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FW: Birding Community E-Bulletin - October 2011

From:

Norm Saunders

Reply-To:

Norm Saunders

Date:

Wed, 5 Oct 2011 19:19:39 -0400

 

 

From: Paul J. Baicich [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 05, 2011 6:17 PM
To: Paul J. Baicich
Cc: Wayne Petersen
Subject: Birding Community E-Bulletin - October 2011

 


THE BIRDING COMMUNITY E-BULLETIN
         October 2011

This Birding Community E-bulletin is being distributed to active and
concerned birders, those dedicated to the joys of birding and the protection
of birds and their habitats. 

This issue is sponsored by NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, publishers of acclaimed
birding books and field guides, available wherever books are sold:
www.shopng.com/birdbooks


[]
  
You can access an archive of past E-bulletins on the website of the National
Wildlife Refuge Association (NWRA):
www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html


RARITY FOCUS

On 14 September Shep Thorp, Roger Hunt, and Ruth Sullivan discovered a
Black-tailed Gull along the Tacoma, Washington, log booms on the northeast
shore of Commencement Bay.

This species breeds in e. China, North Korea, se. Siberia, Sakhalin, the
Kuril Islands, and Japan. It normally winters south to Taiwan. Curiously,
the first record of this species in North America (i.e., November 1954 at
San Diego, California) was originally suspected of being a ship-assisted
individual, possibly from Japanese or Korean waters. However, beginning in
1980, additional observations began to be reported, first from Alaskan
outposts and then from elsewhere. There are now over two dozen reports of
Black-tailed Gulls from Alaska, all between April and October. Farther south
along the Pacific Coast, from British Columbia to southern California, there
are also at least a half-dozen reports. Additionally, there are now about 20
reports along the Atlantic coast from Newfoundland to North Carolina.
Inland, there are scattered reports from Nunavut, Manitoba, Texas, Iowa, the
Great Lakes states, and elsewhere. 

Currently this species, almost unheard of in North America a quarter century
ago, is now seemingly possible to find practically anywhere in North America
and is now illustrated in almost all of the popular North American bird ID
guides.

The Black-tailed Gull at Commencement Bay was roosting on booms along with
California and Bonaparte's Gulls. Surprisingly, a Black-tailed Gull was at
this very same location in 2009, from 13 October to 7 November. It could
have been the same individual.

This recent Black-tailed Gull in Washington was observed almost daily by
many happy visiting birders through the end of the month. 


WHIMBREL LOSS RAISES ISSUES ACROSS THE CARIBBEAN

As part of an international effort to map shorebird migration, Whimbrels on
the Eastern Shore in Virginia have recently been fitted with satellite
tracking devices. Some of these birds have been tracked for years. This is a
project previously brought to the attention of E-bulletin readers, most
recently in July when we described the remarkable international journey of
one of these birds, a Whimbrel named "Hope": 
www.refugenet.org/birding/julsbc11.html#TOC05

Two other Whimbrels, a female named "Machi" and a male named "Goshen," have
also been tracked for several years. Last month, both Machi and Goshen
landed on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, after first having
successfully navigated their way through or around Tropical Storm Maria and
Hurricane Irene, respectively. Although they were not migrating together,
both stopped at Guadeloupe after encountering the two different storm
systems. Then, on the morning of 12 September, both satellite-tracked birds
were shot by hunters at two different wetlands in Guadeloupe. Not
surprisingly, the loss of these two individuals on the same day and on the
same island quickly raised international concerns from birders and
conservationists over the vulnerability of migratory shorebirds throughout
the Caribbean and the need for increased protection.

According to the United States Shorebird Conservation Plan, 28 of North
America's 57 shorebird species are now considered highly imperiled or of
high conservation concern in the U.S. Among these species, population
information suggests that Whimbrels may have declined by as much as 50
percent over the last several decades. Hunting and habitat loss are among
the leading causes for this decline. These factors are exacerbated during
migration following severe storms, when large numbers of shorebirds are
sometimes forced to land at often restricted Caribbean stopover sites.
Guadeloupe, Martinique, and Barbados are specifically islands where limited
natural or artificial wetlands (created to attract migrant shorebirds for
sport shooting) during fall migration account for tens of thousands of
shorebirds getting shot annually.

