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FW: Birding Community E-bulletin - November 2008

From:

Norm Saunders

Reply-To:

Norm Saunders

Date:

Sun, 2 Nov 2008 13:55:04 -0500

 

 

From: Paul J. Baicich [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Sunday, November 02, 2008 9:59 AM
To: Paul J. Baicich
Cc: Wayne Petersen
Subject: Birding Community E-bulletin - November 2008

 


THE BIRDING COMMUNITY E-BULLETIN
            November 2008
 
 
This Birding Community E-bulletin is being distributed through the generous
support of Steiner Binoculars as a service to active and concerned birders,
those dedicated to the joys of birding and the protection of birds and their
habitats. You can access an archive of past E-bulletins on the website of
the National Wildlife Refuge Association (NWRA):
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
  and on the birding pages for Steiner Binoculars
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin.html
                                    
                        
RARITY FOCUS 
 
In our monthly "Rarity Focus" we try to inform readers about interesting
rare birds in the U.S. or Canada that appeared long enough in the previous
month to entertain numerous observers. With these limitations in mind, we
tend to exclude rare birds that only appeared for one day ("one-day
wonders"), those that were seen on pelagic trips, and those that were found
in really remote locations (e.g., Alaskan "outposts") where multiple
observers could not reasonably pursue the rarity over multiple days.
 
This month's rarity is a bird that marginally fits this definition. .
 
On the morning of 16 October, Oscar Johnson found a Dusky Warbler at
Antonelli Pond in Santa Cruz, California. The bird was foraging among
willows by the edge of the pond, along with a group of Yellow-rumped
Warblers. Once Johnson and Ryan Terrill were able to obtain definitive
looks, they sent out the word to other birders.
 
The Dusky Warbler is a vagrant from Asia. It breeds in Siberia and northern
and central China, and typically winters from southern China and the north
Indian subcontinent throughout much of Southeast Asia. (For identification
details, see your National Geographic guide, page 348-9, or in the "big"
Sibley, page 395.)
 
There have been about a dozen previous reports of this species from Alaska
since 1977, most of them in the fall. There are also about 10 previous
reports from California since 1980, most of them occurring between late
September and early November, and almost all from coastal locations. There
are also two records from Baja California, Mexico.
 
Curiously, in 1997 a Dusky Warbler was discovered in the very same area as
last month's bird!
 
This month's bird continued to be seen until 18 October, during which time
it was observed by many delighted birders. It spent most of its time
skulking in the branches overhanging the water within about a foot or two of
the water. Unfortunately, 18 October was the last day it was seen. 
 
You can view photos of the bird taken by Brian Sullivan here:
http://briansullivanphotography.com/Galleries/Dusky_Warbler_10-18-2008/index
.html 
 
And there are also some group pictures of gratified visiting birders taken
by Cindy Cummings:
http://www.baymoon.com/~birds/duskywarbler.html
 
 
ONE-DAY, ONE-OBSERVER WONDER: POSSIBLE JACK SNIPE
 
In the category of "one-day wonders," and a reminder that anything is
possible, consider this shorebird found by Mike Patterson on 18 October just
east of Astoria, Oregon.
 
In a field full of many Wilson's Snipes and a few Pectoral Sandpipers;
Patterson came across a smaller snipe, about 20% smaller, with an all-dark
crown and other field marks that suggested that it was a Jack Snipe. The
bird was observed in direct comparison to Wilson's Snipes with which it was
associating. (For identification comparisons, see a National Geographic
guide, page 190-1.)
 
Jack Snipe is a Eurasian species that breeds in Scandinavia and n. Siberia
and winters mainly from the British Isles and nw. Europe to c. Africa and
the Indian subcontinent. It is an extreme rarity along both the Atlantic and
Pacific Coasts of the United States, with only about half a dozen reports
from North America (i.e., Newfoundland, Alaska, California, Oregon, and
Washington). Curiously, two of these reports were also from Oregon - one in
October 2004 and one in November 2007.
 
Unsuccessful searches -were made for several days following the original
sighting. Unfortunately the snipe was not photographed, but Patterson made
this intriguing sketch:
http://home.pacifier.com/~neawanna/temp/snipe20081017d%20001.jpg
 
 
WHAT IS THE RAREST BIRD IN THE BAHAMAS, AND CAN IT BE SAVED?
 
