Birdingonthe.Net

Recent Postings from
The Louisiana Birding List

> Home > Mail
> Alerts

Updated on Friday, May 9 at 10:33 AM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Warbling Vireo,©Sophie Webb

9 May Re: Rockefeller NWR , 5/6/08 [Peter H Yaukey ]
9 May Couturie Forest article in Birder's World Magazine -- online version [Joelle Finley ]
8 May Re: Countability of Canada Goose & summer Mallards [Justin Eby-Bosler ]
8 May Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Tommy Walker ]
8 May Re: Recent raven sighting in LA ["Purrington, Robert D" ]
8 May Re: Countability and Subspecies ID ["Purrington, Robert D" ]
8 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List ["Purrington, Robert D" ]
8 May Atchafalaya Basin IBA Recognition Ceremony, May 10th ["DRISCOLL, Melanie" ]
8 May Re: Recent raven sighting in LA [Buford Myers ]
8 May Re: Recent raven sighting in LA [JDillon ]
8 May Recent raven sighting in LA ["Ingold, James" ]
8 May Single friendly Canada Goose [Miriam Davey ]
8 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Paul Conover ]
7 May Re: Rig birds 7-May-08 [Devin Eby-Bosler ]
7 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [David Muth ]
7 May Re: Possible Fork-Tailed FC ["James W. Beck" ]
08 May Rig birds 7-May-08 []
8 May Rig birds 7-May-08 [Troy Reitan/Denise Duvic ]
7 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Paul Conover ]
7 May Rockefeller NWR , 5/6/08 [Jacob Saucier ]
7 May Recent CENLA Birds [Huner Jay V ]
7 May Re: Herring Gull splits ["Woltmann, Stefan" ]
7 May Possible Fork-Tailed FC [Josh Engelbert ]
7 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [David Muth ]
7 May Re: Herring Gull splits [Buford Myers ]
7 May Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record [David Muth ]
7 May Re: Big Day Question -- what IS the record? ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
7 May western kingbirds and other stuff [Gary Broussard ]
7 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Bruce Baird ]
7 May NEXRAD observed bird migration, 5-7-08 [John Arvin ]
7 May Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
7 May Re: Herring Gull splits ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
7 May Countability and Subspecies ID ["Woltmann, Stefan" ]
7 May Re: Big Day misses ["Brian O'Shea" ]
7 May Re: Countability of Canada Goose & summer Mallards ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
7 May Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record [Peter H Yaukey ]
7 May Also This Saturday--IBA Dedication at Sherburne! []
7 May Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [David Muth ]
7 May Recent CENLA Birds [Huner Jay V ]
7 May Mallard/Canada Goose - Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Huner Jay V ]
7 May Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List [Richard Gibbons ]
6 May Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record [David Muth ]
6 May Corrections to LSU Big Day Post [Richard Gibbons ]
6 May LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record [Richard Gibbons ]
07 May 5-6-08 Rig birds []
7 May 5-6-08 Rig birds [Troy Reitan/Denise Duvic ]
6 May Re: LOS mystery booby=Red-footed Booby [Jennifer Holmes ]
6 May Permits - Clarification about Neotropical Songbird Tour [Huner Jay V ]
6 May FW: eBird Report - Rip Van Winkle Gardens Rookery , 5/3/08 [Mike Constant ]
6 May Re: red-breasted nuthatch - Garden District, B. R. May 5, 2008 ["Purrington, Robert D" ]
6 May Trees are for the birds ["J. S. SLACK III" ]
6 May Re: Clarification about Neotropical Songbird Tour ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]

Subject: Re: Rockefeller NWR , 5/6/08
From: Peter H Yaukey <PYaukey AT UNO.EDU>
Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 10:32:55 -0500
Birders:

Give the lack of conventional fallout factors in the weather yesterday
or today, I was surprised to find a busy assortment of passage
migrants in the tiny UNO Fine Arts woodlot this morning:
Pewee
Great Crested
Red-eyed Vireo
Black and White Warb- 2 females
Magnolia Warb- 3 males, 1 female
Bay-breasted Warb- 1 female
Chestnut-sided Warb - 1 female
Am Redstart - 2 females
Scarlet Tanager- male
Summer Tanager- SY male

No pecans or mulberries there to act as magnets either.

Peter Yaukey
Subject: Couturie Forest article in Birder's World Magazine -- online version
From: Joelle Finley <joelle_finley AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 9 May 2008 09:35:47 -0500
Hi LABIRD,

Dan Purrington's article on Couturie Forest in New Orleans City Park is 
available online. Thank you Dan and thanks to Wendy Rihner for alerting 
Birder's World to our local birding hotspot. Things are looking good for the 
preservation of the woods. City Park has hired a landscape architect firm and a 
master plan will be developed. Currently City Park is planting trees and we are 
urging them to plant bird friendly native species. Thanks to all of you who 
wrote letters in support of keeping the forest wild and not turning it into a 
golf green. 


http://www.birdersworld.com/brd/default.aspx?c=a&id=1109 .

Joelle Finley
New Orleans
Subject: Re: Countability of Canada Goose & summer Mallards
From: Justin Eby-Bosler <jebybo1 AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 22:54:57 -0500
Labird,

 Devin and I provided an annotated checklist of our April Big Day to clear up 
any confusion in regard to the countability of certain species. We were 
fortunate to locate a lingering pair of wild Mallards departing a flooded field 
off Fruge Road between Pine Pasture and Chalkley Roads near Sweet Lake. Later 
on, we encountered at least 2 pairs of feral Mallards in the borrow pits along 
LA-82 in Johnson Bayou. Although they exhibited relatively normal structure and 
plumage traits, it is fairly obvious that they originated from local escapes; 
and therefore, would not be countable. As Steve mentioned, the situation with 
Canada Goose in LA is complicated. It would be an extremely difficult move to 
re-designate Canada Goose from a historically wild-occurring status to 
"Introduced", especially considering the potential for truly wild Canadas to 
stray into LA during the fall and winter. What complicates matters further is 
the sizeable, established introduced population of ! 

 Rockefeller Canada Geese. These Canada Geese breed from Rockefeller Refuge to 
Sabine NWR, encompassing a majority of the freshwater marshes in Cameron 
Parish. In my opinion, this population appears more "wild" in nature than other 
introduced feral populations across the state which are restricted to specific 
refugia (e.g. community parks, golf courses, residential developments, etc.). 
Does this justify their countability on a LA Big Day? No, not really. So, I 
guess it's more a matter of personal preference in counting individuals of this 
particular population. 


Good birding,
Justin Bosler
Baton Rouge, LA


> Labird-
>      Canada Goose status has been discussed a number of times on this forum
> over the past few years.  It's a rather complicated and unique situation
> because wild Canadas occurred here historically and are legitimately on the
> state list, but have pretty much disappeared as a wild-occurring species.
> Meanwhile, Canada Geese have subsequently been deliberately introduced here,
> resident feral populations seem to be holding on or even flourishing in some
> areas, and there's apparently some evidence to suggest that feral birds can
> disperse fairly long distances within their introduced range in the
> southeastern US.  More recently, the larger Canada Goose was taxonomically
> split from the smaller Cackling Goose, further confusing past and present
> status of the two forms.
>      Again, there is little or no evidence to indicate that wild Canada Geese
> still occur in Louisiana.  So, the assumption is that we are only seeing
> birds derived from introduced/feral sources.  It seems doubtful that there
> is any gene flow occurring between our feral Canadas and potentially wild
> Canadas, e.g., there's no evidence that our "resident" feral birds are
> moving north to within the range of wild Canadas, or that wild Canadas are
> making it south to LA and mixing with feral birds.  In my opinion, feral
> Canadas cannot survive without protected "refugia" such as Rockefeller
> Refuge, parks, golf courses, and industrial installations with lawns and
> ponds. In other words, the species does not seem to be expanding into and
> permanently occupying wild habitat.  This seems to be the situation in
> Cameron Parish, where the introduced Canadas expand and contract from the
> refuge HQ "refugium."  So, the debate centers on whether we consider Canada
> Geese as a "subsidized" species, or do we consider those protected "refugia"
> as part of the permanent landscape?  Such considerations would also have
> ramifications for species such as Muscovy...
>      I'm hoping that the LBRC will make a "ruling" on this problem in the
> near future.  The conundrum is whether we can make the case for
> re-designating Canada Goose as an "Introduced" species when it's already on
> the list based on historical wild occurrence and could potentially still
> occur in the wild.....
>      In the case of Mallard, as myself and others have pointed out, there's
> not a whole lot that can be done as far as countability of "resident"
> populations.  The species is a common migrant and wintering bird in the
> wild, and there's some evidence that increasing numbers are remaining in LA
> during the summer.  There probably is some gene flow between wintering birds
> and residents (and between Mallards and Mottled Ducks).  So, I would say
> that Mallard countability should be on the honor system.  If you see
> Mallards that are normally plumaged, normally shaped, and can fly, or if
> they are seen in "wild situations" (e.g., sitting in a ricefield, even if a
> potential cripple) then count them.  If they can't fly, are the size of a
> goose, have aberrant plumage or soft parts colors, or fail the "bread test,"
> then they should not be counted.
> 
> Steve Cardiff
> 
> 
> On 5/7/08 8:46 AM, "David Muth"  wrote:
> 
> > Richard/Labird:
> >
> > I had to get my little dig in about Canadas and Mallard, but Big Day teams
> > have been counting them for years. I haven't done a soutwest La. 
> > Big Day for a
> > long, long time, so I guess these days I'd just follow the convention.
> >
> > It is remarkable how many species are possible or even probable now that 
were 