Fortunately, there has been some recent progress to change this activity on
Barbados, a story the E-bulletin highlighted in July 2009
www.refugenet.org/birding/julSBC09.html#TOC05

While hunters and bird conservationists on many of the islands from the
Bahamas to Barbados have formed partnerships to support wiser use of hunted
species and their habitats, adequate conservation regulations still seem to
be lacking.

Over many decades, the International Migratory Bird Treaty (IMBT) has
protected many bird species that migrate across international borders.
Unfortunately neither Guadeloupe nor Martinique which are operated as French
overseas departments is party to this Treaty. More importantly, birds which
are protected in the French overseas departments do not benefit from the
same level of protection that exists in metropolitan France. The European
Directives of Birds and Habitats, pillars of conservation of nature in
Europe, do not apply to these territories. Barbados, once a British colony
and now an independent state, is also not party to the IMBT.

These factors complicate matters considerably.

While birds are falling between the cracks of regulation and enforcement,
bird-conservation organizations across the Americas, including the Society
for the Conservation and Study of Caribbean Birds (SCSCB), are calling for
action to increase shorebird protection in the French West Indies. NGOs in
France, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, and Martinique have called for examining
a number of options, including the need for the following:
 - updating the standing of hunted species, notably shorebirds, according to
their population status;
 - adapting the hunting season to forbid hunting during periods of
reproduction, dependence, and prenuptial migration;
 - limiting the number of days of hunting and bag limits;
 - limiting the use of lead in wetland zones.

Lisa Sorenson, President of SCSCB commented, "This event has quickly raised
awareness of the issue of shorebird hunting and the need for updated hunting
regulations in the French West Indies in a way that was not possible
previously. We are optimistic that better hunting laws and other shorebird
conservation measures will come out of this experience." (Those interested
in writing to decision-makers in the Caribbean, with an emphasis on the
French West Indies, can contact Lisa Sorenson for some guidance at:
 )

To obtain further information, visit: 
http://ccb-wm.org/news/pressreleases_pdfs/20110912_Machi.pdf
and
www.birds.cornell.edu/roundrobin/2011/09/13/whimbrel-survives-tropical-storm
-shot-in-caribbean/


NEW DAKOTA GRASSLAND CONSERVATION AREA ESTABLISHED

At the beginning of the year, we described an ambitious U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service (USFWS) proposal to protect two million acres of vital grassland
habitat in the Dakotas. 
www.refugenet.org/birding/JanSBC11.html#TOC04

Viewed as a grassland corollary to the Service's Small Wetlands Acquisition
Program, the plan could become an easement-driven delivery system for native
prairie conservation, something which is currently a major bird-conservation
necessity.

On 6 September, USFWS Director Dan Ashe signed the Dakota Grassland
Conservation Area Environmental Assessment and Land Protection Plan. Through
this effort, the Service would seek to acquire easements from willing
sellers on approximately 240,000 acres of wetlands and 1,700,000 acres of
grasslands native prairie habitat to benefit birds and wildlife while at the
same time supporting traditional economic activities, specifically livestock
production. 

These conservation easements will allow lands to remain in private
ownership, in production, and on local tax rolls. Future funding for the
easements will be the crucial issue. Funding would be expected to come from
the Land and Water Conservation Fund and the Migratory Bird Conservation
Fund, not from general taxpayer dollars.

The Migratory Bird Conservation Commission (MBCC) opened the door to this
newest initiative for the Refuge System on 14 September. It approved funding
for 2,794 acres of initial grassland easements in South Dakota, the first
commitment under this new Dakota Grassland Conservation Area.


ACCESS MATTERS:  WHY SHOULD HOMEOWNERS TOLERATE US?

Sometime this fall or winter, you may be fortunate enough to visit
somebody's private home or yard where a "special bird" is being seen. It
could be a local or state rarity, a late-season hold-out, or a bird that
"neglected" to migrate.

In any case, somehow you will find out about such a bird, and somehow your
presence will be tolerated.

On 25 September, in Eastpoint, Florida, Fred Dietrich banded an adult male
Broad-billed Hummingbird at the home of Sheila Klink. There have been other
Broad-billed Hummingbirds seen in the sunshine state, but this one is only
the third to be banded. You can see photos of the bird here:
www.pbase.com/fdietrich/klink

Although the hummingbird was back defending its sugar-water feeder minutes
after being released, it only remained a couple of days in the yard. Still,
birders were almost immediately informed, given the street address and
backyard location, and were told, "Visitors are welcome to come and view the
bird and they don't need to call beforehand."