Arguably, the Brown-headed Nuthatch might be considered the rarest nesting
bird in the Bahamas. The nuthatch occurs only in the Caribbean pine forests
of Grand Bahama Island. 
 
James Bond, the famous ornithologist and actual namesake for Ian Fleming's
spy character, first described this bird in the 1930s, and considered it to
be a subspecies ("insularis") of the Brown-headed Nuthatch of the United
States. Grand Bahama Island is the only place outside the U.S. where
Brown-headed Nuthatches occur.
 
Recent studies of this bird on Grand Bahama by Prof. William Hayes of Loma
Linda University, California, and Prof. Gary Slater of the Ecostudies
Institute, Mount Vernon, Washington, suggest that the bird may be a full
species, distinguished from its continental relatives by its longer bill,
shorter wings, whiter belly, and distinctive voice.
 
Unfortunately, the bird is threatened with extinction, with only 1,000
individuals thought to exist on Grand Bahama. The nuthatches are at risk
from accelerated human development, predation by invasive species (e.g.,
snakes, cats, and raccoons), and storm damage. 
 
For more details see:
http://tinyurl.com/4g799o
and
http://www.ecoinst.org/files/bahama_nuthatch_paper.pdf
 
 
KIRTLAND'S WARBLER DOING WELL ON BREEDING GROUNDS
 
And while we are on the subject of the Bahamas, Kirtland's Warblers that
nested in Michigan earlier this year have by this season migrated to the
Bahamas. And this year there will be more of them than usual!
 
The Kirtland's Warbler is a tremendous success story that has benefitted
from the Endangered Species Act. Even though the species' breeding success
is dependent on northern Michigan's jack pine ecosystem, ongoing habitat
management continues to aid in the species' recovery. Michigan's Department
of Natural Resources (DNR) recently released the findings from last season's
warbler surveys. The 2008 nesting population actually exceeded the goal for
de-listing that was previously set forth in the Kirtland's Warbler Recovery
Plan. The singing males counted in Michigan in the 2008 nesting season were
1,791 during the official survey period, up from 1,697 in 2007. The lowest
numbers ever recorded were in 1974 and 1987, when only 167 singing males
were found.
 
Amazingly, and for the second consecutive year, singing males were also
found outside of Michigan - nine in Wisconsin and one in Ontario.
 
Although the news is good, the species is by no means "out of the woods"
yet.
 
For details on the 2008 survey, see this summary from the Michigan DNR:
http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153--200899--,00.html
 
 
MOVES TO PUSH MARBLED MURRELET OFF THE ENDANGERED SPECIES LIST
 
The California, Oregon, and Washington populations of Marbled Murrelet have
been listed as Threatened under the Endangered Species Act since 1992. This
status is based on the assumption that birds nesting in these states
represent a distinct population (a term that means the population is
genetically or otherwise biologically distinct from other Marbled Murrelet
populations, and that it represents a disjunct distribution that is
otherwise separate from other populations).
 
About six years ago, two timber groups filed a lawsuit to compel the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service to conduct a five-year review of the status of the
species. The Department of the Interior settled the case by agreeing to do
the status review. In 2004, the Service completed its review, stating that
the Marbled Murrelets in these three states did not comprise a distinct
population segment. However, at that time the Service did not de-list the
species.
 
The same timber groups filed a petition in May of this year to compel the
Service to de-list the murrelet. In response, the USFWS announced in early
October that it finds that the petition may be warranted, and it is
initiating another status review. The 90-day review will examine the
range-wide status of the species, soliciting as much relevant scientific and
commercial data as possible. At the conclusion of the status review, the
Service will issue a 12-month finding on the recent petition.
 
 
A CLOSER LOOK AT "OPEN FIELDS"
 
One element in the recently-passed Farm Bill, particularly a feature that
has been under the proverbial radar, is the "Open Fields" portion of the
legislation. It may have been ignored mainly because it was such a small
part of the multi-billion-dollar Farm Bill.
 
This portion of the bill was "only" $50 million over four years (2009-2012),
yet it could have real significance for birders and other members of the
outdoor-oriented public. The Open Fields effort, now awkwardly called the
Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program, is designed to help
states enroll private land in programs for public access involving
wildlife-dependent recreation. 
 
