall's probably is
> related to the warming climate. Birds are shifting their wintering ranges
> farther north.  In the Great Lakes area, if the waters remain open farther
> north some birds just don't make it down. The same is for the northeast
> coast.  In NC, I don't have much of an answer other than the sea surface
> temperatures haven't warmed as much there.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Oct 14, 2020 at 10:14 AM  wrote:
>
>> Willie, that is very interesting. I had a quick look at CBC results - for
>> NJ rather than NY, so as to avoid including any "Niagara Falls
>> concentration effect," and the recent trend does appear to be a decline
>> (with a few ‘exception’ years mixed in). In this graph "120" is 2019, and
>> numbers extend back to turn of century. I know "birds per party hour" is a
>> rough measure (I was a CBC compiler for > 25 years, potential party-hour
>> reporting vagaries acknowledged), but the numbers do suggest either a
>> decline in population or a shift in wintering behavior.
>>
>> Sorry, this was a quick take, now back to the ol’ day job…
>>
>> Rick
>>
>> P.S.  Hope the attached graph comes through - if now (and you're
>> interested) I can send on the side.
>>
>> -Original Message-
>> From: bounce-125036389-3714...@list.cornell.edu <
>> bounce-125036389-3714...@list.cornell.edu> On Behalf Of Willie D'Anna
>> Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 2020 9:34 AM
>> To: '& [NYSBIRDS]' 
>> Subject: RE:[nysbirds-l] Bonaparte's Gulls
>>
>> I have enjoyed the recent posts about Bonaparte's Gulls. Some of the
>> highest concentrations of Bonaparte's Gulls in the world occur along the
>> Niagara River, with estimates of 50,000 to 100,000 on some days. It is a
>> spectacle to witness this blizzard of gulls on the Niagara but it seems
>> that numbers have declined, particularly in the last ten to 20 years. It is
>> unfortunate that the only evidence that I can offer for this are my own
>> subjective observations. Counts of gulls on the Niagara have been done
>> sporadically and it is only in recent years that organized counts have been
>> conducted on a yearly basis, with three counts per season (late
>> fall/winter), by the Canadian Wildlife Service.
>>
>> Numbers of Bonies, as they are affectionately called here, month to month
>> along the Niagara, are highly interesting. Twenty to fifty years ago,
>> numbers would begin to build on the Niagara in late July with most of these
>> birds consisting of one-year-olds. By mid August, there would be a
>> significant influx of adults, only just finished with their breeding
>> activities in Canada. Hundreds of individuals could be seen at the source
>> of the river (Buffalo/Fort Erie) and below the falls or in the
>> Lewiston/Queenston area. At times there would be well over a thousand,
>> particularly when there was a good southwesterly blow that would push more
>> of them to the eastern end of Lake Erie. These numbers more or less
>> continued, perhaps with a slight decrease, into October, although whenever
>> there was a southwesterly blow numbers would spike considerably. The bi

[nysbirds-l] Fork Tailed Flycatcher continues

2020-10-18 Thread Robert Taylor
reported today on Ebird, Ashokan Reservoir, Ulster. good luck if you go

Rob in Massapequa

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[nysbirds-l] White Pelican - Terrell County Park, East Moriches, Suffolk County

2020-10-18 Thread Eileen Schwinn
The previously reported
(yesterday) White Pelican, was seen this AM, 8:30, swimming mid creek, about 
3/4  mile from parking area, on eastern trail.  At trail intersection, take 
left and view from top of hill, overlooking frags.  Seen previously by other 
birders, in other spots along the creek, and in flight.  Thanks to those who 
found it!
Eileen Schwinn 
Mike Higgiston

Sent from my iPhone

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[nysbirds-l] N.Y. County, Sat. 10/17, incl. Amer. Bittern, 19 Warbler spp., many other migrants

2020-10-18 Thread Thomas Fiore
Saturday, Oct. 17th -
In N.Y. County which includes Manhattan island, Randall’s Island, and Governors 
Island 

An American Bittern was found & photographed at Randall’s Island (NW 
‘quadrant') by S. Blazer & D. Zappone. They - & many many other observers - 
also saw a lingering Red-throated Loon off the shore at Randall’s Island - and 
some obs. again found Nelson’s Sparrow[s] there - with a Nelson’s Sparrow also 
continuing in northern Manhattan, at Inwood Hill Park. 2 American Pipits were 
also noted as they flew over, from Inwood Hill Park (N. O’Reilly) on 10/17.

For N.Y. County, at least 19 American Warblers were seen on the day; of that 
tally by many, many observers; 18 species were found in Central Park alone.  A 
male-type-plumaged Hooded Warbler in the C.P. Ramble was a bird that had 
lingered there for many days. All of the remaining 18 species for the county 
were seen in the multiple, although some are now in apparently very scant 
numbers (as is somewhat expected).  By far the most-numerous of the warblers 
now in N.Y. County are Yellow-rumped [Myrtle], Palm (of the 2 forms), followed 
by Common Yellowthroat.

