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BIRD COLUMN For By
Benjamin P. Burtt What
birds were visiting feeders in December? That is, are some birds scarce this year?
Which birds from Skipping
geese, starlings, gulls and crows, the most abundant bird right at the
feeders was the goldfinch with 1,007. This was also the highest count for
that species in the 45 years this survey has been taken. In the past on the
average, people had about 5 at their feeder, but this year there were about
12. Some had more and some had less. Sharon Crane of Eighty-two
percent of the feeders had goldfinches.
In
the winter, the male goldfinch closely resembles the female. To tell them
apart, note the arrows in Roger Tory
Peterson’s painting of the winter male. One arrow points to the small white
shoulder patch and the other directs your attention to the white rump. The
winter female has a buff rump and no shoulder patch. The painting is from the
“Peterson Field Guide to the Birds of Eastern and In
the list of birds by number, after the goldfinch came the house sparrow with
751, dark-eyed junco 597. Other relatively abundant birds were house finch,
chickadee, blue jay, tree sparrow and cardinal. There
were a number of other birds that were reported in above average numbers for
their species. The number of red-bellied woodpeckers was higher than it
usually is in December. The same was true for the junco. Nuthatches
were more numerous than they were last year. The numbers continue to go up
and down in alternate years. This includes both the red-breasted and the
white-breasted. Last year they were down and this year both are up. Tree
sparrows breed far north beyond the limit of the trees where there is brush
and weeds. In the winter they come south to spend the winter from the
northern border of the There
are a number of northern finches that sometimes migrate south into SHORT
LISTS ARE IMPORTANT The
shortest list this time came from Norma Griffin's 3rd grade class
at the Listing
5 species were Robert and Barbara Domachowski of Clay. There were 6 on Susan
Cummins list from Mcgraw. In The
typical feeder had 14 species so half of the people had less than 14 and half
had more than 14. Who had the longest lists? Linda
Quackenbush of Bob
Asanoma of Listing
18 species were Paul Radway of Pompey, Clara Barrett in Clinton, William and
Marilyn Fais of New Woodstock and Jim and Doris Wagner of Four
people reported chipping sparrows, but did not tell how they were identified.
As I have written before, the chipping sparrow does not have a red cap in the
winter. The top of its head is brown with some black stripes. It normally
leaves Many
winter reports turn out to be tree sparrows in which the breast spot was not
obvious. The
List Here
is a list of all species reported. The first figure for a species, is the
total number of them spotted on 100 reports and the second figure, the one
enclosed in parentheses, is the number of reports that list the species. If
you divide the number of birds by the number of reports that listed the
species, you get the average number visiting a feeder. For the chickadee this
is 483 divided by 96 reports. So on the average, people have about 5
chickadees at their feeder. You can compare this to the number visiting your
feeder. Loon
12 (1); snow goose 335 (2); Canada goose 6,238 (45). Ducks:
black 5 (1); mallard 51 (5); turkey vulture 1 (1). Hawks:
northern harrier 1 (1); sharp-shinned 9 (9); Cooper's 7 (7); red-tailed 30
(26); rough-legged 2 (2); kestrel 1 (1). Pheasant
2 (2); ruffed grouse 2 (1); turkey 137 (9). Gulls:
ring-billed 14 (6); herring 8 (2); rock dove 269 (19); mourning dove 829
(86); horned owl 2. Woodpeckers:
red-bellied 54 (49); sapsucker 1 (1); downy 189 (88); hairy 74 (45); flicker
4 (4); pileated 3 (3). Blue
jay 284 (82); crow 851 (81); raven 1 (1); chickadee 483 (96); titmouse 103 (44);
red-breasted nuthatch 57(41); white-breasted nuthatch 123 (75); brown creeper
2 (2); Bluebird
4 (1); robin 32 (4); mockingbird 4 (3); cedar waxwing 5(1); northern shrike 4
(4); starling 1,143 (44); cardinal 214 (77). Sparrows:
tree 228 (50); chipping 7 (3); song 11 {5}; white-throated 86 (25);
white-crowned 7 (5); junco 597 (95). Red-winged
blackbird 21 (5); rusty blackbird 4 (2); grackle 212 (7); cowbird 49 (7). Purple
finch 21 (8); house finch 517 (70); redpoll 1 (1); siskin 2 (2); goldfinch
1,007 (82); evening grosbeak 20 (4); house sparrow 751 (48). NEW
SURVEY BEGINS The
January Feeder Survey starts next Sunday January 4 and continues all through
that week. If
you have not participated before, your report is welcome. Anyone in upstate
New York State is welcome to participate. Years ago, our Sunday newspaper
circulated all through Northern New York up to the St. Lawrence River and
through the Adirondacks. I hope those former readers will join me once again
now that this column is available on line. For
each species, report the largest number you see at any one time during the
seven days. To read the complete instructions, go to the top of this page,
click on LIBRARY on the left and then choose "Feeder Survey
Directions." At
the end of the week, put your list on a postcard or in a letter or in an
email and send it to the appropriate address on the home page. Every
list is important and short ones are just as important as long ones. Lists
range from 3 to 30 species and the typical report has 14 species. This is a project to try to measure how the numbers of each species change over time at feeders in Central New York. It does not matter how many species are attracted to your feeder, for ALL feeders should be counted. To get in touch with Benjamin P. BurttVia Mail: Write to B.Burtt, Stars Magazine, P.O. Box 4915, Syracuse,, NY 13221. Via E-mail: Send to
features@syracuse.com. Be
sure to put “For B.Burtt” in the subject line.
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