This puts a potential additional layer on the Conservation Reserve Program
(CRP), to provide public access on private lands. There are already 21
states that have modest public access programs related to
wildlife-associated recreation on these private lands. The $50 million could
be used to enhance these existing programs or establish programs in states
without public access programs.
 
If the public is paying for conservation (i.e., CRP) on private lands, the
reasoning goes, shouldn't the public also have some access? For birders,
this could mean increased birding opportunities.
 
The current pending questions are: How can states fully take advantage of
this new resource? Who is at the table to make sure that access really takes
place? 
 
The Farm Service Administration (FSA) is expected to publish a rule on this
issue sometime near the first of the year, after which there will be a
60-day comment period.
 
So far, it is the hunting and fishing communities that have been pressing
for Open Fields, not organized birders. Birders could surely benefit from
legislation, but currently as sideline observers only.
 
 
BOOK NOTES: MEXICAN RTP GUIDE
 
Although we may have seemingly over-reported on Roger Tory Peterson lately,
it is his centennial year after all, and there is one additional recent
Peterson book development that deserves your attention this month.
 
In June 2006 we discussed The Peterson Field Guide, AVES DE MEXICO, by R. T.
Peterson and E. L. Chalif, originally published in 1989. This was a
fascinating composite field guide, using illustrations by Peterson from
several of his previous field guides and describing all the species of
Mexico in Spanish.
 
While it was a valuable tool in the field for Spanish speakers, the
prohibitive cover price of $40 made it difficult to keep in print. 
 
In an attempt to get a more affordable edition of the guide produced,
publishers at Houghton Mifflin asked birders for information about the
virtues of this field guide and whether it was worthwhile to reprint it. 
 
The upshot is that Diana Publishing in Mexico has, indeed, reprinted this
unique guide. The price is reported to be less expensive than in the
original edition, particularly for Mexicans. (It may be about $26.)
 
The guide is not perfect, with somewhat dated taxonomy and plate
reproductions which are not of the best quality; however, it's the only
guide in Spanish with essentially all the birds of Mexico (and parts of
Central America) described and illustrated. Look for it very soon. This
reprinting is another valuable contribution in the increasing flurry of new
Neotropical field guides.
 
 
MEXICAN BAN ON PARROT TRADE
 
A bill to ban the capture and export of Mexican wild parrots was introduced
one year ago by the Environment Commission of the Deputy Chamber. It was
passed in the Mexican Senate on 22 April, 2008 with near unanimous support
and recently signed by President Felipe Calderon. The bill will go into
effect once it is published in the official Congressional diary.
 
Mexico has 22 species of parrots and macaws, and roughly 90 percent of all
them are in some category of risk. The latest Mexican classification (yet to
be published) lists 11 species as endangered, five as threatened, four
requiring special protection, and two as yet unclassified. 
 
"In 2007, only six species of parrots in Mexico were listed as endangered.
This new classification almost doubles that number," said Juan Carlos Cantu
Guzman, director of Mexican programs for Defenders of Wildlife. "It is
readily apparent that unless we immediately halt the capture and trade in
all parrots and macaws, we could lose these species entirely."
 
An estimated 65,000-78,500 wild parrots and macaws are captured illegally
each year, with more than 75 percent of them dying before ever reaching a
purchaser. Approximately 50,000 to 60,000 parrots die this way each year in
Mexico. 
 
Mexico only allows the sale of parrots via legal channels, with 3,000 to
4,000 parrots allocated for capture each year, according to government
quotas. Unfortunately there is no system to differentiate between legally
and illegally captured birds.
 
While this bill marks a victory for parrot conservation, much has yet to be
done. Enforcing this legislation is the critical next step. 
 
See here for more details:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/10/0801002-parrot-trade.html 
 
 
IBA NEWS: NYC MARKS NINTH URBAN TREATY
 
Last month, New York City became the ninth city in the nation to sign an
Urban Conservation Treaty for Migratory Birds. This Treaty is a partnership
among The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, New York City Parks and Recreation,
Audubon New York, and New York City Audubon. The partners commit to restore,
conserve, and protect valuable bird habitat within New York City's urban
environment and to develop an informed public through education and training
programs. 
 
What does this have to do with Important Bird Areas?
 