Unfortunately, birders often become too accustomed to this sort of
treatment. We shouldn't, however, because there is no guarantee that we will
always be welcome. Be sure to always thank such gracious hosts and be as
cordial as possible during your visit. Because, access matters!
 

TOO MANY PHARMACIES IN INDIA IGNORE DEADLY DRUG BAN

We've written multiple times about the impact of the drug diclofenac on the
vultures of the Indian subcontinent. This drug is responsible for
practically wiping out three species of Gyps vultures endemic to the region.
The E-bulletin covered this issue most recently in June:
www.refugenet.org/birding/junesbc11.html#TOC05

The manufacture and sale of diclofenac for veterinary use has been illegal
since 2006, when in May of that year the Indian Government banned diclofenac
for veterinary use. Similar bans in Nepal and Pakistan followed shortly
thereafter. Increased measures in India in August 2008 put additional
restrictions on the manufacture, sale and distribution of diclofenac and its
formulations for livestock use, along with violations being punishable by
imprisonment.

Unfortunately, farmers and livestock owners in the region continue to
purchase human diclofenac illegally in conveniently available large bottles
to treat their animals. In fact, over a third of Indian pharmacies are
ignoring a ban on a veterinary drug that has brought the country's vultures
to the brink of extinction, according to a new study in the science journal
QRYX.

From November 2007 to June 2010, more than 250 veterinary and general
pharmacies in 11 Indian states were surveyed. When specifically asked if
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for treating cattle were available,
diclofenac was recorded in 36 percent of the cases.

Lead author of the study, Dr. Richard Cuthbert, said: "Preventing the misuse
of human diclofenac for veterinary use remains the main challenge in halting
the decline of endangered vultures."

While the research shows that there is still widespread availability of
diclofenac, it also shows an increase in the availability of meloxicam
(found in 70 per cent of pharmacies), a drug that has very similar
therapeutic effects on livestock as diclofenac, yet is apparently safe for
vultures.

For more information, see here:
http://tinyurl.com/3shnss8


TEXAS AQUACULTURE COMPANY GUILTY OF KILLING PROTECTED WATERBIRDS

Seaside Aquaculture Inc., a fish farm located in Palacios, Texas, and its
owner were convicted by a jury in late September of violating the Migratory
Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) in connection with the killing of protected species
at a fish farm. In February, USFWS special agents recovered the remains of
90 Brown Pelicans, 17 Great Blue Herons, five Great Egrets, four
Black-crowned Night-Herons, four Turkey Vultures, two Ospreys, two
unidentified gulls, and one unidentified scaup. The case was also
investigated by the Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife.
 
The defendants were indicted in April, specifically because of the loss of
90 Brown Pelicans. Sentencing is set for early next month. You can find more
details here:
www.fws.gov/home/feature/2011/pdf/110812Seaside.pdf


TE EXTENTION GETS BY

Last month we drew your attention to the bird-and-birder friendly
Transportation Enhancement (TE) elements in the Highway Bill
www.refugenet.org/birding/sepsbc11.html#TOC11

TE parts of the transportation bill include a number of programs that are
viewed favorably by responsible outdoor recreationists and conservationists,
including the acquisition of scenic or historic easements, control of some
roadside outdoor advertising, support for rails-to-trails development,
planting of wildflower meadows along roadways, mitigation of runoff
pollution, maintenance of current refuge and park roads, and building needed
wildlife connectivity.

Fortunately, in mid-September, the Senate voted - 92 to 6 - to approve an
extension of the federal transportation and aviation programs. Senator Tom
Coburn's (R-OK) efforts to remove Transportation Enhancement funding from
the extension were unsuccessful. 

Since this extension will expire at the end of March 2012, and since there
are chances that new language may allow states to opt out of funding for
some enhancement projects and use the funds elsewhere, this important issue
is not settled.


IBA NEWS: MASS "STATE OF THE BIRDS" RELEASED

A number of states involved in Important Bird Area programs have enhanced
their efforts by presenting parallel and useful "State of the Birds"
reports. Within the New England Region such efforts have recently been
undertaken by Connecticut and New Hampshire. The most recent New England
state to provide a contribution to these "avian report cards" is
Massachusetts.