> > real long shots 20 years ago. When I started doing Big Days I used to code
> > birds by the likelihood of an encounter from 1 (certain) to 5 (fantastic
> > luck). Black-bellied Whistling Duck, White-tailed Kite, caracara and
> > oystercatcher would have been 5s, Brown Pelicans in Cameron were 4s as were
> > Inca Dove and Swainson's Hawk. White-winged Dove was a long shot in late
> > April. There were, of course, no collared-doves and House Finches were 
still 

> > 5s. I like to think that with those birds available, plus countable 
mallards 

> > and Canadas, I'd have broken 200 a couple of times, though obviously by 
that 

> > logic Cardiff, Dittmann, Parker and Remsen would have broken 210. I don't
> > think any species has dropped off the list of probables, though a few have
> > declined in abundance.
> >
> > I better stop thinking about this, or I'll be planning a 2009 Big Day.
> >
> > BTW, I think we ought to settle on a convention about countability (and, 
more 

> > importantly, reportability) of "Rockerfeller" Canadas, and other Canadas 
and 

> > Mallards. If we count "wild" breeding mallards in the coastal zone or along
> > rivers or in ag farm fields, do we also count golf course free-flying 
Canadas 

> > and city park mallards, mixed with white Pekins and pie-bald Muscovies? 
I've 

> > always treated them as being in seperate categories from truly 
> > wild birds, and
> > have tried to hold the line for the CBC, but is that truly the best course?
> > Input welcome.
> >
> > David Muth
> > New Orleans
> >
> > ---- Richard Gibbons  wrote:
> >
> > =============
> > David and LABIRDers,
> >
> > Good catch! I accidentally deleted Least Tern and Herring Gull from the
> > eBird list when cleaning it up for posting. You are right on the mark
> > with shorebirds and waterfowl saving the day.
> >
> >  The morning was foggy so perched Mississippi Kites were not detected
> > on the snags as we raced southward out of their breeding range. As we
> > left Lake Charles without it, we knew it might well be a dip. We found
> > what was probably a "Traill's" Flycatcher in Peveto, but without a call
> > note or better look, we decided it was best to leave it off.
> >
> > The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe just
> > unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm falling
> > in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to consult and they
> > counted them.
> >
> > We did not use the 5 minute rule with Red-cockaded Woodpecker as this
> > is a World Series of Birding rule that was worked in at some point in
> > the past and it just seemed too sloppy.
> >
> > The LeConte's was kicked up during a comfort stop alongside a rice
> > field. We flushed it three more times to get a good look.
> >
> > A scouted Eared Grebe from two days before in Lake Charles and many
> > other misses suggests a bigger day is well within reach. If you look at
> > the Lyon et al. list, you see there are several species the other team
> > missed. It might be worth doing a thorough information share session
> > next year for any group interested in making a run at 220.
> >
> > 215 is certainly not the limit. If Kansas can get 225, I'm pretty sure
> > Louisiana can get 226.
> >
> > There's always next year!
> >
> >
> > Richard Gibbons
> > Baton Rouge, LA
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > 
______________________________________________________________________________ 

> > ______
> > Be a better friend, newshound, and
> > know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now.
> > http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
> >
> > --
> > David Muth
> > New Orleans

>
Subject: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Tommy Walker <birdman3607 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 19:39:24 -0700
Dan,Labird,
     
 I still don't get what the hold up is on Monk Parakeet (Myiopsitta monachus). 

   
     Had to say it!,
                Tommy Walker, Jr.

"Purrington, Robert D"  wrote:
  We allow various established exotics on Christmas Counts and Big Days,
etc. Consider E. Starling, House Sparrow, Rock Pigeon, ECDO, perhaps
even House Finch. In the case of Canada Geese, Mallards, Muscovies, and
all manner of intergrades, these birds are actively introduced on a
continuous basis into canals, parks, etc. Aside from how long a bird
has been established as breeding, the fact that misguided citizens are
constantly helping these exotics extend their range is an important
distinction. It seems to me Monk Parakeet is perhaps one to suspend
judgement on, for a bit, although it has been breeding here since well
before the first ECDO. 

I might add that it is usually not hard to tell whether a mallard is
countable or not. On the other hand, I was complicit in counting a
canada goose flock on a New Orleans CBC that might not have been
sanitary.

Dan Purrington
Subject: Re: Recent raven sighting in LA
From: "Purrington, Robert D" <danny AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 17:15:37 -0500
Chihuahuan, I think 

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds 
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Ingold, James 

Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2008 1:47 PM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Recent raven sighting in LA

I’m making corrections on a manuscript that is going to press soon. Recently 
someone posted about seeing a white-necked raven in LA. Is this confirmed? Who 
saw it and when? 


I know the name is changed but I can spell white-necked ☺

Jim
Subject: Re: Countability and Subspecies ID
From: "Purrington, Robert D" <danny AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 16:45:43 -0500
 Stefan--

You are clearly right.  One should not employ a greater degree of
specificity than is justified by the data. It's very much like giving
significant figures in a numerical answer that are not justified by the
knowledge of the data themselves and their uncertainties.

Dan Purrington
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: "Purrington, Robert D" <danny AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 16:45:43 -0500
We allow various established exotics on Christmas Counts and Big Days,
etc.  Consider E. Starling, House Sparrow, Rock Pigeon, ECDO, perhaps
even House Finch.  In the case of Canada Geese, Mallards, Muscovies, and
all manner of intergrades, these birds are actively introduced on a
continuous basis into canals, parks, etc.  Aside from how long a bird
has been established as breeding, the fact that misguided citizens are
constantly helping these exotics extend their range is an important
distinction.  It seems to me Monk Parakeet is perhaps one to suspend
judgement on, for a bit, although it has been breeding here since well
before the first ECDO.  

I might add that it is usually not hard to tell whether a mallard is
countable or not.  On the other hand, I was complicit in counting a
canada goose flock on a New Orleans CBC that might not have been
sanitary.

Dan Purrington
Subject: Atchafalaya Basin IBA Recognition Ceremony, May 10th
From: "DRISCOLL, Melanie" <mdriscoll AT AUDUBON.ORG>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 17:03:14 -0400
National Audubon to Recognize Atchafalaya Basin as an Important Bird Area

The National Audubon Society of Louisiana will recognize the Atchafalaya Basin 
as an Important Bird Area (IBA) on May 10, 2008, International Migratory Bird 
Day. This will be the first such recognition for any IBA in the state of 
Louisiana. The ceremony will take place at 1:30 p.m. at the Sherburne Wildlife 
Management Area headquarters on Whiskey Bay Road during Step Outside Day, and 
it is open to the public. 


The largest remaining tract of bottomland hardwood forest in the United States, 
the Atchafalaya Basin is gaining recognition as an IBA due to its vital 
importance for breeding populations of Northern Parula, Kentucky, Prothonotary, 
Swainsons and Yellow-throated Warblers, as well as Swallow-tailed Kites and 
the colorful and near-threatened Painted Bunting. It is also a migratory 
stopover site for globally important concentrations of up to 2,000 Wood Storks 
in the fall. The site is visited by hundreds of birders annually, as well as 
numerous hunters and anglers. 


For an introduction to the birds for which the Atchafalaya Basin has been 
identified as an IBA, attend the Neotropical Songbird Tour. To follow the tour 
stops on your own, assemble between 7 and 8 a.m. at the intersection of I10 and 
LA 975. Or, gather at 6:30 a.m. at Coffee Call (I10 and College Drive in Baton 
Rouge) to join the tour led by Richard Gibbons of the Baton Rouge Audubon 
Society. 


At the IBA recognition ceremony, Paul Kemp, Vice-President of Louisianas Gulf 
Coast Initiative, will speak about the importance of the site to birds. 
Representatives of the major public landowners in the Atchafalaya Basin will 
also speak briefly about the site. These individuals include Neil Lalonde of 
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Danny Breaux of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service, and Michael Seymour, of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and 
Fisheries. 


Its with great pleasure that I announce today that the Atchafalaya Basin will 
be the first site in Louisiana officially recognized as an Important Bird Area 
under National Audubons Louisiana IBA program, said Melanie Driscoll, 
Louisianas Important Bird Areas Coordinator. Driscoll added, National Audubon 
looks forward to working in partnership with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 
the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service, and other interested organizations and private landowners, in 
promoting sound bird conservation practices on the site for years to come. 


National Audubon Societys Important Bird Areas program identifies significant 
bird habitat across Louisiana based on data reviewed by a technical committee 
of 18 experts using peer-reviewed scientific criteria. The IBA Program is a 
voluntary effort to help willing private and public land managers provide the 
best stewardship practices for bird conservation on their property. It is a 
non-regulatory program providing sound scientific information to help build 
conservation partnerships. 


STEP OUTSIDE is a national program administered by the National Shooting Sports 
Foundation to increase participation in outdoor sports. This years event runs 
from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and will include fishing, archery, boating, target and 
trap shooting, wood crafts construction, nature photography, raptors, bird 
watching and decoy painting. Step Outside Day is open to all children and 
adults, but is targeted to those with special needs. 


For further information on the National Audubon Society of Louisianas 
Important Bird Areas program contact Melanie Driscoll, Important Bird Areas 
Program Coordinator, Louisiana Bird Resource Center, c/o LSU Museum of Natural 
Science, 119 Foster Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803; (225) 938-7209. 


