Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Recent Sightings by Jim Eager

Recent Sightings:


Krider's Red-tailed Hawk photo by Paul Cooper
  • 11/30/10—Marbled Godwit (17)--East & West Gator Ck—MINWR—Tom Dunkerton
  • 11/30/10—Virginia Rail  (1st yr)--Peacocks Pocket—MINWR—Tom Dunkerton
  • 11/30/10—Snow Goose (2)--Peacocks Pocket—MINWR—Tom Dunkerton
  • 12/05/10—Rusty Blackbird--Parrish Pk, Titusville—Ryan Lesh
  • 12/06/10—Common Tern--Sebastian Inlet SP—beach side south—Andy Bankert
  • 12/14/10—Yellow-billed Loon--(possible)--Manatee Hammock Pk—Mitchell Harris
  • 12/14/10—Tundra Swan (2)--Indian River Lagoon—Tom Dunkerton
  • 12/18/10—Thayer’s Gull (1st cycle)--Jetty Pk--Cocoa CBC—Mitchell Harris & team
  • 12/18/10—Krider’s Red-tailed Hawk--SR528/SR401--Cocoa CBC—Mitchell Harris & team
  • 12/18/10—Black Rail--Ulumay Sanctuary--Cocoa CBC—Charlie Venuto & team
  • 12/22/10—Glaucous Gull--Cocoa Beach(Minuteman Cswy)—Karen Mansfield
  • 12/23/10—Peregrine Falcon--Lori Wilson Pk (beach)—Karen Mansfield
  • 12/27/10—Ross’s Goose--(possible SnowXRoss’s hybrid)--Viera Wetlands—Thomas Ford
  • 12/30/10—Canvasback (F)--Viera Wetlands—Carolyn Cimino
  • 01/01/11—Glaucous Gull--Cocoa Beach between S 8th & S 10th St—Karen Mansfield—possibly the same one observed on 12/22/10 by Karen Mansfield
  • Yellow-billed Loon:  On 12/14 Mitchell Harris observed what he thinks might be a Yellow-Billed Loon.  It was 1st observed from the fishing pier at Manatee Hammock Pk, a Brevard County campground at 7275 S US 1 in Titusville.  There have been many possible sightings and many distant photos but no positive identification has been made.  When and if there is a positive id and acceptance by FOSRC this would be a 1st documented Florida record.
  • Krider’s Red-tailed Hawk:  On Saturday 12/18, during the Cocoa CBC, Mitchell Harris and his team located a Krider’s Red-tailed hawk around the area of SR528 (Beachline) & SR401 (road to north cruise terminal and Cape Canaveral AFS).  Over the next several days the hawk was observed and photographed by many people.

Cocoa CBC had a total species count of 157, including the following unusual sightings:

  • Dark-eyed Junco
  • Thayer’s Gull (1st cycle)
  • Dickcissel
  • Snow Goose
  • Black Rail
  • Yellow-breasted Chat
  • Krider’s Red-tailed Hawk

 Merritt Island CBC had a total species count of 158, with the following unusual sightings:

  • American Pipit
  • Long-billed Dowitcher
  • Black Scoter 
  • Black-legged Kittywake
  • Pomarine Jaeger
  • Parasitic Jaeger
  • Greater Scaup
  • Bobolink
  • Ruby-throated Hummingbird
  • House Finch

Cocoa CBC Final Information by Dave Freeland

Green-wing Teal Missed for First Time in Count History
photo by Dee Fairbanks Simpson
Now that last responses to the compilers' queries have been received, we can confirm that the Cocoa CBC on December 18 recorded a total of 165 species -- 155 of them list-countable -- and 64,707 individuals.  Included are three exotics, one hybrid, one additional form and five birds seen count-week-only, not on count day.  This is a low total for Cocoa thanks to seven hours of rain that made finding passerines difficult.

Still, teams recorded two species new to the CBC's 60-year history -- Dark-eyed Junco and Thayer's Gull (though the latter has been recorded once as a count-week-only species).  Other good finds were the count's first Black Rail since 1990, first Yellow-breasted Chat since 1994 and first Dickcissel since 1983.  A record high count of 102 Caspian Terns -- 77 of them roosting on an island in the Banana River -- bettered the 92 recorded way back in 1954.  Other record counts were Mallard (160, previous high 145), Common Peafowl, an exotic (85, previous 54), Tricolored Heron (700, previous 652) and Northern Waterthrush (6, previous 5).

Other high totals included 5 Grasshopper Sparrows, 104 Painted Buntings and 15 Orange-crowned Warblers.  It looks like some species can withstand rain, although maybe it was more the observers refusing to give up.

Missed for the first time in count history were Green-winged Teal and Northern Flicker (the latter noted during count week).  Yellow-crowned Night-Heron was missed for the first time since 1953 and Ovenbird for the first time since 1996.  Eastern Towhee (5) was the lowest CBC total ever, and Red-tailed Hawk (6) was our lowest since 1953.

