A studio for bird study

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A Highlight of Birding- Breeding Sabine’s Gulls

by Bryce W. Robinson

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I can write a book about how many birding highlights I had this past summer on Alaska’s north slope. It seemed every day I had a memorable experience that will last a lifetime.

I’ve mentioned before that Richard Crossley came to Prudhoe Bay on my last week of work in the region. I agreed to guide him around the oil fields for a day and show him where I had seen particular species. He, of course, had an agenda, and I was tasked to help him out.

We had a hell of a day. I think we started around 8 in the morning, and by midnight, I was still wandering around the tundra photographing birds. He was very keen on finding the Sabine’s Gulls, a bird of which I had seen little. Still, I had a reliable spot that would likely turn up a few gulls, in the least. Just after midnight, we headed that way.

We stopped near the spot I planned to check, only to photograph a small group of Semipalmated and Pectoral Sandpipers. While Richard took photos, I scanned about. I then saw a single Sabine’s some yards away. I alerted Richard. After scanning about a bit, we found a dozen more.

Excitedly we approached the group of gulls and began photographing. The gulls would lift off, and take turns harassing us. Such behavior is typical of breeding birds, defending their young. I took advantage of their tenacity and let my shutter fly. After gathering more photos than necessary, I began the search for the young. Soon enough I found a single bird across a pond, sitting with an adult. It was nothing more than a single ball of grey fluff. So adorable, and so vulnerable.

Our intrusion lasted only a moment. We recognized the stress we were causing the birds, and left. It couldn’t have been better; finding Sabine’s, which I’d barely seen, and having the opportunity to see both adult and young at such close proximity. The experience will stick with me for my lifetime.

The tragedy comes with the benefits of digital photography. Through some glitch, I lost nearly all photos from that evening. Luckily, I have one. It is a photo in the striking midnight sun of the arctic, of a bird I will never forget, and hope to see again, somewhere on the open arctic tundra.

 

The Pygmy Nuthatch

by Bryce W. Robinson

Pygmy Nuthatch

I’ve been very fortunate to bird as often as possible while I’m busy in grad school. The semester is nearing a close, which means the work load has increased, exponentially, it seems. Luckily, I’ve managed my time such that I have been able to bird one day every week.

I’ve found myself part of a great birding crew. It’s been a blast, as we seem to find something notable every time we go out. Yesterdays star bird was a Little Gull, an incredible bird for central Idaho. It was very distant across Cascade Reservoir, so no photos. I did, however, manage to fulfill a photography goal I’ve been after for a while

Until yesterday, it seemed that I’d only seen the Pygmy Nuthatch- Sitta pygmaea, at the very top of tall conifers, out of reach even for my 300mm with a 1.4 tc attached. Any shot appeared a small dot on a tree, which of course does not honor the small nuthatch in the way it deserves. I consider the Pygmy Nuthatch to be one of the cutest birds of the forest. They are small and vocal, full of personality. With my photography, I’d like to capture that personality.

While checking the outflow of Cascade Reservoir yesterday, we found a small group of very vocal “Piggies”. They were low in the trees, feeding and flitting about. Fortunately, they’d pause and take note of me, allowing for some quick snaps of my shutter. Finally, I’d caught the personality of the little piggies.

IMG_0852 copyI think my interpretations of the birds behaviors are a little anthropocentric, but still, they seemed shy but inquisitive. Because of their size, appearance, and personality, I find them one of the funnest birds to interact with in the high pine forest.

 

 

Aging Accipiters

by Caitlin M. Davis

Hatch year (left) and adult (right) Sharp-shinned Hawks

Hatch year (left) and adult (right) Sharp-shinned Hawks, Accipiter striatus

What a difference a year makes!

Some Notes on the Gray-crowned Rosy Finch- Leucosticte tephrocotis

by Bryce W. Robinson

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Juvenile “tephrocotis” Gray-crowned Rosy Finch. Brooks Range, Alaska. July

Caitlin Davis recently shared some photos with me of a small group of Gray-crowned Rosy Finches that visited her this fall at the Goshutes in eastern Nevada. The photos showed two different types of Gray-crowned Rosy Finch, one with gray cheeks, the other with brown. The photos reminded me of the flocks I saw while counting migrants there last fall. I remember seeing the two cheek colors, along with a few Black Rosy Finches intermixed in the flocks, which was exciting. My exposure to the birds did not end with the Goshutes. Over the course of the winter I saw a number of birds, and studied the differences in plumage that I observed.

Adult "Tephrocotis" Gray-crowned Rosy Finch. Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October

Adult “tephrocotis” Gray-crowned Rosy Finch. Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October

"Hepburns" Gray-crowned Rosy FInch. Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October.

“Hepburns” Gray-crowned Rosy FInch. Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October.

The two types of plumage illustrated in Caitlin’s photos are a function of subspecies. There are six recognized subspecies in North America, most easily distinguished by the color of their cheek. Three subspecies have gray cheeks, while the others have brown cheeks. The”Hepburns”, a coastal gray cheeked group ranging from Alaska to northern California, winters in the interior west with another group, a brown cheeked bird, the nominate tephrocotis, an interior subspecies ranging from the Brooks Range of northern Alaska to the Rocky Mountains of the lower 48.

"Tephrocotis" (left) and "Littoralis" or "Hepburns" (right). Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October.

“tephrocotis” (left) and “littoralis” or “Hepburns” (right). Goshutes Mountains, Nevada. October.

I find it interesting that these birds form these large flocks, intermixed with obviously separate populations. What this speaks to is the nature of flocking in this species. I’d love to track each group, as they break apart with the onset of spring, and then form into their winter groups with the inception of fall.

After the past winter, I found an interest in the small fringillid. I spent a bit of time studying and learning parameters of the subspecies. After making plans to drive to the great north, I realized the potential of seeing the tephrocotis at the northern extent of its range. That thought was ultimately exciting, but even more so was my excitement when I actually found a small group in the Brooks Range of northern Alaska. I was only able to get photos of one cooperative juvenile, regrettably. The adults were very shy, and stayed far from range of my lens.

I plan to locate some flocks this winter, in hopes of studying the birds in the field and getting some additional photographs. What I would like to work out is the ability to sex each individual, and hopefully find a bird in its first basic plumage. I’ve learned some of the characteristics of each sex, now I just need to test those in the field.

After reviewing a photo from last winter, I noticed an aspect of the birds plumage I haven’t read about or heard of. In the photo below, the bird has a great deal of black on the cheeks, rather than brown or grey. This is worth some thought, and one of the reasons I’m anxious to find a large flock and see if there are other instances of variability. Perhaps it is an expression from a lineage closely tied to the Black Rosy Finch. After all, I’ve heard buzz of the possibility of the North American Rosy Finches being once again lumped as a single species. It would be fun to really get to the bottom of how different each population truly is.

"Hepburns" Gray-crowned Rosy Finch, exhibiting a great deal of ashy black on its cheek. West Desert of Utah, January.

“Hepburns” Gray-crowned Rosy Finch, exhibiting a great deal of ashy black on its cheek. West Desert of Utah, January.

Maybe, if I have some luck this winter and really get to know this species, I can illustrate what I’ve learned about how to distinguish individuals to age, sex, and subspecies. And the intellectual journey continues.

 

Referenced information:

Macdougall-Shackleton, Scott A., Richard E. Johnson and Thomas P. Hahn. 2000. Gray-crowned Rosy-Finch (Leucosticte tephrocotis), The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; Retrieved from the Birds of North America Online:http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/559 doi:10.2173/bna.559 Accessed 11/10/2013