Showing posts with label shorebirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shorebirds. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Shorebird conundrum


So, in terms of conservation, which of these shorebirds in the top row and bottom left and bottom centre is not quite like the others (the photo in the bottom right hand is a clue)? This quizz pertains to a newly published study that showed high survivability in 6 species of shorebirds at 9 breeding sites across the North American Arctic in 2010–2014: American Golden Plover, Dunlin, Semipalmated Sandpiper, Western Sandpiper, Red-necked Phalarope, and Red Phalarope with one important difference. The conclusion of the paper is that the main conservation concern may be at stopover sites or wintering sites, see: rhttp://www.bioone.org/doi/10.1642/AUK-17-107.1 ... scroll down to see the answer:
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This study looked at breeding and survivorship of six species: Western Sandpiper (top left), Dunlin (top centre), American Golden-Plover (top right), Semipalmated Sandpiper (bottom left), Red-necked Phalarope (bottom centre) and also Red Phalarope (not pictured). They showed good breeding success and high survivorship in all except the arcticola subspecies of Dunlin. So how does the arcticola Dunlin differ from the others? Well, it breeds in North America but it winters in Asia and uses the East Asian Flyway (all of the others stay within the Americas). Stop-over sites in the East Asian Flyway have deteriorated so drastically and there is so much habitat loss that it affects survivorship. This is a major problem not just for these Dunlin but also for many Asian shorebirds such as the Spoon-billed Sandpiper (the clue is the bottom right photo of a Dunlin beside a Spoon-billed Sandpiper, a photo that I took in South Korea). It goes to show that even if all is well on the breeding grounds, a species can encounter great danger elsewhere in its range (on migration or on the wintering grounds). It is important to remember this connectivity and its consequences when we talk about Canadian Species At Risk.

Monday, August 7, 2017

Piping Plover Update 2017

In 2017 there have been at least two pairs of Piping Plover in the province (i.e. that we know of), one of which fledged at least one young (maybe more young fledged but this was hard to confirm given the difficulty of access). This year’s successful nesting attempt was near the always amazing Whitewater Lake, where two failed attempts occurred in 2012. This pair was first found by Julie Yatsko and Nicole MacPherson. In addition to this pair, a third banded Piping Plover was found by Colin Blyth and Gillian Richards. This bird was banded as an adult on Lake Sakakawea June 2015 near New Town, North Dakota and was observed on the 16th of June, 2017 near Coleharbor, North Dakota ten days before being photographed at Whitewater lake.   The photo below shows one of the unbanded birds believed to be the male of the nesting pair.


As a side note: While at Whitewater Lake, Colin Blyth found a male Cinnamon Teal on June 4th which was seen by me later the same day. Since Colin and Gillian had earlier found a hybrid Cinnamon Teal X Blue-wing Teal nearby, we studied this one as best we could and found no evidence of hybridisation (my photo below). Unfortunately, this bird was not found again in checks the following day nor in the days/weeks that followed.


This year was another great year for observing Clark's Grebe at Whitewater Lake. The Clark's Grebe in the below was paired with a bird that was either a Western Grebe or perhaps a hybrid an they fledged three young.



There is always a rarity or two at Whitewater Lake and this year at least three "obliging" Glossy Ibis were outstanding amongst the hundreds of White-faced Ibis (and the many Great Egrets, Snowy Egrets and Cattle Egrets).


Special thanks to all who reported their sightings and helped monitor our Threatened and Endangered species with such great care and consideration to ensure the birds were not disturbed: Colin Blyth, Ken De Smet, Nicole MacPherson, Ken Porteous, Gillian Richards, Julie Yatsko (and of course Wally Jansen and Jake Peters for their great find and efforts in 2016). If anyone with a canoe or kayak (or canoeing skills) is interested in helping out next year, please get in touch!

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

The Importance of Important Bird Areas

On Sunday 24th July I photographed this Pectoral Sandpiper in a mixed species flock at Delta Marsh Important Bird Area (four photos below).  It turns out this bird, an adult male, was fitted with a satellite transmitter by the Max Planck Institutes (https://mpg.de/institutes) on 28th May 2016 in Barrow, Alaska. On his fall migration, this male Pectoral Sandpiper went from Barrow to the southwestern area of Hudson Bay, where there are no less than nine Important Bird Areas, and from there flew to Delta Marsh IBA (MB001).  He arrived at Delta Marsh on the 23rd July or possibly the 22nd (the satellite tags have a 48-hour on and off schedule so it could have arrived one day before transmitting a signal from Delta) and stayed until the 26th July. He took flight in the early morning of 26th July and went to the Whitewater Lake Important Bird Area (MB015).