Mass Audubon has just released its own comprehensive State of the Birds
report, a report which effectively documents changes in Massachusetts
birdlife as a result of a critical analysis of several long-term datasets,
most importantly the results of two Massachusetts breeding bird atlas
projects (1974-1979 and 2007-2011), the Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) and the
Christmas Bird Count (CBC).

By integrating and analyzing trends reflected from these and various other
extensive databases, birders, conservationists, and land managers in
Massachusetts now have a current blueprint for future bird conservation
efforts in the Bay State.

To see the results of the Massachusetts State of the Birds report, visit:
www.massaudubon.org/StateoftheBirds/ 

For additional information about IBA programs worldwide, including those
across the U.S., check the National Audubon Society's Important Bird Area
program web site at: 
www.audubon.org/bird/iba/


TIP OF THE MONTH:  CHRISTMAS TREE PLANS

This month we have some suggestions about dealing with your own Christmas
tree once the holidays are over.

Why are we making a Christmas Holiday suggestion in October? Well, read on.

If you plan to have a Christmas tree this year, and if it's not an
artificial tree, then you might just consider planning ahead, depending upon
where you live and what the expected winter temperatures are like where you
are located. An after-season and used tree is an ideal addition to your
winter backyard brush-pile, providing fine protection for birds that might
be visiting your bird-feeder area. 

But, wait! If you start a month or two in advance, you might even be able to
"plant" that cut holiday tree so that it can be even more useful for a time
for winter birds. If you drive a wooden stake into the ground, say one foot
of a three-foot stake, you can secure your used tree to the post in such a
way that shelters the birds from wind, cold, snow, and possible predators.
The point is to do this before the ground freezes. October would be a good
time to get this done, so that it's already in place at the end of the
holiday season.

Of course if you live in an area with warm winters, you can ignore this
Christmas-tree option. You will, however, have the envy of your two
E-bulletin editors, both of whom live in the cold Northeast!


EASTERN CRANES AGAIN IN THE NEWS

In February we reported that the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Commission
(TWRC) decided to delay its decision to open a Sandhill Crane hunting season
for at least two years while more studies could be conducted. The agency
cited insufficient data for establishing such a season:
www.refugenet.org/birding/febsbc11.html#TOC09

Now neighboring Kentucky says it is ready to set up the first authorized
state hunt for Sandhill Cranes in about a century. A season in Kentucky
could open as early as mid-December.

Sandhill Cranes practically disappeared in the Southeastern U.S., going back
at least to the 1930s. They have, however, been steadily increasing over the
last two decades. There seems to be some disagreement over the exact number
of cranes migrating in the East.

While Tennessee is taking time to consider its options, Kentucky is
apparently moving forward to open a season on cranes, a move that would
essentially impact the same resource and much of the same migrating
population of cranes. Presently, there are no other eastern states proposing
a season on the eastern population of Sandhill Cranes. In fact, Ohio even
considers the Sandhill Crane to be endangered as a breeding species. Every
reasonable expectation is that Ohio's cranes will have to fly across
neighboring Kentucky in migration.

Promoters of the hunt claim that there are now enough cranes to justify a
hunt, a hunt that will not have a negative impact on the crane population or
the wildlife-viewing public. There is a claim that the birds have actually
become a veritable nuisance in some localities.

The Atlantic and Mississippi Flyway Councils under the USFWS have completed
a Management Plan for the Eastern Population of Sandhill Cranes consistent
with hunting seasons for the cranes. There will be an annual review of
applicable population and harvest information as well as conditions on the
hunt (e.g., requiring an on-line identification for Sandhill and Whooping
Cranes and limiting the time of the hunt to after the passage of
experimental Whooping Cranes).

In the meantime, Governor Steve Beshear has declined to stop this hunt.

Some 17 conservation groups oppose the hunt, claiming the science used by
the state is inadequate, insisting, among other things, that the harvest
rate proposed for Kentucky alone "could consume a substantial portion of the
productivity of the breeding crane population in the Upper Midwest." The
slow reproduction rate of Sandhill Cranes (a species which does not reach
maturity until 5-7 years of age and a survival rate of only one young in
three nests surviving to fall migration) has raised concerns over a
replacement rate in light of the possible hunting season in Kentucky. 