As part of the Treaty, the partners will work together to improve New York
City's bird habitat by increasing stewardship, providing restoration of key
areas, and ensuring proper monitoring in all New York City natural areas,
including the City's IBAs, Forever Wild sites, and other critical habitats.
The City will also increase and improve protected natural areas, restore,
and protect existing nesting areas such as North Brother Island and the
Rockaway Beach Endangered Species Nesting Area, and develop a green-collar
workforce through the Green Apple Corps program.
 
Partners will also work to heighten public awareness of birds and the
importance of open space to bird conservation through public programs and
events, including education programs for school children and citizen
scientists.
 
This is the kind of effort which deepens the IBA approach, broadening
stewardship and education.
 
The Urban Conservation Treaty Program started in 1999, when New Orleans
became the first Urban Conservation Treaty. Other cities in the program are
Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, Portland (OR), St. Louis, Nashville, and
Anchorage.
 
For information on IBA sites in New York, see:
http://ny.audubon.org/BirdSci_IBAs.html
 
For additional information about worldwide IBA programs, and those across
the U.S., check the National Audubon Society's Important Bird Area program
web site at: 
http://www.audubon.org/bird/iba/
 
 
TIP OF THE MONTH: PITY THE ELECTED BUREAUCRAT
 
An election year is a time when Americans have an opportunity to make
decisions that impact the country, the state, and the county and town where
you live. No matter who is elected to fill various political positions, we
can be pretty sure that he or she under-appreciates the value of birds and
other natural resources. It's just reality.
 
For our tip of the month, we suggest that you make an effort to track down
newly elected (or re-elected) officials where you live. Let them know that
not only are birds and their habitats important to you, but that you would
be delighted to share and show them to the official or his/her staff at a
local park, refuge, forest, and/or nature center. 
 
Don't underestimate the impact of a personal bird-and-habitat experience for
an otherwise often oblivious elected official or staff member. It makes the
issue "real," and there is no substitute for such an experience. 
 
 
NEW MIGRATORY BIRD STAMP ART CHOSEN
 
In mid-October, in Bloomington, Minnesota, a panel of five judges chose the
artwork which will grace the 2009 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation
Stamp (aka, the "Duck Stamp"). The winning artwork depicting Long-tailed
Duck, was by Joshua Spies of Watertown, South Dakota. The image will appear
on the new 2009-2010 Stamp, and will be available on 1 July.

Proceeds for the $15-stamp go to support securing grassland and wetlands for
the National Wildlife Refuge System, to the tune of about $23 million
collected per year.
 
You can find more information and an image of the upcoming artwork here:
http://www.fws.gov/duckstamps/
 
In the meantime, Congress has not acted to increase the cost of the
individual stamp, which has remained at $15 since 1991, the longest fixed
rate in the Stamp's 75-year history.
 
 
REFUGE SYSTEM AWARDS: LOOKING FOR NOMINATIONS
 
The 2009 National Wildlife Refuge System Awards are sponsored by the
National Wildlife Refuge Association and the National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation. The awards honor outstanding accomplishments by Refuge Managers,
Refuge System Employees, Volunteers, and Friends Groups. A number of
award-winners from previous years have been particularly bird-focused.
 
Award recipients will receive a monetary award ($1000 for Refuge Manager,
Employee and Volunteer awards, $2000 for Friends Group), and paid travel
expenses to the award presentation in the Washington DC area next February
and March. 
 
Nominations are still open, due no later than 15 November 2008. For details
and to download the required nominations form, visit:
http://www.refugeassociation.org/new-events/callfornom2008.html
 
- - - - - -
You can access past E-bulletins on the National Wildlife Refuge Association
(NWRA) website:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
  and on the birding pages for Steiner Binoculars
http://www.steiner-birding.com/bulletin.html
                                    
If you wish to distribute all or parts of any of the monthly Birding
Community E-bulletins, we simply request that you mention the source of any
material used. (Include a URL for the E-bulletin archives, if possible.) 
 
If you have any friends or co-workers who want to get onto the monthly
E-bulletin mailing list, have them contact either:
            
            Wayne R. Petersen, Director
            Massachusetts Important Bird Areas (IBA) Program
            Mass Audubon
            718/259-2178
             
                        or
            Paul J. Baicich            
            410/992-9736
             
                                                            
We never lend or sell our E-bulletin recipient list.