The Important Bird Areas program began by Bird Life International in the late 
1980s as a way of recognizing and ultimately conserving land that is vital to 
the health and survival of birds. As Bird Life Internationals official U.S. 
partner, Audubon spearheads the program here, with more than 2,000 IBAs already 
identified in more than 40 states. 


IBAs are sites that provide habitat essential for the breeding, feeding, 
wintering or migration of one or more species of birds. IBAs may be large or 
small and either publicly or privately owned, sharing characteristics such as 
high bird diversity, threatened species, or the presence of unusually large 
numbers of birds. To be recognized as an IBA, a sight is nominated and 
evaluated based on standard scientific criteria to ensure its significance to 
birds. Audubon chapters, scientists and the general public may nominate site. 
The recognition of an IBA does not confer any legal or regulatory status, and 
is entirely voluntary. 


Now in its second century, Audubon is dedicated to protecting birds and other 
wildlife and the habitat that supports them. Our national network of 
community-based nature centers and chapters, scientific and educational 
programs, and advocacy on behalf of areas sustaining important bird 
populations, engage millions of people of all ages and backgrounds in 
conservation. 

###
Melanie

Melanie Driscoll

Coordinator, Louisiana IBA Program
Louisiana Bird Resource Center
LSU Museum of Natural Science
119 Foster Hall
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
work:  225-578-3116
cell:    225-938-7209
mdriscoll AT audubon.org
www.audubon.org
Subject: Re: Recent raven sighting in LA
From: Buford Myers <bmyers990 AT EARTHLINK.NET>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 15:13:01 -0500
Jim,

It was Dan Lane who saw it, photographed or videoed it, and obtained audio 
recordings of call. This was 12 April near Holly Beach. I have not seen any 
of the documentation, but I suspect you could take it to the bank.

Mac
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Ingold, James" 
To: 
Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2008 1:46 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Recent raven sighting in LA


> I’m making corrections on a manuscript that is going to press soon. 
> Recently someone posted about seeing a white-necked raven in LA.  Is this 
> confirmed?  Who saw it and when?
>
> I know the name is changed but I can spell white-necked ☺
>
> Jim 
Subject: Re: Recent raven sighting in LA
From: JDillon <jdillon AT WEBSTERPSB.ORG>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 14:16:37 -0500
Just as long as there are no sightings of red-necked ravens. ...which would 
probably be in a Wal-Mart parking lot somewhere. 


JD

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds 
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Ingold, James 

Sent: Thursday, May 08, 2008 1:47 PM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Recent raven sighting in LA

I’m making corrections on a manuscript that is going to press soon. Recently 
someone posted about seeing a white-necked raven in LA. Is this confirmed? Who 
saw it and when? 


I know the name is changed but I can spell white-necked ☺

Jim
Subject: Recent raven sighting in LA
From: "Ingold, James" <James.Ingold AT LSUS.EDU>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 13:46:39 -0500
I’m making corrections on a manuscript that is going to press soon. Recently 
someone posted about seeing a white-necked raven in LA. Is this confirmed? Who 
saw it and when? 


I know the name is changed but I can spell white-necked ☺

Jim
Subject: Single friendly Canada Goose
From: Miriam Davey <athena_9 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 08:18:20 -0500
Dave

There was a single Canada Goose swimming around MS River floodwaters
adjacent to Richfield Riversilt levee in early April.  It wasn't much
spooked by either me or our goofy Doberman just a few ft away, and was in
the general vicinity of the infamous Ben Hur/LSU feral goose flock.  Feral,
I assumed.

My 2cents on what is kosher for lists: Some of us, IF were inclined to keep
lists at all, would put non-avian critters and even plants on them.  And
maybe a human celeb or two, or that ultra- rare, REALLY good-looking hunk of
guy. Many birders keep multiple bird lists (birds seen/heard on TV, birds
seen from the toilet) and other lists (US counties visited,  state license
plates) other than their official bird lists. Ferals are often included on
some of those other lists.

MiriamLDavey
BatonRougeLA
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 07:11:53 -0500
David, Labird,
    If my mist net won't hold them, I think I have a Magnalite that will.

Paul Conover
Lafayette




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Muth" 
To: "Paul Conover" ; 
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2008 10:13 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List


> Paul/Labird:
>
> Well clearly we need to put bands on our winter birds and try to get some 
> returns. Do you think your mist nets will hold them?
>
> David Muth
> New Orleans
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Paul Conover" 
> To: 
> Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2008 7:28 PM
> Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
>
>
>> David,
>>    You might recall that I mentioned an article I had seen a while back 
>> about feral Canadas. In short, it said that a group that was against the 
>> culling of feral flocks found proof through banding returns that their 
>> local feral Canadas were migrating out in winter. They were arguing in 
>> court that this should lead to their protection under the Migratory Bird 
>> Act.
>>    You asked me at the time if I could back up my fuzzy memory with a 
>> citation, and no, I couldn't--and can't. Maybe someone with better 
>> Googling skills might be able to dig it up, or maybe one of you read the 
>> same article.
>>
>> Paul Conover
>> Lafayette
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> The question is: where are they? Anybody seeing Canadas somewhere 
>>> unexpected? What is the situation at other parks and golf courses with 
>>> winter flocks? Are our Canadas simply dispersed widely but locally, or 
>>> do they actually migrate to some other park to the north? Anybody know 
>>> anything?
>>>
>>> David
>>>
>>> David Muth
>>> New Orleans
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
> 
Subject: Re: Rig birds 7-May-08
From: Devin Eby-Bosler <debybo1 AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 22:18:06 -0500
  Troy/LABIRD,

  Presumably these are Northern Waterthrushes (NOWA), as a Louisiana
  Waterthrush (LOWA) would be exceptionally late at this date.  LOWA is
  one of our earliest neotropical spring migrants, reaching the Gulf
  coast by mid-March or earlier.  Nearly all LOWA have returned to
  breeding grounds by late March to early April, so having 3
  individuals on two consecutive days out in the GOM would be an
  unprecedented occurence in May.  Thanks for sharing your sightings
  from the GOM.

  Devin Bosler
  LSU-Baton Rouge


  Good evening everyone,
  Today was a slow day work
  wise and bird wise. Too bad I didn't have more birds but that's how
  it goes here. I observed two birds during the day, one La
  Waterthrush and one Gray Catbird. One LAWT specimen was collected
  today. Just now there was either a Semipalmated Plover or a
  Wilson's Plover on the heliport. This bird had only one ring on
  it's neck. I am thinking it's a Semipalmated because of the size
  listed in Peterson's Eastern book. I've never seen one of these
  birds offshore before, so I don't know which I may be apt to see
  over the other. I am head on shore tomorrow so this will be my last
  rig report for a couple of weeks. I understand that I am missing a
  lot of action in our yard in Vicksburg. Good night all.

  Troy Reitan/GOM
  190 miles SSW of Port Fouchon, La
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 22:13:01 -0500
Paul/Labird:

Well clearly we need to put bands on our winter birds and try to get some 
returns. Do you think your mist nets will hold them?

David Muth
New Orleans

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Paul Conover" 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2008 7:28 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List


> David,
>    You might recall that I mentioned an article I had seen a while back 
> about feral Canadas. In short, it said that a group that was against the 
> culling of feral flocks found proof through banding returns that their 
> local feral Canadas were migrating out in winter. They were arguing in 
> court that this should lead to their protection under the Migratory Bird 
> Act.
>    You asked me at the time if I could back up my fuzzy memory with a 
> citation, and no, I couldn't--and can't. Maybe someone with better 
> Googling skills might be able to dig it up, or maybe one of you read the 
> same article.
>
> Paul Conover
> Lafayette
>
>
>
>>
>> The question is: where are they? Anybody seeing Canadas somewhere 
>> unexpected? What is the situation at other parks and golf courses with 
>> winter flocks? Are our Canadas simply dispersed widely but locally, or do 
>> they actually migrate to some other park to the north? Anybody know 
>> anything?
>>
>> David
>>
>> David Muth
>> New Orleans
>>
>>
>>
> 
Subject: Re: Possible Fork-Tailed FC
From: "James W. Beck" <agkistrodon AT WORLDNET.ATT.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 21:33:13 -0500
Josh,

There was a Fork-tailed Flycatcher in Plaquemines Parish earlier in 
the year....a 2nd Louisiana record.  I suppose it could possibly be 
the same individual?

-j

At 04:01 PM 5/7/2008, you wrote:
>My wife and I spent a few days birding most of southern LA. On the 
>5th, we decided to drive down to Venice to check out that area. On 
>our way (just north of Boothville) my wife hollered to stop and turn 
>around. She was kind of confused about what she had seen. After 
>discussing it, she is very sure it was a Fork-tailed flycatcher. She 
>said the bird seemed slightly larger than a Scissor-tailed FC, dark 
>colored, and its tail feathers sort of fluttered individually like 
>ribbons instead of stiff like a Scissor-tail. Also, we grew up in NE 
>Oklahoma so we are very good with Scissor-tail identification. Well 
>we unfortunately never relocated the bird in question. We also 
>didn't see it as we headed back north the next morning. I'm not sure 
>if anyone will want to go looking for it with such a slim chance, 
>but I figured the list deserves to know that one might be in that area.
>
>Josh Engelbert & Melissa Patrick
>Jonesboro, AR (school)
>Copan, OK (home)
>
>---------------------------------
>Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! 
>Mobile.  Try it now.