We were blessed to have 63 participants -- our best number in recent memory -- and 13 dutiful feeder watchers.

The Natural Splendor of Panamá!

Panamá, though scarcely the size of South Carolina, but perfectly positioned as a narrow land bridge between North and South America, is blessed with an incredible natural beauty and biodiversity second to none.  Over 976 bird’s species, hundreds of mammals, reptiles & amphibians, and a staggering 10,000 plants species have been recorded here.

On Friday evening, January 21, join SCAS and the knowledgeable and entertaining head guide of the Canopy Tower, Carlos Bethancourt, on a photographic journey across Central Panama, where myriad tropical birds, bizarre mammals and unusual reptiles and amphibians are seen in their natural setting!  From Toucans to hummingbirds, Mouse Opossums to tongue-wielding Orange Nectar Bats, Carlos will keep you spellbound with his stories of discovery and vivid images.  Come experience why Panamá is indeed the country of Natural Splendor!  Check out their website at www.canopytower.com.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Birding at Panama’s Canopy Tower

By Vicky Hamilton (Reprinted from December 2007 Limpkin)

I first heard about Panama’s Canopy Tower by attending a seminar at our Space Coast Birding & Wildlife Festival.  The Canopy Tower is a former U.S. military radar tracking station which was turned into an eco-lodge in 1999.  It sits inside the Soberania National Forest near the Panama Canal.  I visited the Canopy Tower the last week of April, the beginning of the “green” (interpret wet) season when prices drop considerably. Tropical birds are easy to see from the Tower itself and from the nearby locations where they offer side trips.  The Canopy Tower provides top-notch bird guides assigned to groups of six people or less.

The first full day we awoke to…rain. Despite the rain, we headed out to Pipeline Road famous for its bird diversity. It did not disappoint.  Our first bird was a black breasted puff bird.  Soon other birds began popping out.  Making appearances were the cinnamon woodpecker, black cheeked woodpecker, white flanked ant wren, squirrel cuckoo, broad billed motmot, striped sparrow, plain xenops, slaty throated ant wren, chestnut headed oropendolas and scarlet rumped caciques.

Tanagers are not difficult to see in Panama.  In just the first morning we saw the crimson backed, white shouldered, grey headed, blue grey and palm tanagers.  But the day was still young.

We walked on taking in all the new birds when our guide stopped abruptly.  He pointed up to a large bird sitting on a branch hanging across the road.  We blinked in disbelief taking in this soggy raptor with its wings partially open.  It was a  Harpy Eagle! We probably watched each other for a good 10 minutes before we turned around so as not to disturb it further.  When we started our walk we had heard the eerie roar of the howler monkeys. The harpy’s presence explained why the monkeys were now silent.

After our morning hike we returned to the Canopy Tower for lunch and siesta time before heading out for our second portion of Pipeline Road.  We had literally just pulled out of the Tower’s driveway  when the guide pulled the vehicle over to locate a bird he heard calling. It was a pheasant cuckoo making his way up the tree but offering us an excellent view of his enormous tail.

Other birds we saw on Pipeline Road included the following: spectacled ant pitta, barred ant shrike, double toothed kite, grey headed kite, white necked puff bird, buff breasted wren, blue black grassquit, short billed pigeon, white flanked antwren, yellow bellied seedeater and even a great jacamar.  We were fortunate to see a greater potoo next to a juvenile and common potoos at two different locations.  The potoos are truly masters of camouflage that become one with a tree.

Between the different sites we saw five species of trogans, some of them numerous times.  They included the violaceous, black tailed, slaty tailed, white tailed and black throated trogans.  Hummingbirds seen included the black throated mango, white necked jacobin, long tailed hermit, violet bellied, rufous tailed and purple crowned fairy.

One evening we were treated to a night tour.  This consists of riding in the back of the modified pickup while the guide shines a spotlight searching for eyes reflecting back.  We caught sight of a few animals moving around in the night – monkeys, kinkajous and even a couple of sloths (two and three toed.)
The light caught a bird’s red eyes staring back from a tree branch over Semaphore Hill Road.  Our guide Alexis could hardly contain his excitement when he shone the light on this large bird and yelled out “Oilbird.”  The oilbird was nestled on a branch overhead and simply blinked at us.  We viewed this beautiful brown nightjar like bird with a hawkish bill.  The light was bright enough to clearly make out his coloring and spots on his wings.  This was only the second time an oilbird was seen in the area and I felt very fortunate to be one of the seven people to witness it that night.

The roof top viewings from the tower brought us the noisy but extremely colorful green shrike vireo each morning.  From the roof we also viewed blue cotingas, blue dancis, plain tanager, keel billed toucan, chestnut mandibiled toucan, collared aracari, short tailed hawk, pale vented pigeon, scaled pigeon and numerous parrots and parakeets.

