A flock of Tundra Swans approaching |
One of the many flocks of Common Redpolls zipping by the point |
A flock of mostly Greater Scaups flying by |
An adult and a juvenile Tundra Swan |
It was almost a record poor year for Boreal Chickadees at TLBO. This one visited the point in mid-October |
No real rarities were seen but an American Dipper, flying along the lakeshore on the 27th, was a new
species for TLBO as was Evening Grosbeak,
three of which flew by on the 15th. A shorebird looking like a Dunlin, seen
on the 19th, would've also been a new species had it been positively identified
as such but the views weren't sufficient enough to confirm the species. A
juvenile Yellow-billed Loon was seen
on three different days, two Snow Geese
were seen mixed in the swan flocks, one on the 15th and the other on the 17th, and
an unidentified Ptarmigan was spotted
on the opposite shore on the 23rd. Birds behind the usual departure time were
few but included a Greater White-fronted
Goose on the 15th, a Sandhill Crane
on the 17th, an Osprey and two Varied Thrushes on the 18th, a Northern Shoveler on the 23rd and a Yellow-rumped Warbler on the 27th. The
last effort for owl banding on the night of the 14th was a success with 4 Boreal Owls captured.
For about a week this juvenile Yellow-billed Loon was a regular sight around the point |
A hatch-year (i.e. juvenile) Boreal Owl - one of about 40 banded this year! |
Below are the season's raptor counts, species organized
in the order of abundance. Notice that these numbers include both the birds
observed flying by the observatory in migration flight as well as birds just
hanging around. Bald Eagle gets the biggest gain from this as there were a few local
birds present throughout the season.
Red-tailed Hawk 581
Sharp-shinned Hawk 570
Golden Eagle 293
Northern Harrier 285
Rough-legged Hawk 197
Bald Eagle 183
American Kestrel 179
Merlin 90
Northern Goshawk 84
Osprey 54
Peregrine Falcon 34
Swainson's Hawk 13
Gyrfalcon 2
Turkey Vulture 1
= 2565 (+ a number of unidentified raptors)
Probably one of the locally born Bald Eagles, this juvenile visited the gull feeding station regularly for about a month |
Finally, as the final thoughts of the season, it is time
to thank various people for their efforts to keep the projects going. A big
thank you for all the field volunteers, particularly Sarah Nägl, Ariel Lenske,
Gwen Baluss, Julie Bauer, Vesta Mather and Chris Sukha, for all the help you
provided. Doug Martens for providing the BIC with a comfortable accomodation, Ted
Murphy-Kelly for the help with all the logistics, and the Schonewilles for
dealing with the station gear and data related issues. Last but not the least,
thanks for all our financial supporters! See you next year!
As most already know, these blog entries are provided by BIC Jukka Jantunen. From the station managers (Ben Schonewille & Ted Murphy-Kelly), also thank you to Jukka for his exceptional dedication and attention to detail with running the station once again this year. Your hard work does not go unnoticed - our readers may be interested to know that Jukka spent nearly 600 hours at TLBO this fall, including over 275 hours conducting the visual migration counts !
As most already know, these blog entries are provided by BIC Jukka Jantunen. From the station managers (Ben Schonewille & Ted Murphy-Kelly), also thank you to Jukka for his exceptional dedication and attention to detail with running the station once again this year. Your hard work does not go unnoticed - our readers may be interested to know that Jukka spent nearly 600 hours at TLBO this fall, including over 275 hours conducting the visual migration counts !
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