James W. Beck
Broussard, Louisiana
Venomous Photography
"Anything that bites, and then some". 
Subject: Rig birds 7-May-08
From: cnrdmd AT bellsouth.net
Date: Thu, 08 May 2008 01:55:40 +0000
Good evening everyone,
 Today was a slow day work wise and bird wise. Too bad I didn't have more birds 
but that's how it goes here. I observed two birds during the day, one La 
Waterthrush and one Gray Catbird. One LAWT specimen was collected today. Just 
now there was either a Semipalmated Plover or a Wilson's Plover on the 
heliport. This bird had only one ring on it's neck. I am thinking it's a 
Semipalmated because of the size listed in Peterson's Eastern book. I've never 
seen one of these birds offshore before, so I don't know which I may be apt to 
see over the other. I am head on shore tomorrow so this will be my last rig 
report for a couple of weeks. I understand that I am missing a lot of action in 
our yard in Vicksburg. Good night all. 


Troy Reitan/GOM
190 miles SSW of Port Fouchon, La
Subject: Rig birds 7-May-08
From: Troy Reitan/Denise Duvic <cnrdmd AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 8 May 2008 01:55:40 +0000
Good evening everyone,
 Today was a slow day work wise and bird wise. Too bad I didn't have more birds 
but that's how it goes here. I observed two birds during the day, one La 
Waterthrush and one Gray Catbird. One LAWT specimen was collected today. Just 
now there was either a Semipalmated Plover or a Wilson's Plover on the 
heliport. This bird had only one ring on it's neck. I am thinking it's a 
Semipalmated because of the size listed in Peterson's Eastern book. I've never 
seen one of these birds offshore before, so I don't know which I may be apt to 
see over the other. I am head on shore tomorrow so this will be my last rig 
report for a couple of weeks. I understand that I am missing a lot of action in 
our yard in Vicksburg. Good night all. 


Troy Reitan/GOM
190 miles SSW of Port Fouchon, La
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 19:28:04 -0500
David,
    You might recall that I mentioned an article I had seen a while back 
about feral Canadas. In short, it said that a group that was against the 
culling of feral flocks found proof through banding returns that their local 
feral Canadas were migrating out in winter. They were arguing in court that 
this should lead to their protection under the Migratory Bird Act.
    You asked me at the time if I could back up my fuzzy memory with a 
citation, and no, I couldn't--and can't. Maybe someone with better Googling 
skills might be able to dig it up, or maybe one of you read the same 
article.

Paul Conover
Lafayette



>
> The question is: where are they? Anybody seeing Canadas somewhere 
> unexpected? What is the situation at other parks and golf courses with 
> winter flocks? Are our Canadas simply dispersed widely but locally, or do 
> they actually migrate to some other park to the north? Anybody know 
> anything?
>
> David
>
> David Muth
> New Orleans
>
>
>
Subject: Rockefeller NWR , 5/6/08
From: Jacob Saucier <jsauci3 AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 19:06:45 -0500
Hey Labird,

On Tuesday I found myself on a last minute trip to Rockefeller NWR to
pick up bees for the bee lab.  I decided to take advantage of it as a
birding opportunity, but being that it was a work trip I wasn't able to
dedicate all of my free time to observing and/or counting individual
birds.  But since I wasn't driving I was able to jot down what I saw at
each stop and as I hung out of the window.  Also, it helped that my
coworker on this trip was open-minded and willing to stop every now and
then for birds.

Our apiary is located in the western end about a mile south of Hwy 82. 
Most of this place is inaccessible to the public, which is unfortunate
because birding it from the road just doesn't do it justice.  The core
habitat of this refuge is dense tracts of tall marsh grasses
(unfortunately I don't know what types) cut by canals,  and once inside
the breeding bird density is reminiscent of Whiskey Bay.  Especially
numerous were Orchard Orioles, all of which were territorial to an extent
that some would challenge the truck as we drove by.  Not far behind
in numbers were Boat-tailed Grackles, Eastern Kingbirds, and Common
Yellowthroats.  There were also some territorial Black-necked Stilts, so
I assume they're breeding here too.  Other cool birds were an Osprey
flying overhead and a small flock of 5-6 Bobolinks near the entrance. 
The Yellow Warbler, Summer Tanager, and Yellow-billed Cuckoo were seen
and heard in the trees (willow and tallow) near the apiary itself.  Also
of note was a family of Clapper Rails seen crossing the road, comprised
of an adult and several youngsters (still quite black and fluffy).  And
of course, Least Bitterns are always cool.   List below: 

Also, I was surprised to see us kicking up at least a dozen Savannah
Sparrows as we drove down the narrow grass road; they must be getting
late soon(?).  Unfortunately I didn't see any representatives of the
Rockefeller Canadian Goose flock, so I can't contribute to that thread.


  Location: Rockefeller NWR
  Observation date: 5/6/08
  Number of species: 41

  Black-bellied Whistling-Duck --6 
  Mottled Duck --2
  Neotropic Cormorant
  Least Bittern ~7
  Great Blue Heron
  Great Egret
  Snowy Egret
  Tricolored Heron + (predominant heron)
  Cattle Egret
  Green Heron
  Yellow-crowned Night-Heron--1
  White Ibis
  White-faced Ibis ++
  Roseate Spoonbill
  Osprey --1
  Clapper Rail
  Purple Gallinule
  Common Moorhen
  American Coot
  Black-necked Stilt
  Willet --1
  Laughing Gull
  Forster's Tern (some flushed from ground in gravelly area)
  Royal Tern
  Mourning Dove
  Yellow-billed Cuckoo --1
  Ruby-throated Hummingbird +
   Eastern Kingbird ++
  crow sp. --didn't vocalize, but Fish by appearance (although I think
  American is expected here)
  Barn Swallow + 
  Marsh Wren
  Yellow Warbler --1
  Common Yellowthroat ++
  Summer Tanager --1
  Savannah Sparrow  ~12
  Bobolink --6-7
  Common Grackle +
  Boat-tailed Grackle ++
  Brown-headed Cowbird
  Orchard Oriole +++

  This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)

  Jacob Saucier
Subject: Recent CENLA Birds
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 17:13:59 -0500
I could not find this in my inbox so thought I would send it again. This 
gives me a chance to mention a bird I forgot to included - Black-billed 
Cuckoo.

Jay H.

---------- Forwarded Message -----------
From: "Huner Jay V" 
To: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds 

Sent: Wed, 7 May 2008 07:42:45 -0500
Subject: Recent CENLA Birds

There are three comprehensive parish bird lists - Acadia, Rapides, and St. 
Martin, all the result of Marty Floyd's efforts. I use these parish lists to 
help me decide whether or not to submit 3x5 cards. Recent "Reportable" birds 
based on the Rapides list are:

- Common Loon - 20-30' away from my bulkhead the other day!
- Bald Eagle
- Common Tern - No, I am NOT mistaking it for a Forster's Tern!
- Alder Flycatcher
- White-breasted Nuthatch - "yanking" up a storm and apparently breeding. 
No, I've seen the birds and they are not "late" Red-breasted Nuthatches. 
This is the third spring that I've had the birds here and, for now, this 
location is the southermost documentation of breeding of the species in 
Louisiana to the BEST of my knowledge.
- Tennessee Warbler
- Blackpoll Warbler

I realize that the flycatcher and warblers would be "expected" to pass 
through the area in migration. But, there are next to no records! Also, 
eagles are "ho hum" now; however, their current breeding status here was not 
noted by Floyd, Breedlove, and Cummings (2000) who considered the birds to 
be Rare winter birds. And, the loon is not really a surprise but until 2002 
or 2003, no loons had been reported from Rapides Parish. I think that Jim 
Johnson had the first loon at the reservoir at Woodworth the year before I 
reported one at Cotile Lake, but it was never clear if he submitted a 3x5 
card. Knowing what an astute birder Jim is, I am sure that he recognized the 
uniqueness of his observation and documented it.

And, for what it's worth, I am seeing a few suspicious Tree Swallows 
suggesting that they will or are breeding around here for the third year in 
a row.

Jay Huner
------- End of Forwarded Message -------


--
Subject: Re: Herring Gull splits
From: "Woltmann, Stefan" <swoltman AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 17:06:38 -0500
Mac, Steve and LABird,
 
I see that the British Ornithologists' Union has recently split American 
Herring Gull from "Caspian" Gull (cachinnans), but they apparently left vegae 
and mongolicus in with smithsonianus, all as American Herring Gull (am I wrong 
in thinking it's odd to have something called mongolicus - with an asian 
distribution - in "American" Herring Gull?). Not sure where the other Eurasian 
subspecies stand, but presumably split. 

 
I understand well the desire to pick out non-smithsonianus Herring Gulls in 
North America, and kudos to those who can and do. I just think it's case of 
pseudo-precision to call all the Herring Gulls around here "American" just 
because there's a spot for it on e-bird. 

 
Stefan
 
 
Stefan Woltmann 
Dept. Ecology & Evolutionary Biology 
400 Boggs 
Tulane University 
New Orleans, LA 70118 
swoltman AT tulane.edu

________________________________

From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds on 
behalf of Buford Myers 

Sent: Wed 07-May-08 16:10
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Herring Gull splits



Steve, Stefan and Labird,

I realize that AOU reigns supreme in our hemisphere, or at least in North
and Middle America. Perhaps there is some sort of ornithological Monroe
doctrine concering old world ornithologists messing with our avifauna's
taxonomy. But haven't some other equivalent organizations in Britain or
Europe already split American Herring Gull (smithsonianus) from the European
argentatus/argenteus?

