Friday, December 28, 2012

White Lake CBC, 12/27/2012

Gary Broussard, my brother John, and I did a section of the White Lake Christmas Bird Count yesterday.  It was a great day, especially compared to the cold, windy weather of the day before.  Our area had a good mix of woods and fields alongside marsh, so we had a good mix of species.

The best bird of the day happened in the morning.  John called out, "Stork!" and both his words and the bird went over my head.  Stork?  Huh? Oh, stork.  I looked up and saw a Wood Stork flying over, put the binos on it, then grabbed my camera...which wasn't set...as the bird passed behind the trees and disappeared.  We all got looks at it, but no photos.  I don't recall ever having seen one in winter, much less on a CBC.  Good bird.

Otherwise, action was pretty steady on all fronts.  There weren't many species of sparrow, but there were tons of what sparrows there were.  Hundreds of Savannahs, flock after flock of White-crowned and White-throated, Swamps all over, and lot of Songs.  Mixed in we also had 2 Clay-colored Sparrows, always a fun find, especially this fall and winter as they've been scarce.


















In a nice patch of oaks, we also had an out of season American Redstart.














We ended up with 105 species for the day.  A good day to be afield.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

December 23, 2012

Today, Dave Patton and I took a meandering drive through the SWLA interior.  Part of the mission was to scan a few fields around the area where the Mountain Plover was found (and last seen) on December 14.  The rest of the plan was to drive around without any real plan.  We scratched on the plover search, but had an interesting drive.

Near Lacassine, we scanned a flock of thousands, maybe ten thousands of gulls.  Other than a couple of Lesser Black-backed Gulls, nothing unusual there.  South of Lacassine, we hit a flock of bluebirds, Pine Warblers, and Chipping Sparrows.  We estimated about 50 Pine Warblers in the flock.

















At the corner of Highway 14 and Harris Road east of Holmwood, we found a Say's Phoebe in a location where I had one last winter.

















Throughout the day, we scanned flocks of shorebirds, ducks, geese, and blackbirds.  The biggest flock of blackbirds was a flock in Lafayette Parish that I estimated at around one million birds (it was at least 1000 thousand birds).  I scanned the flock for quite a while, knowing that sooner or later I'd find a Yellow-headed Blackbird.  Sure enough, I eventually did.  I believe it was my first Lafayette Parish sighting of one.



Saturday, December 15, 2012

Mountain Plover, 12/14/2012















Michael Seymour has found some pretty memorable birds in Louisiana, including second state records of Jabiru Stork and Gray Flycatcher, and he and his CBC party added another good one yesterday.  The Mountain Plover they found yesterday near Thornwell is the first ever for Louisiana.

Mountain Plovers are birds of the Great Plains (not mountains).  In the past, they were incredibly numerous, but their numbers have dropped steeply in the past several decades.  These plovers nest as near to us as west Texas and winter across south Texas, so it's odd that the first one comes when the fortunes of the species are so low.  It's long overdue.

Congrats to Michael for finding it, and to Mike Musumeche and Jay Huner for relocating it about two miles from its original location after it hightailed it.  

Duck, 12/15/12












This cafe au lait Blue-winged Teal was just north of Kaplan today.  Pale birds like this often called albino, but they're actually leucistic, which basically means they look whitish (leukos = white in Greek; leucistic is pronounced with the same beginning syllable as leukemia and leucocyte).  Unlike albinos, leucistic birds don't have pink eyes.  

The short and sweet of it is that it looked pretty cool.  In flight it stood out among the hundreds of ducks it flushed with.