These groups' arguments can be found here:
http://kyc4sandhillcranes.wordpress.com/fact-sheets/
and, specifically, those of the Kentucky Ornithological Society can be read
here:
http://kyc4sandhillcranes.files.wordpress.com/2011/08/kos_4_8_11_to_kdfwr.pd
f

You can also see the case for hunting cranes made by the League of Kentucky
Sportsmen here:
www.kentuckysportsmen.com/DistrictsNews/AnnouncementSandhillCraneFacts/tabid
/932/Default.aspx


BOOK NOTES:  10,000 COPIES OF AVES DE CUBA

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology recently finished a grand project: producing
and then donating to the people of Cuba, over 10,000 copies of a new version
of a Cuban field guide to birds of that island.

AVES DE CUBA by Orlando H. Garrido and Arturo Kirkconnell was produced in
conjunction with Cornell University Press, with support from the Macarthur
Foundation, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and the Reynolds Foundation.
It has been available in English as BIRDS OF CUBA since 2000. The new
Spanish-language books are being provided at no cost to every elementary and
high school library in Cuba, the staff of the Cuban protected areas system,
and biology programs at several universities across the country. This
magnificent effort is the first large-scale free distribution of a national
bird field guide in the Western Hemisphere.

You can find more details here:
www.birds.cornell.edu/Page.aspx?pid=2264


"THE BIG YEAR" COMING UP

For better or worse, the movie, "The Big Year" will be released across the
U.S. on 14 October. We wrote about the expectations for this film in
September of last year:
www.refugenet.org/birding/SepSBC10.html#TOC13
and also in April of this year:
www.refugenet.org/birding/aprsbc11.html#TOC11

The plot of this "sophisticated comedy" features characters played by Steve
Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson, each of whom is at a personal crossroad.
One is experiencing a mid-life crisis, another character a work-life crisis,
and the third character, a no-life crisis. Each spends a year of his life
following his own individual birding aspirations, highlighted by
cross-continental journeys of life-changing experiences.

We can only hope it proves to be a thoughtful and fun film, yet doesn't make
fun of us all who enjoy birding and its unique subculture.

You can watch the official trailer and other details here:
http://big-year-movie-trailer.blogspot.com/


CORRECTED KIRTLAND'S WARBLER NUMBERS

Last month we had a typo in our report on the status of Kirtland's Warblers
in Michigan. We corrected the problem before we sent out all the
E-bulletins, but most went out incorrectly.

Rather than there being the reported 1,170 singing male Kirtland's Warblers
in central Michigan this breeding season, there were actually 1,770. The
story stands corrected here:
www.refugenet.org/birding/sepsbc11.html#TOC05


A REINTRODUCTION OF OUR QUIZ FOR A NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC BIRD BOOK

We are pleased to reintroduce our quick-and-easy quiz where readers have a
chance to win a fine National Geographic bird publication. Each monthly quiz
question will either relate to one of our previous news items, or it will
pertain to an event or experience that is scheduled to occur during the
current or coming month.

For more on NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, publishers of acclaimed birding books and
field guides, available wherever books are sold, visit:
www.shopng.com/birdbooks

We will give away five books to E-bulletin readers whose names are picked at
random from among those submitting correct answers. Due to shipping
constraints only folks residing in the U.S. or Canada are eligible to win.

The prize for this month will be a copy of the sixth edition of the NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC FIELD GUIDE TO THE BIRDS OF NORTH AMERICA. This book is still at
the printers, and will be released on or about 1 November. (We hope to
review it very soon.) Be among the first to get this new edition into your
hands. You can find more details on this sixth edition here:
http://tinyurl.com/3vv7q9s

This month's question is linked to at least two of our stories: What Cuban
(and Bahamian) bird, previously reported to be seen in Florida, had to be
removed from listing and remains unlisted for the state and for the United
States because it was never photographed or otherwise fully documented?

Please send your answer by 15 October to:


Make the subject line "QUIZ! " and please include your full name and mailing
address along with your answer so that we can mail you a book should you be
a fortunate winner. We will also provide the correct answer next month.

- - - - - - - - -
You can access past E-bulletins on the National Wildlife Refuge Association
(NWRA) website:
http://www.refugenet.org/birding/birding5.html
                          
If you wish to distribute or reproduce 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.


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