Mac
----- Original Message -----
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2008 1:05 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Herring Gull splits


> Stefan (labird)-
>    I agree with you that "smithsonianus" is the default Herring Gull over
> most of North America, so it seems pretty silly to list "Herring Gull
> (American)" on ebird lists, etc.  You can go to the AOU website and view
> "species split" proposals and anonymous AOU Check-list Committee Member
> comments.  The proposal to split American Herring Gull failed by a 2-8
> vote.
> The proposal to split Vega Gull failed by a 4-6 vote.
>
> Steve Cardiff
>
>
Subject: Possible Fork-Tailed FC
From: Josh Engelbert <labirdguest AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 14:01:22 -0700
My wife and I spent a few days birding most of southern LA. On the 5th, we 
decided to drive down to Venice to check out that area. On our way (just north 
of Boothville) my wife hollered to stop and turn around. She was kind of 
confused about what she had seen. After discussing it, she is very sure it was 
a Fork-tailed flycatcher. She said the bird seemed slightly larger than a 
Scissor-tailed FC, dark colored, and its tail feathers sort of fluttered 
individually like ribbons instead of stiff like a Scissor-tail. Also, we grew 
up in NE Oklahoma so we are very good with Scissor-tail identification. Well we 
unfortunately never relocated the bird in question. We also didn't see it as we 
headed back north the next morning. I'm not sure if anyone will want to go 
looking for it with such a slim chance, but I figured the list deserves to know 
that one might be in that area. 


Josh Engelbert & Melissa Patrick
Jonesboro, AR (school)
Copan, OK (home)
       
---------------------------------
Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now.
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 17:02:09 -0400
Bruce:

You raise good points, and I like the Ebird response. However, they need to 
make the ebird interface more user friendly by including these options in the 
template that opens up each time, rather than forcing one to hunt and peck. 


As to City Park Canadas, I too have been tracking them more assiduously this 
spring as a result of our discussions. I meant to post this eventually, but 
here goes. I assure you that a large flock is there each winter. I have made 
the lazt assumption that these birds, like the other park ducks, geese and 
swans, disperse in spring to breed along lagoons throughout the park, keeping a 
low profile, but still there. However, like you I've seen very few actual birds 
about since early March--very few. I haven't walked all the laggon edges, but I 
expect I'll find that my assumption was wrong, and that most of the winter 
flock actually leaves the park during the breeding season. 


The question is: where are they? Anybody seeing Canadas somewhere unexpected? 
What is the situation at other parks and golf courses with winter flocks? Are 
our Canadas simply dispersed widely but locally, or do they actually migrate to 
some other park to the north? Anybody know anything? 


David

David Muth
New Orleans




______________________________________________________________________________
______
Be  a better friend, newshound, and 
know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try  it now.   
http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ

--
David  Muth
New Orleans





**************Wondering what's for Dinner Tonight? Get new twists on family 
favorites at AOL Food.      
(http://food.aol.com/dinner-tonight?NCID=aolfod00030000000001)

--
David Muth
New Orleans
Subject: Re: Herring Gull splits
From: Buford Myers <bmyers990 AT EARTHLINK.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 16:10:28 -0500
Steve, Stefan and Labird,

I realize that AOU reigns supreme in our hemisphere, or at least in North 
and Middle America. Perhaps there is some sort of ornithological Monroe 
doctrine concering old world ornithologists messing with our avifauna's 
taxonomy. But haven't some other equivalent organizations in Britain or 
Europe already split American Herring Gull (smithsonianus) from the European 
argentatus/argenteus?

Mac
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2008 1:05 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Herring Gull splits


> Stefan (labird)-
>    I agree with you that "smithsonianus" is the default Herring Gull over
> most of North America, so it seems pretty silly to list "Herring Gull
> (American)" on ebird lists, etc.  You can go to the AOU website and view
> "species split" proposals and anonymous AOU Check-list Committee Member
> comments.  The proposal to split American Herring Gull failed by a 2-8 
> vote.
> The proposal to split Vega Gull failed by a 4-6 vote.
>
> Steve Cardiff
>
> 
Subject: Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 16:23:11 -0400
Steve/Labird:

Sorry if I implied those were bad misses--I was really assuming there was 
something so obvious I was not seeing it, on the level of Cattle Egret, since 
most big days have a true worst miss. I agree that the birds you list are not 
gimmes at all, just possibilities, in the 3 range or harder on my scale. The 
truth is it looks like they got almost all of the 1, 2, and 3 birds, which is 
why it is a record run. 


David

David Muth
 New Orleans

---- "Steven W. Cardiff"  wrote: 

=============
David M./Richard/Brian (labird)-
    I would consider "non-Acadian" Empids as easy to miss on spring big
days, especially in April.  We have very few hard-evidence spring records of
non-Acadians from the coast (despite intensive efforts to document): only a
couple of Least specimens from as early as late April; earliest
Yellow-bellied specimen is 7 May, earliest "Traill's" were voice-recorded
singing Willow Flycatchers 12 May.  So, any coastal report of silent,
non-Acadian empids from late April should be considered tentative at best.

    Loon, kingbird, and Bobolink aren't necessarily spring gimmees either. I
would not categorize those among "worst misses."

Steve Cardiff
Subject: Re: Big Day Question -- what IS the record?
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 14:58:12 -0500
Dawn, Labird-
    The official (submitted to ABA and published in the annual list totals)
LA Big Day record is 209.  The 211 Big Day was apparently never submitted.
Of course, now that the 2008 LSU Team has let the cat out of the bag and
blown everyone out of the water with 215, the 211 LSU team may be somewhat
depressed, but they should still be encouraged to submit that former #1
record because it will have stood for 5 years or so and will still be the #2
record when the 2008 record gets officially published.

Steve Cardiff  




On 5/3/08 10:26 AM, "Dawn Perkins"  wrote:

> I would like to add my congratulations also.  208 is a most impressive total.
> Especially for post Rita/Katrina!
>  
> Someone mentioned that the previous record was 209.  I thought the record was
> 211 set by 
> the LSU birdathon team in 2003.  All of these numbers are impressive and far
> beyond what 
> I could do.  So as a fascinated bystander I am curious to know what the
> current record actually is and in what year it was set.
>  
> As for the rule under debate:  I think you would have to be careful, in a
> competitive setting, about
> invalidating someone's result because of someone else's comments.  We have no
> control over what other people say or do. In my humble opinion: No one's Big 

> Day should be invalidated because another birder, in the heat of the moment,
> couldn't resist sharing the excitement of their find.  All the team members
> can do is disclose that they are doing a Big Day.  They can't stick a cork in
> somebody else's mouth. Also, imagine if you were in a competitive setting and 

> all you had to do to sabotage the opposing team was to send a few buddies out
> in the field to "helpfully" tell the other teams where certain birds were and
> then, boom, their results are invalidated.   Heh.  It's a good thing birders
> almost always use their powers for good rather than evil.
>  
> I look forward to reading LSU's birdathon also.  I always enjoy reading these
> reports.  They are like adventure stories.
>  
> Best wishes, Dawn
> _________________________________________________________________
> Get Free (PRODUCT) RED  Emoticons, Winks and Display Pics.
> http://joinred.spaces.live.com?ocid=TXT_HMTG_prodredemoticons_052008
Subject: western kingbirds and other stuff
From: Gary Broussard <redeyedvireo AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 14:28:36 -0500
I've been meaning to post this at some point... I had 9 western  
kingbirds at holleyman on may 2 nd.
also a bobolink on may 3 off of west congress in Lafayette.
also noteable was a prairie warbler on April 28 at holleyman. common  
ground dove may4 at holleyman. A. black- headed rose-breasted grosbeak  
hybrid made a brief appearance in my breaux bridge yard may 5.
gary


On May 7, 2008, at 1:31 PM, "Steven W. Cardiff"  wrote:

> David M./Richard/Brian (labird)-
>    I would consider "non-Acadian" Empids as easy to miss on spring big
> days, especially in April.  We have very few hard-evidence spring  
> records of
> non-Acadians from the coast (despite intensive efforts to document):  
> only a
> couple of Least specimens from as early as late April; earliest
> Yellow-bellied specimen is 7 May, earliest "Traill's" were voice- 
> recorded
> singing Willow Flycatchers 12 May.  So, any coastal report of silent,
> non-Acadian empids from late April should be considered tentative at  
> best.
>
>    Loon, kingbird, and Bobolink aren't necessarily spring gimmees  
> either. I
> would not categorize those among "worst misses."
>
> Steve Cardiff
>
>
> On 5/6/08 11:38 PM, "David Muth"  wrote:
>>
>> I'm sure we'll hear about the worst misses, but I note no loon,  
>> Mississippi
>> Kite, Herring Gull, Least Tern!, non-acadian empidonax, Western  
>> Kingbird, or
>> Bobolink right off the bat--I'm sure I'm missing others.
>>
>> All of which means 215 is not the limit.
>>
>> Excellent job.
>>
>> David Muth
>> New Orleans
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Richard Gibbons" 
>> To: 
>> Sent: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 9:57 PM
>> Subject: [LABIRD-L] LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
>>
>>
>>> LABIRDers,
>>>
>>> The LSU Ornithology group does a big day each year to raise money  
>>> for
>>> research projects. I can tell you that it is true when they say it  
>>> is
>>> hard to get start up funds for field projects. I'm told once you  
>>> have
>>> data from a pilot season and publish something, it becomes easier to
>>> win grants. I'm personally hoping this is true.
>>>
>>> Below is a brief summary of our route and the species list generated
>>> from eBird. A more complete account of the day will be sent to  
>>> donors
>>> and posted to the Big Day website in the next week or so.
>>>
>>> In short, we had a great day and the scoter flock and migrants after
>>> the front made the day. It was an awesome evening seeing all the
>>> migrants dropping into Peveto woods.
>>>
>>> You can check out the report from last year and see the new t-shirt
>>> design here.
>>>
>>> www.museum.lsu.edu/bigday.html
>>>
>>> Richard Gibbons
>>> Baton Rouge, LA
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Report generated from eBird:
>>>
>>> Location:     Louisiana, US
>>> Observation date:     4/29/07
>>>
>>> Observers: Brian O'Shea, Gustavo Bravo, Richard Gibbons,  James  
>>> Maley,
>>> and Phred Benham
>>> Weather was calm and somewhat foggy in the morning with a cold front
>>> passing the coast around 2 PM.
>>>
>>> We started in the pineywoods of Beauregard and Calcasieu Parish,  
>>> worked
>>> west to a sod farm
>>> east of Lake Charles, birded the rice country, Lacassine NWR, and  
>>> then
>>> the coastal woodlots and beaches west to Sabine Pass.
>>>
>>> Number of species:     215
>>>
>>> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
>>> Fulvous Whistling-Duck
>>> Canada Goose
>>> Wood Duck
>>> Gadwall
>>> Mallard
>>> Mottled Duck
>>> Blue-winged Teal
>>> Northern Shoveler
>>> Northern Pintail
>>> Green-winged Teal
>>> Ring-necked Duck
>>> Greater Scaup
>>> Lesser Scaup
>>> Surf Scoter
>>> White-winged Scoter
>>> Black Scoter
>>> Hooded Merganser
>>> Pied-billed Grebe
>>> American White Pelican
>>> Brown Pelican
>>> Neotropic Cormorant
>>> Double-crested Cormorant
>>> Anhinga
>>> Least Bittern
>>> Great Blue Heron
>>> Great Egret
>>> Snowy Egret
>>> Little Blue Heron
>>> Tricolored Heron
>>> Cattle Egret
>>> Green Heron
>>> Black-crowned Night-Heron
>>> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
>>> White Ibis
>>> Glossy Ibis
>>> White-faced Ibis
>>> Roseate Spoonbill
>>> Wood Stork
>>> Black Vulture
>>> Turkey Vulture
>>> White-tailed Kite
>>> Bald Eagle
>>> Northern Harrier
>>> Cooper's Hawk
>>> Red-shouldered Hawk
>>> Broad-winged Hawk
>>> Swainson's Hawk
>>> Red-tailed Hawk
>>> Crested Caracara
>>> Merlin
>>> Peregrine Falcon
>>> Clapper Rail
>>> King Rail
>>> Sora
>>> Purple Gallinule
>>> Common Moorhen
>>> American Coot
>>> Black-bellied Plover
>>> Snowy Plover
>>> Wilson's Plover
>>> Semipalmated Plover
>>> Piping Plover
>>> Killdeer
>>> American Oystercatcher
>>> Black-necked Stilt
>>> American Avocet
>>> Spotted Sandpiper
>>> Solitary Sandpiper
>>> Greater Yellowlegs
>>> Willet
>>> Lesser Yellowlegs
>>> Upland Sandpiper
>>> Whimbrel
>>> Long-billed Curlew
>>> Ruddy Turnstone
>>> Sanderling
>>> Semipalmated Sandpiper
>>> Western Sandpiper
>>> Least Sandpiper
>>> White-rumped Sandpiper
>>> Pectoral Sandpiper
>>> Dunlin
>>> Stilt Sandpiper
>>> Buff-breasted Sandpiper
>>> Short-billed Dowitcher
>>> Long-billed Dowitcher
>>> Wilson's Phalarope
>>> Laughing Gull
>>> Bonaparte's Gull
>>> Ring-billed Gull
>>> Gull-billed Tern
>>> Caspian Tern
>>> Black Tern
>>> Common Tern
>>> Forster's Tern
>>> Royal Tern
>>> Sandwich Tern
>>> Black Skimmer
>>> Rock Pigeon
>>> Eurasian Collared-Dove
>>> White-winged Dove
>>> Mourning Dove
>>> Inca Dove
>>> Yellow-billed Cuckoo
>>> Black-billed Cuckoo
>>> Barn Owl
>>> Eastern Screech-Owl
>>> Great Horned Owl
>>> Barred Owl
>>> Common Nighthawk
>>> Chuck-will's-widow
>>> Chimney Swift
>>> Ruby-throated Hummingbird
>>> Belted Kingfisher
>>> Red-headed Woodpecker
>>> Red-bellied Woodpecker
>>> Downy Woodpecker
>>> Hairy Woodpecker
>>> Northern Flicker
>>> Pileated Woodpecker
>>> Eastern Wood-Pewee
>>> Acadian Flycatcher
>>> Great Crested Flycatcher
>>> Eastern Kingbird
>>> Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
>>> Loggerhead Shrike
>>> White-eyed Vireo
>>> Yellow-throated Vireo
>>> Philadelphia Vireo
>>> Red-eyed Vireo
>>> Blue Jay
>>> American Crow
>>> Fish Crow
>>> Purple Martin
>>> Tree Swallow
>>> Northern Rough-winged Swallow
>>> Bank Swallow
>>> Cliff Swallow
>>> Barn Swallow
>>> Carolina Chickadee
>>> Tufted Titmouse
>>> Brown-headed Nuthatch
>>> Carolina Wren
>>> Sedge Wren
>>> Marsh Wren
>>> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
>>> Eastern Bluebird
>>> Veery
>>> Gray-cheeked Thrush
>>> Swainson's Thrush
>>> Wood Thrush
>>> American Robin
>>> Gray Catbird
>>> Northern Mockingbird
>>> Brown Thrasher
>>> European Starling
>>> Cedar Waxwing
>>> Blue-winged Warbler
>>> Golden-winged Warbler
>>> Tennessee Warbler
>>> Northern Parula
>>> Yellow Warbler
>>> Chestnut-sided Warbler
>>> Magnolia Warbler
>>> Cape May Warbler
>>> Black-throated Green Warbler
>>> Blackburnian Warbler
>>> Yellow-throated Warbler
>>> Pine Warbler
>>> Prairie Warbler
>>> Palm Warbler
>>> Bay-breasted Warbler
>>> Blackpoll Warbler
>>> Cerulean Warbler
>>> Black-and-white Warbler
>>> American Redstart
>>> Prothonotary Warbler
>>> Worm-eating Warbler
>>> Swainson's Warbler
>>> Ovenbird
>>> Northern Waterthrush
>>> Kentucky Warbler
>>> Common Yellowthroat
>>> Hooded Warbler
>>> Yellow-breasted Chat
>>> Summer Tanager
>>> Scarlet Tanager
>>> Eastern Towhee
>>> Bachman's Sparrow
>>> Chipping Sparrow
>>> Savannah Sparrow
>>> Le Conte's Sparrow
>>> Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow
>>> Seaside Sparrow
>>> White-throated Sparrow
>>> White-crowned Sparrow
>>> Northern Cardinal
>>> Rose-breasted Grosbeak
>>> Blue Grosbeak
>>> Indigo Bunting
>>> Painted Bunting
>>> Dickcissel
>>> Red-winged Blackbird
>>> Eastern Meadowlark
>>> Common Grackle
>>> Boat-tailed Grackle
>>> Great-tailed Grackle
>>> Brown-headed Cowbird
>>> Orchard Oriole
>>> Baltimore Oriole
>>> House Finch
>>> House Sparrow
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 
_____________________________________________________________________________ 

 

>>> _______
>>> Be a better friend, newshound, and
>>> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now.
>>> http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
>>>
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Bruce Baird <Bbairdsr AT AOL.COM>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 15:37:27 EDT
David/LaBird
 
I have expressed concern about not counting Canadas, Mallards, and other  
birds normally seen in parks and considered feral even when the sightings are  
many miles from the parks.  I feel that by not counting at least the free  
flying species, how is the birding community ever going to separate the feral 
from 

the wild.  As an example, I have been looking for the 50 Canada geese  that 
you told me were resident in City Park during eight  trips between 3/17/08 and 
today.  The total counts were 3, 0, 0,  0, 6, 3, 0, and 4.  If this is 
representative of the actual City Park Canada Goose count, then flocks greater 
than 

6 seen either in or near the park  cannot be attributed to being City Park 
resident birds. I realize that I am a rookie at this and my numbers may be low, 

but since Canadas are  generally excluded from City Park eBird reports that 
are published on  LaBird, how will accurate numbers ever be established.
 
eBird allows entry of both Mallard and Mallard (Domestic type) and Muscovy  
Duck and Muscovy 
Duck (Domestic type).  I thought this was a good way  to record separate the 
wild from the feral for these two species, but  unfortunately data entered in 
eBird for these two domestic types does  not get included in one's personal 
summary data.  I wrote eBird about  this problem and the following is their 
response.
 
One other thing, if a Big Day trip included the New Orleans area, would a  
Monk Parakeet be allowed?
 
Bruce Baird
Metairie, LA
 
   
Subject: RE: [Fwd: Inclusion of Park Resident Birds on eBird]
Date: 4/4/2008
From Miliff
To: Bbairdsr
cc: _bis42 AT cornell.edu_ (mailto:bis42 AT cornell.edu) 
 
Bruce,

We wish more eBirders were like you. Tracking these  "resident" birds is
important too. If birders had kept good records of the  city park Canada
Geese back before they were everywhere, then we would have  had a much better
record of their spread.