Each day at the Canopy Tower and its nearby side trips brought at least one special species if not more. In the Summit Pond and Gamboa area we saw: spectacled owl, crane hawk, grey hawk, grey necked wood rail, a pair of white capped herons, boat billed heron, pygmy kingfisher, amazon kingfisher, ringed kingfisher, green kingfisher, jet antbird, scrub greenlet, common nighthawks, greater kiskadee, lesser kiskadee, black chested jay, yellow green vireo, ruddy ground dove, lesser goldfinch, yellow backed oriole, variable seedeaters, orange billed sparrow and clay colored robins.

At the Ammo Dump area we saw a rufescent tiger heron, white throated crake, red legged honeycreeper, yellow tailed orioles, striated heron, yellow headed caracara, grey headed chachalaca, greater ani, smooth billed ani, wattled jacana, southern lapwings, white tipped doves, ruddy breasted seedeaters and tropical mockingbirds.

On Semaphore Hill Road and Plantation Road Trail our special birds were a tiny hawk and a sunbittern.  Also seen were: white whiskered puffbird, masked tityra, red capped manakin, blue crowned manakin, rufous breasted wren, white breasted wood wren, checker throated ant wren, plain brown woodcreeper, dot winged ant wren, dusky antbird, lesser greenlet, purple throated fruit crow, yellow warbler, cananda warbler, swainson’s thrush and red crowned woodpeckers.

There were so many new birds that it was difficult to keep track of them all, so some of my notes are incomplete.  Here are some of the flycatchers seen: brown capped tyrannulet, yellow tyrannulet, yellow bellied elania, southern bentfill,olivaceous flatfill, social, ruddy tailed, black tailed, acadian, streaked, fork tailed and Panama flycatchers.

The “green season” ended up having the extra benefit of seeing quite a few birds on nests with eggs or with young chicks.  Even one of the common potoos had its single egg precariously balanced in front of it on the treetop.  Other than a wet first day, the rains only came during siesta time and didn’t interfere with any of the outings.

The Soberania National Forest is touted as being the most accessible rain forests in the world. I found this to be true.  It was only a three hour direct flight from Orlando to Panama City, Panama and then less than an hour’s drive to all these incredible birds and wildlife.  The Canopy Tower is definitely worth a visit!  If you would like to learn more about the Canopy Tower or see photos of some of these birds check out their web site at www.CanopyTower.com.

Join the Great Backyard Bird Count; Count for Fun, Count for the Future

(Information excerpted from the Great Backyard Birdcount website)

Bird and nature fans throughout North America are invited to join tens of thousands of everyday bird watchers for the 13th annual Great Backyard Bird Count (GBBC), February 18-21, 2011. A joint project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society, this free event is an opportunity for families, students, and people of all ages to discover the wonders of nature in backyards, schoolyards, and local parks, and, at the same time, make an important contribution to conservation. Participants count birds and report their sightings online at http://www.birdsource.org/gbbc/ .

"The Great Backyard Bird Count benefits both birds and people. It’s a great example of citizen science: Anyone who can identify even a few species can contribute to the body of knowledge that is used to inform conservation efforts to protect birds and biodiversity," said Audubon Education VP, Judy Braus. "Families, teachers, children and all those who take part in GBBC get a chance to improve their observation skills, enjoy nature, and have a great time counting for fun, counting for the future."

Anyone can take part, from novice bird watchers to experts, by counting birds for as little as 15 minutes (or as long as they wish) on one or more days of the event and reporting their sightings online at www.birdcount.org. Participants can also explore what birds others are finding in their backyards- whether in their own neighborhood or thousands of miles away. Additional online resources include tips to help identify birds, a photo gallery, and special materials for educators.

The data these "citizen scientists" collect helps researchers understand bird population trends, information that is critical for effective conservation. Their efforts enable everyone to see what would otherwise be impossible: a comprehensive picture of where birds are in late winter and how their numbers and distribution compare with previous years. In 2010, participants submitted more than 97,000 checklists.

"The GBBC has become a vital link in the arsenal of continent-wide bird-monitoring projects," said Cornell Lab of Ornithology director, John Fitzpatrick. "With more than a decade of data now in hand, the GBBC has documented the fine-grained details of late-winter bird distributions better than any project in history, including some truly striking changes just over the past decade."

Each year, in addition to entering their tallies, participants submit thousands of digital images for the GBBC photo contest. Many are featured in the popular online gallery.  Visit http://www.birdsource.org/gbbc/  to learn more.

Businesses, schools, nature clubs, Scout troops, and other community organizations interested in the GBBC can contact the Cornell Lab of Ornithology at (800) 843-2473 (outside the U.S., call (607) 254-2473), or Audubon at citizenscience@audubon.org.

The Great Backyard Bird Count is made possible, in part, by support from Wild Birds Unlimited.