Below are the list of warbler species for 10/17:

Tennessee Warbler
Nashville Warbler
Northern Parula
Yellow Warbler
Magnolia Warbler
Cape May Warbler
Black-throated Blue Warbler
Yellow-rumped [Myrtle] Warbler
Black-throated Green Warbler
Pine Warbler
Palm Warbler
Blackpoll Warbler
Black-and-white Warbler
American Redstart
Ovenbird
Northern Waterthrush
Common Yellowthroat
Hooded Warbler
Wilson's Warbler

At least 3 E. Meadowlarks were seen on Governors Island on Sat., 10/17, that 
following the observation of 5 of that species 2 days previously there by J. 
Thorp. (It’s been a somewhat above-average season for the species in the 
county, already and the season is not at all done.)

A very large flock of Chimney Swift - 110 birds - were seen, photographed, & 
reported by D.B. Bolton at a Fifth Ave. location in Manhattan late in the day.  
The first Buffleheads of the season appeared at the Central Park reservoir (& 
very possibly, in other N.Y. County waters), and lingering birds in Central 
Park also included multiple Wood Ducks, & numbers of Gadwall, Northern 
Shoveler, & Ruddy Ducks, with at least 2 American Coots.

A very small no. of E. Wood-Pewee have been seen, & a few also photo-documented 
in N.Y. County in recent days, including to 10/17.  With the findings of such 
rare-vagrant flycatchers as Fork-tailed Flyctacher in Ulster County, NY (on 
10/17, terrific photos of that adult-breeding-plumaged bird, perhaps a 
misdirected ‘austral migrant’) and Say’s Phoebes in various eastern states, as 
well as a steady supply of Western Kingbirds in a no. of states & in NY’s 
southeast region, there is plenty of emphasis on triple-checking any & all 
flycatcher species from now right on through the middle of next spring.

With Veery becoming scarce (most are long-gone & south of the U.S.-Mexico 
border by now), the photograph (by A. Deutsch) taken at Union Square Park on 
Friday, 10/16 offered incontrovertible evidence of that species still there. (A 
few sightings also were reported elsewhere into 10/17.)

Modest but multiple no’s. of Scarlet Tanager were seen in various locations 
around Manhattan. Sparrow diversity continues to be very good, with such 
species as Lincoln’s, White-crowned, Field, Savannah, Swamp & others all seen 
in the multiple.  Pine Siskins have continued in scores of locations, with 
flocks in double-digit numbers not uncommon. There have also been Purple 
Finches in good numbers as American Goldfinch have been increasing as well.

-  -  -  -  -
"This country will not be a good place for any of us to live in unless we make 
it a good place for all of us to live in.” - Teddy Roosevelt (26th president of 
the U.S.A.)
"If there is no struggle, there is no progress."  - Frederick Douglass 
(1818-1895; U.S. statesman, orator, writer)

Thanks to all who practice and support ethical birding in the field every day & 
night,

Tom Fiore,
manhattan





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Re:[nysbirds-l] [hmbirds] Fork-tailed Flycatcher location additional notes

2020-10-18 Thread Richard Guthrie
Sorry. For those who might not have been following,, I should have stated
that the clarification to the directions was in reference to a Fork-tailed
Flycatcher found yesterday afternoon at the Ashokan Reservoir in Ulster
County. The "frying pan" is the parking area on the south/eastern side of
the reservoir accessible from NYS Rt. 28-A

Rich Guthrie

On Sun, Oct 18, 2020 at 6:09 AM Richard Guthrie via groups.io
 wrote:

> This from one of the finders:
>
>  "I was on the top walking/biking trail, on the eastern side of the road
> that divides the two sides. It was happily feeding at about the halfway
> point of that side. It was still there yesterday when I left about 5:00 "
>
> And this from another finder wrote:
>
>  "As you're approaching from the frying pan parking lot, we saw it at the
> second wooden bench on the left side, as you're getting closer to the
> bridge"
>
> Good Luck
>
> --
> Richard Guthrie
> New Baltimore
> The Greene County
>
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[nysbirds-l] Fork-tailed Flycatcher location additional notes

2020-10-18 Thread Richard Guthrie
This from one of the finders:

 "I was on the top walking/biking trail, on the eastern side of the road
that divides the two sides. It was happily feeding at about the halfway
point of that side. It was still there yesterday when I left about 5:00 "

And this from another finder wrote:

 "As you're approaching from the frying pan parking lot, we saw it at the
second wooden bench on the left side, as you're getting closer to the
bridge"

Good Luck

-- 
Richard Guthrie
New Baltimore
The Greene County

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http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsWELCOME.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsRULES.htm
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NYSbirdsSubscribeConfigurationLeave.htm

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nysbirds-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NYSBirds-L
3) http://birding.aba.org/maillist/NY01

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

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