As it stands though, most  birders do not spend much time tracking these
exotics, with you and a few  others being exceptions. By all means continue
to do so.

These records  are excluded from the bar charts and maps since the state
reviewers have  probably tagged them as "ID OK--origin exotic". These keeps
it so that one  can look at the distribution of Baikal Teal in the US
(records from western  Alaska and the west coast) without having it clouded
by escapees. Similarly,  if all Muscovy Ducks were accepted, one would have
no way of knowing where  the wild ones are in a quick view.

The Muscovy Duck (Domestic) and  Mallard (Domestic) are excluded from life
lists since most birders want to  count wild ones only and do not want to end
up counting it twice if they  report a Mallard (Domestic) and a wild Mallard.

In the future we plan to  give users the option to manage their own list, but
for the moment, we have  defaulted to the way that most birders want it. 

Let me know if you have  further questions--and keep reporting those birds!

Best,

Marshall  


Call it crazy, but I like to include park resident birds in my  eBird  data.

I have recorded species such as Swan Goose, Mute   Swan, Black Swan, Muscovy 
Duck (Domestic type) and Mallard (Domestic type)  that  are resident in my 
local 
parks using private locations.   They appear in my  list, but are excluded 
from 
other lists.  For  example, none of the  five are included in the county or 
state lists in  which my private location  is located, and none of them are 
included in  the My Bar Charts for my  private locations.  The Mute Swan is
the  only 
one to make it to My  Summary Tables, and only the Mute Swan, Swan  Goose,
and 
Black Swan make it to My  Life List.

Does eBird do  this intentionally, or is there a problem with the  software?

Bruce  Baird

--  

-------------------------------------------------
Marshall J.  Iliff
West Roxbury, MA
miliff AT  aol.com
-------------------------------------------------
eBird/AKN  Project Leader
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159 Sapsucker Woods  Rd.
Ithaca, NY  14850
http://www.ebird.org
http://www.avianknowledge.net
-------------------------------------------------


-----Original  Message-----
From: Brian Sullivan [mailto:bls42 AT cornell.edu] 
Sent:  Thursday, March 27, 2008 5:08 PM
To: miliff AT aol.com
Subject: [Fwd:  Inclusion of Park Resident Birds on eBird]



-------- Original  Message --------
Subject:    Inclusion of Park Resident Birds on  eBird
Date:   Tue, 25 Mar 2008 23:41:11 EDT
From:    Bbairdsr AT aol.com
To:     ebird AT cornell.edu



Call  it crazy, but I like to include park resident birds in my eBird   data.

I have recorded species such as Swan Goose, Mute  Swan, Black  Swan, Muscovy 
Duck (Domestic type) and Mallard (Domestic type) that   are resident in my
local 
parks using private locations.  They appear  in my  list, but are excluded
from 
other lists.  For example,  none of the  five are included in the county or 
state lists in which my  private location  is located, and none of them are 
included in the My  Bar Charts for my  private locations.  The Mute Swan is
the only  
one to make it to My  Summary Tables, and only the Mute Swan, Swan  Goose,
and 
Black Swan make it to My  Life List.

Does eBird do  this intentionally, or is there a problem with the  software?

Bruce  Baird



**************Create a Home Theater Like the Pros. Watch  the video on AOL 
Home.       
(http://home.aol.com/diy/home-improvement-eric-stromer?video=15?ncid=aolhom0
0030000000001)



--  
******************************
Brian L. Sullivan
Pacific Grove,  CA

eBird/AKN Project Leader
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
159  Sapsucker Woods Rd.
Ithaca, NY  14850
www.ebird.org
www.avianknowledge.net
-----------
Photographic  Editor
Birds of North America Online
Cornell Lab of  Ornithology
www.bna.birds.cornell.edu/BNA
-----------
Photographic  Editor
North American Birds
American Birding  Association
www.americanbirding.org
(609)  694-3280
******************************** 



In a message dated 5/7/2008 8:48:48 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
dpmuth AT COX.NET writes:

Richard/Labird:

I had to get my little dig in about Canadas and  Mallard, but Big Day teams 
have been counting them for years. I haven't done a soutwest La. Big Day for a 

long, long time, so I guess these days I'd just  follow the convention.

It is remarkable how many species are possible  or even probable now that 
were real long shots 20 years ago. When I started doing Big Days I used to code 

birds by the likelihood of an encounter from 1  (certain) to 5 (fantastic 
luck). Black-bellied Whistling Duck, White-tailed  Kite, caracara and 
oystercatcher would have been 5s, Brown Pelicans in Cameron were 4s as were 
Inca Dove and 

Swainson's Hawk. White-winged Dove was a long  shot in late April. There 
were, of course, no collared-doves and House Finches  were still 5s. I like to 
think that with those birds available, plus countable mallards and Canadas, I'd 

have broken 200 a couple of times, though obviously  by that logic Cardiff, 
Dittmann, Parker and Remsen would have broken 210. I  don't think any species 
has dropped off the list of probables, though a few have declined in abundance. 


I better stop thinking about this, or I'll  be planning a 2009 Big Day.

BTW, I think we ought to settle on a  convention about countability (and, 
more importantly, reportability) of  "Rockerfeller" Canadas, and other Canadas 
and Mallards. If we count "wild" breeding mallards in the coastal zone or along 

rivers or in ag farm fields, do  we also count golf course free-flying 
Canadas and city park mallards, mixed with white Pekins and pie-bald Muscovies? 

I've always treated them as being in seperate categories from truly wild birds, 

and have tried to hold the line for  the CBC, but is that truly the best 
course? Input welcome.

David  Muth
New Orleans

---- Richard Gibbons   wrote: 

=============
David and LABIRDers,

Good catch! I  accidentally deleted Least Tern and Herring Gull from the
eBird list when  cleaning it up for posting. You are right on the mark
with shorebirds and  waterfowl saving the day.

The morning was foggy so perched Mississippi  Kites were not detected
on the snags as we raced southward out of their  breeding range. As we
left Lake Charles without it, we knew it might well  be a dip. We found
what was probably a "Traill's" Flycatcher in Peveto, but  without a call
note or better look, we decided it was best to leave it off.  

The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe  just
unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm  falling
in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to consult and  they
counted them.

We did not use the 5 minute rule with  Red-cockaded Woodpecker as this
is a World Series of Birding rule that was  worked in at some point in
the past and it just seemed too sloppy.  

The LeConte's was kicked up during a comfort stop alongside a  rice
field. We flushed it three more times to get a good look.

A  scouted Eared Grebe from two days before in Lake Charles and many
other  misses suggests a bigger day is well within reach. If you look at
the Lyon  et al. list, you see there are several species the other team
missed. It  might be worth doing a thorough information share session
next year for any  group interested in making a run at 220.

215 is certainly not the  limit. If Kansas can get 225, I'm pretty sure
Louisiana can get  226.

There's always next year!


Richard Gibbons
Baton  Rouge, LA





______________________________________________________________________________
______
Be  a better friend, newshound, and 
know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try  it now.   
http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ

--
David  Muth
New Orleans





**************Wondering what's for Dinner Tonight? Get new twists on family 
favorites at AOL Food.      
(http://food.aol.com/dinner-tonight?NCID=aolfod00030000000001)
Subject: NEXRAD observed bird migration, 5-7-08
From: John Arvin <jarvin AT GCBO.ORG>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 14:04:51 -0500
Upper level winds were really ripping in the western Gulf (52 and 57 kts. at 
Brownsville and Corpus respectively) moderating to half that at Lake Charles 
and even less eastward. Bird Targets were moving in the 65 kit. range in the 
west and slightly less than that at Houston where upper level winds are not 
reported by the NWS, but must be estimated based on readings at Corpus and Lake 
Charles. Reports from the field indicate that migrants that were put down last 
Saturday by the weak front have all but completely departed coastal woodlots 
while inland sites are reporting excellent numbers. This is no surprise under 
the circumstances and will probably remain the case through the weekend 
(bummer, but we've been remarkably lucky for weekend fronts this spring) when 
the next front is forecast to move offshore about Monday. This far out 
forecasting a front at this late date is probably tentative at best. Whether 
there will be another event that could be termed a fallout this season seems 
unlikely, but migrants will be moving through in lesser numbers. Flycatchers, 
especially Empidonax and Contopus, will be dominant elements so it will give us 
opportunities to hone our skills on the these difficult groups. 


John C. Arvin
Research Coordinator
Gulf Coast Bird Observatory
103 W. Hwy 332
Lake Jackson, TX 77566
(979) 480-0999
Fax: (979) 480-0777
jarvin AT gcbo.org
www.gcbo.org
eBird.org/gcbo
Subject: Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 13:31:27 -0500
David M./Richard/Brian (labird)-
    I would consider "non-Acadian" Empids as easy to miss on spring big
days, especially in April.  We have very few hard-evidence spring records of
non-Acadians from the coast (despite intensive efforts to document): only a
couple of Least specimens from as early as late April; earliest
Yellow-bellied specimen is 7 May, earliest "Traill's" were voice-recorded
singing Willow Flycatchers 12 May.  So, any coastal report of silent,
non-Acadian empids from late April should be considered tentative at best.

    Loon, kingbird, and Bobolink aren't necessarily spring gimmees either. I
would not categorize those among "worst misses."