As we discover more and more about the incredible journeys of shorebirds, what I find most amazing about this particular story is the way this bird has used a series of Important Bird Areas during his southbound migration. The Important Bird Area program is designed to identify and work towards securing a network of key sites along migratory flyways (as well as other important habitats). This network recognises the importance of hemispheric connections and international collaboration for the conservation of migratory species. This movement of this Pectoral Sandpiper demonstrates nicely how this network of sites works for an individual. From the Hudson Bay IBAs to Delta Marsh and onto Whitewater Lake, this individual is connecting the dots in a very real way!(see http://ibacanada.org/ to find details and a map of these IBAs)


As this bird moves south to South America, perhaps even as far south as Argentina, it is quite likely that other IBAs along the way will provide important stopover and refueling places. Without all of those, we would be unable to enjoy their magnificence up here in the north. You can read about some recent findings on this amazing species here: https://www.nature.com/articles/nature20813.epdf?referrer_access_token=wp9yadTPPo1--TbIkmdHr9RgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0MNwzKCl3iiqhEiO_VlpLQT9Hc-9evJWnZQLEY4etso-WcGQjyn9LLpI1vyYM3LZil9e4G4cM_2NeyXEuz7xF6YfsWLOiHQ0Z0_s0jk40wBouWquZEV-0CCYhxhaP41ptfYavqfgQkItSBwSi5rC0D6xMYhO3bNj2N-V18tGGvWOw%3D%3D&tracking_referrer=www.popsci.com

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Three Manitoba birds added to Species At Risk Act

There is a short piece in CBC online today regarding recent additions to the Species At Risk Act (SARA). It also acknowledges our good work in projects such as the Manitoba Breeding Bird Atlas (www.birdatlas.mb.ca), the Important Bird Area program (https://importantbirdareasmb.ca/) and even some shorebirds surveys we did in the north. I'd be remiss if I didn't mention the huge role that the Breeding Bird Survey (BBS: https://ec.gc.ca/reom-mbs/default.asp?lang=En&n=416B57CA-1) plays in determining trend, a critical piece of any designation, and the significant role of Manitoba birders in the BBS. Here is a link to a CBC article on these recent additions:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/manitoba-bird-species-added-to-endangered-list-1.3659784


The photo shows a Horned Grebe. I took this shot recently in Churchill, Manitoba. Thank you to everyone involved in all these important programs!

Sunday, October 11, 2015

ON THE VERY BRINK...


I photographed this Spoon-billed Sandpiper (Calidris pygmaea) in South Korea in 2005 (the bird on the right is a Dunlin) but this critically endangered species in now on the very brink of extinction. Their massive decline, and the decline of many other species that use the East Asian-Australasian Flyway is strongly linked to the ecological devastation of major stop-over sites (much more so than to changes on the breeding grounds or wintering grounds) as this post http://www.birdskoreablog.org/?p=16846  and this article http://news.sciencemag.org/environment/2015/10/hostile-shores discuss. This is a compelling example of the need for full life cycle monitoring and conservation planning.

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Surveying Whitewater Lake IBA

On August 2, 2015, Jo Swartz and I surveyed the Whitewater Lake Important Bird Area (IBA), tallying shorebirds and other species both inside and near the IBA.  We found 102 species including 22 species of shorebirds plus a few more en route. Some highlights and high counts for the IBA are given below. I also decided to use this chance to talk a little bit about the area and its birds.

Whitewater Lake is a closed basin and has alternated from periods of being bone dry (a few decades ago) to being flooded well past its former shoreline as is the current situation. When I arrived in Manitoba in the early 2000s, the lake was slowly filling back up again and was very shallow at that time. I remember when the whole basin had a shallow layer of water, that the shorebird flocks numbered in the tens of thousands. I recall watching with friends as a Prairie Falcon put up a massive and dense cloud of shorebirds. Then by the mid 2000s, as the lake was getting deeper and the emergent vegetation growing tall in many areas, the lake seemed transformed from a shorebirding destination to a site for rare long-legged waders. In 2006, Ron Bazin and I confirmed breeding of White-faced Ibis in Manitoba for the first time and many rare herons began appearing more and more regularly. In addition to the White-faced Ibis, Great Egrets and Cattle Egrets established colonies and Snowy Egrets were eventually confirmed breeding by Ken De Smet in 2011. All this high water and the great fetch of the prairie winds eventually breached the dyke structures that were built to create cells in the southeastern corner of the lake, such that by 2014 they were “united” with the lake and the cattail beds largely drowned out. The road to the main viewing mound is collapsing and is not currently safe to drive. The shorebirds are no longer as concentrated as they used to be and water logged fields one or two miles from the lake are mow the best places to look for them. Although these areas are not currently within the IBA, some of the wetland-upland complexes around the lake represent important ephemeral habitats that host great diversity and concentrations, as well as high productivity.

To give you a bit of a sense of the lake and its turbulent history , here are a few photos I took on this trip. The first shows what used to be a house on road 19N. The whole road has been washed away, although its slightly raised and compacted bed has allowed the cattails to take hold in what is otherwise a flooded extension of the lake approximately 2 km from the former shoreline.The second photo gives a wider angle of the same area.




This photo shows a former road allowance / “farm road” that has been eroded away and continues to be ground down by the wind and wave action.

The areas well away from the lake proper are now the best shorebird habitat as shown in the photo below (the shallow basin of the main lake used to be THE place in the early 2000s):
Not so very long ago, many of the long-legged waders that are now considered to be Whitewater Lake specialties were mega-rarities in Manitoba. This changed in the mid 2000s. One of the areas special birds (considering they are extremely rare anywhere else in Manitoba) is Snowy Egret and on August 2, we were treated to great views of this individual. I thought at first that this bird might be a juvenile as I saw the long yellow stripe up the back of the leg but the nuptial plumes of the rear crown and lower back made me realize this must be an adult.

Although they have been difficult to find this year, Whitewater Lake is THE place in Manitoba to find Cattle Egret as well. I didn’t manage to get any photos of the Cattle Egrets we saw on this surveying effort but I have added this photo taken last year.

It should be mentioned that these smaller egrets are still rather uncommon and by far the most common egret breeding at Whitewater lake is Great Egret (we only counted 35 on the day but many more were likely hidden in currently inaccessible areas). This photo was taken the following week:


Before proceeding to some of the highlights of the survey, it is worth a little flashback of some of the many rarities that have graced Whitewater Lake, particularly in the heron family. They included frequent sightings of Little Blue Heron as shown here from a few years ago (in fact we wonder if they may have bred here):


And other rarities have included Tricolored Heron and Yellow-crowned Night-Heron as shown here:

Of course there are also lots of the "regular" herons. This American Bittern tried the you-can't -see-me pose as we were surveying this Sunday. In recent years, Least Bittern, a species that seems to be expanding both northward and westward in Manitoba, has also been on territory in the lake's now extensive reed beds. Black-crowned Night-Heron also breeds here and we counted 59 on the day including some juveniles.

Another of the star attractions of Whitewater lake is White-faced Ibis. We counted 145 of these beautiful birds (quite the change from 10 years ago when this species was an RBA alert!). This photo shows a small flock and a little bit of the plumage variation at this time of year, especially how the facial pattern begins to change in late July as they transition from breeding to non-breeding plumage. White-faced Ibis is now the common ibis at Whitewater lake; however, Glossy Ibis has also recently become almost annual (especially in June) so one has to be very careful in the later summer and fall with the ID of Plegadis ibises (all of the birds in this photo are White-faced Ibis). In addition, there is a relatively recent record of White Ibis.   
As you would expect with a wetland complex of this magnitude, rails also abound here. It was late in the year to get a good count on rails (they are less vocal now),  but we saw and heard both Sora and Virgina Rail while counting. This photo of a Virginia Rail was taken at the lake earlier this year. Yellow Rail also occurs further from the lake in sedge meadow habitat. By far the most ubiquitous member of the rail family is American Coot and we counted 4,592 of them on the day.

August is a difficult time to be counting waterfowl when many are far from the observer and in eclipse plumage but we did our best. An example would be a day-total of 2,575 Mallards. American White Pelicans are easier to count and our tally was 1,211 on the day, although this is not a breeding site for this species. We counted 199 Western Grebes including many with young as shown in the two photos below, although the real highlight was seeing a Clark's Grebe with young (a little too far for good photos). In the five years of fieldwork  for the Manitoba Breeding Bird Atlas, nobody managed to get confirmed breeding evidence of Clark's Grebe so this was a little bitter-sweet!

 
Even though Whitewater lake is not as good for shorebirds as it was 10 years ago, this is still an important breeding site for "prairie wetland species" such as American Avocet, Marbled Godwit, Upland Sandpiper, Willet and Wilson's Phalarope. Naturally, this is also a major staging area for thousands of arctic breeding shorebirds. In late July and early August, the American Avocets gather in large flocks, presumably a mix of local breeders and migrants, and can offer an impressive spectacle when they form tight flocks feeding in a "vortex". On this day our count of  3,123 American Avocets included a few such feeding flocks. The first photo below shows one of these avocet swarms but because the views were distant I have added three photos taken at Whitewater Lake last year to illustrate this behaviour.






The most numerous shorebird on this count was Stilt Sandpiper (3,291 in total), so I have included a few photos of some of their flocks below. In each case, these photos only show a tiny portion of a larger flock. If you look closely you may pick out a few other shorebirds such as Wilson's Phalarope and Semipalmated Plover in the mix. The third most abundant shorebird species (after Stilt Sandpiper and American Avocet) was Short-billed Dowitcher  with a count of 2,223 but there were more Limnodromus sp. and some Long-billed Dowitchers as well. If you look closely at the fourth photo in this blog post, you may notice a dark band in the darker blue water in the background, which is a flock of dowitchers. We also had a good count of Wilson's Phalarope with 843 including many juveniles. Two small flocks of 14 Hudsonian Godwits were a special treat as they are not so easy to find here at this time of year.




One of the biggest highlights in our total of 22 shorebird species was Buff-breasted Sandpiper. This special bird is declining in number, causing concern. They breed in the high arctic and migrate all the way to the grasslands of southern South America. They are not easy to find in southern Manitoba any more and Whitewater Lake in early August represents the best chance of finding them. They like "short grass" habitat types such as wet fields, stubble fields, sod farms, and large flats and are sometimes found alongside American Golden-Plover (another high arctic breeder heading to the South American grasslands) and other shorebirds that frequent these habitats. This means that they are not often close to the water's edge where the other shorebirds are and you have to make an effort to find them. On this day, we spotted two on open mud far back from the main shorebird flocks. See if you can spot one of them in the first photo below. If that doesn't work, try the second photo which shows three individuals or the third photo for a closer look. The last two photos were taken in northern Manitoba and not at Whitewater Lake but I have used them to give you a sense of this beautiful bird and how they blend into their habitat.



There are also often raptors here and at this time of the year both Peregrine and Prairie Falcons like to put up the shorebird flocks. On this day we only recorded one Peregrine; however, the following week Tim Poole and I watched this Prairie Falcon soaring above us:


Of course, there is a lot more to Whitewater Lake than the birds shown here. There are also many passerines to look for and I leave you with one simple photo of a Yellow-headed Blackbird to summarise the rest of the amazing biodiversity at this Important Bird Area.

I hope you enjoy this brief introduction to this Manitoba hotspot. Please contact me with questions! There is also another recent article of interest on the lake at: http://manitobacooperator.ca/country-crossroads/whitewater-lake-region-under-threat/

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Seal River IBA

Greeting from the Seal River Estuary Important Bird Area (IBA) (Manitoba, Canada - along Hudson's Bay coast) where I have been conducting shorebird counts at the request of Oceans North for the last few days. I will compile a full post soon; however, here is a short teaser...

One of the notewrothy sightings has been that for the last 2 days Brant (pale-bellied form) have been moving in small flocks along the coast.

Shorebird tallies have been reasonably high. This beautiful Buff-breasted Sandpiper was one of 22 that stopped off in the Seal River Estuary Important Bird Area on their way from the high arctic to southern South America. This species and many others will need a network of high quality sites, such as IBAs, to fuel their migration. Here are three photos of this magnificent shorebird (all are juveniles as seen by the scaly mantle).




Unless you spend time on their breeding grounds, one dones''t often get to see the super streaky plumage of juvenile Dunlin- here is one of my favourite photos of these shorebirds.

Despite their flocking behaviour, shorebirds sometimes display aggression while foraging. These Pectoral sandpipers are squabbling over the rich pickings on the Hudson Bay coastal flat. This photo also reveals the "triple barred" appearance of the underwing that can be a useful feature in identifying Pectoral Sandpipers in flight at a distance.

And here are two photos of a bathing juvenile White-rumped Sandpiper.


Stay tuned for more to come...
 
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