Steve Cardiff


On 5/6/08 11:38 PM, "David Muth"  wrote:
> 
> I'm sure we'll hear about the worst misses, but I note no loon, Mississippi
> Kite, Herring Gull, Least Tern!, non-acadian empidonax, Western Kingbird, or
> Bobolink right off the bat--I'm sure I'm missing others.
> 
> All of which means 215 is not the limit.
> 
> Excellent job.
> 
> David Muth
> New Orleans
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Richard Gibbons" 
> To: 
> Sent: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 9:57 PM
> Subject: [LABIRD-L] LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
> 
> 
>> LABIRDers,
>> 
>> The LSU Ornithology group does a big day each year to raise money for
>> research projects. I can tell you that it is true when they say it is
>> hard to get start up funds for field projects. I'm told once you have
>> data from a pilot season and publish something, it becomes easier to
>> win grants. I'm personally hoping this is true.
>> 
>> Below is a brief summary of our route and the species list generated
>> from eBird. A more complete account of the day will be sent to donors
>> and posted to the Big Day website in the next week or so.
>> 
>> In short, we had a great day and the scoter flock and migrants after
>> the front made the day. It was an awesome evening seeing all the
>> migrants dropping into Peveto woods.
>> 
>> You can check out the report from last year and see the new t-shirt
>> design here.
>> 
>> www.museum.lsu.edu/bigday.html
>> 
>> Richard Gibbons
>> Baton Rouge, LA
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Report generated from eBird:
>> 
>> Location:     Louisiana, US
>> Observation date:     4/29/07
>> 
>> Observers: Brian O'Shea, Gustavo Bravo, Richard Gibbons,  James Maley,
>> and Phred Benham
>> Weather was calm and somewhat foggy in the morning with a cold front
>> passing the coast around 2 PM.
>> 
>> We started in the pineywoods of Beauregard and Calcasieu Parish, worked
>> west to a sod farm
>> east of Lake Charles, birded the rice country, Lacassine NWR, and then
>> the coastal woodlots and beaches west to Sabine Pass.
>> 
>> Number of species:     215
>> 
>> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
>> Fulvous Whistling-Duck
>> Canada Goose
>> Wood Duck
>> Gadwall
>> Mallard
>> Mottled Duck
>> Blue-winged Teal
>> Northern Shoveler
>> Northern Pintail
>> Green-winged Teal
>> Ring-necked Duck
>> Greater Scaup
>> Lesser Scaup
>> Surf Scoter
>> White-winged Scoter
>> Black Scoter
>> Hooded Merganser
>> Pied-billed Grebe
>> American White Pelican
>> Brown Pelican
>> Neotropic Cormorant
>> Double-crested Cormorant
>> Anhinga
>> Least Bittern
>> Great Blue Heron
>> Great Egret
>> Snowy Egret
>> Little Blue Heron
>> Tricolored Heron
>> Cattle Egret
>> Green Heron
>> Black-crowned Night-Heron
>> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
>> White Ibis
>> Glossy Ibis
>> White-faced Ibis
>> Roseate Spoonbill
>> Wood Stork
>> Black Vulture
>> Turkey Vulture
>> White-tailed Kite
>> Bald Eagle
>> Northern Harrier
>> Cooper's Hawk
>> Red-shouldered Hawk
>> Broad-winged Hawk
>> Swainson's Hawk
>> Red-tailed Hawk
>> Crested Caracara
>> Merlin
>> Peregrine Falcon
>> Clapper Rail
>> King Rail
>> Sora
>> Purple Gallinule
>> Common Moorhen
>> American Coot
>> Black-bellied Plover
>> Snowy Plover
>> Wilson's Plover
>> Semipalmated Plover
>> Piping Plover
>> Killdeer
>> American Oystercatcher
>> Black-necked Stilt
>> American Avocet
>> Spotted Sandpiper
>> Solitary Sandpiper
>> Greater Yellowlegs
>> Willet
>> Lesser Yellowlegs
>> Upland Sandpiper
>> Whimbrel
>> Long-billed Curlew
>> Ruddy Turnstone
>> Sanderling
>> Semipalmated Sandpiper
>> Western Sandpiper
>> Least Sandpiper
>> White-rumped Sandpiper
>> Pectoral Sandpiper
>> Dunlin
>> Stilt Sandpiper
>> Buff-breasted Sandpiper
>> Short-billed Dowitcher
>> Long-billed Dowitcher
>> Wilson's Phalarope
>> Laughing Gull
>> Bonaparte's Gull
>> Ring-billed Gull
>> Gull-billed Tern
>> Caspian Tern
>> Black Tern
>> Common Tern
>> Forster's Tern
>> Royal Tern
>> Sandwich Tern
>> Black Skimmer
>> Rock Pigeon
>> Eurasian Collared-Dove
>> White-winged Dove
>> Mourning Dove
>> Inca Dove
>> Yellow-billed Cuckoo
>> Black-billed Cuckoo
>> Barn Owl
>> Eastern Screech-Owl
>> Great Horned Owl
>> Barred Owl
>> Common Nighthawk
>> Chuck-will's-widow
>> Chimney Swift
>> Ruby-throated Hummingbird
>> Belted Kingfisher
>> Red-headed Woodpecker
>> Red-bellied Woodpecker
>> Downy Woodpecker
>> Hairy Woodpecker
>> Northern Flicker
>> Pileated Woodpecker
>> Eastern Wood-Pewee
>> Acadian Flycatcher
>> Great Crested Flycatcher
>> Eastern Kingbird
>> Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
>> Loggerhead Shrike
>> White-eyed Vireo
>> Yellow-throated Vireo
>> Philadelphia Vireo
>> Red-eyed Vireo
>> Blue Jay
>> American Crow
>> Fish Crow
>> Purple Martin
>> Tree Swallow
>> Northern Rough-winged Swallow
>> Bank Swallow
>> Cliff Swallow
>> Barn Swallow
>> Carolina Chickadee
>> Tufted Titmouse
>> Brown-headed Nuthatch
>> Carolina Wren
>> Sedge Wren
>> Marsh Wren
>> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
>> Eastern Bluebird
>> Veery
>> Gray-cheeked Thrush
>> Swainson's Thrush
>> Wood Thrush
>> American Robin
>> Gray Catbird
>> Northern Mockingbird
>> Brown Thrasher
>> European Starling
>> Cedar Waxwing
>> Blue-winged Warbler
>> Golden-winged Warbler
>> Tennessee Warbler
>> Northern Parula
>> Yellow Warbler
>> Chestnut-sided Warbler
>> Magnolia Warbler
>> Cape May Warbler
>> Black-throated Green Warbler
>> Blackburnian Warbler
>> Yellow-throated Warbler
>> Pine Warbler
>> Prairie Warbler
>> Palm Warbler
>> Bay-breasted Warbler
>> Blackpoll Warbler
>> Cerulean Warbler
>> Black-and-white Warbler
>> American Redstart
>> Prothonotary Warbler
>> Worm-eating Warbler
>> Swainson's Warbler
>> Ovenbird
>> Northern Waterthrush
>> Kentucky Warbler
>> Common Yellowthroat
>> Hooded Warbler
>> Yellow-breasted Chat
>> Summer Tanager
>> Scarlet Tanager
>> Eastern Towhee
>> Bachman's Sparrow
>> Chipping Sparrow
>> Savannah Sparrow
>> Le Conte's Sparrow
>> Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow
>> Seaside Sparrow
>> White-throated Sparrow
>> White-crowned Sparrow
>> Northern Cardinal
>> Rose-breasted Grosbeak
>> Blue Grosbeak
>> Indigo Bunting
>> Painted Bunting
>> Dickcissel
>> Red-winged Blackbird
>> Eastern Meadowlark
>> Common Grackle
>> Boat-tailed Grackle
>> Great-tailed Grackle
>> Brown-headed Cowbird
>> Orchard Oriole
>> Baltimore Oriole
>> House Finch
>> House Sparrow
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
_____________________________________________________________________________ 

>> _______
>> Be a better friend, newshound, and
>> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now.
>> http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
>> 
Subject: Re: Herring Gull splits
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 13:05:08 -0500
Stefan (labird)-
    I agree with you that "smithsonianus" is the default Herring Gull over
most of North America, so it seems pretty silly to list "Herring Gull
(American)" on ebird lists, etc.  You can go to the AOU website and view
"species split" proposals and anonymous AOU Check-list Committee Member
comments.  The proposal to split American Herring Gull failed by a 2-8 vote.
The proposal to split Vega Gull failed by a 4-6 vote.

Steve Cardiff


On 5/7/08 11:38 AM, "Woltmann, Stefan"  wrote:

> Hi Folks,
>  
> Very interesting discussion about what is "countable."
>  
> It brings up in my mind a slightly different issue I've been wondering about
> lately, namely the presence of "Herring Gull (American)" on e-bird 
checklists. 

>  
> I'll be the first to confess that I have myself, on numerous occasions,
> checked off Herring Gull (American) rather than just unadorned Herring Gull.
> But more and more I find myself hesitant about that, and I've stopped doing
> it. To say that what I saw was indeed an American (smithsonianus) Herring 
Gull 

> is an assumption, based on geography. I'll bet it's mostly a very safe
> assumption. Other subspecies of Herring Gull do occur in North America at
> times, notably vegae Herring Gulls in the Northwest. But quite honestly, I
> don't think I'd know a vegae Herring Gull or a Eurasian subspecies if it were
> sitting on my front porch. Some people would, but I bet many of us don't
> really look closely enough at each Herring Gull to say with 100% certainty
> that it is indeed an American one.
>  
> Again, I'd be willing to bet that most, if not all of them are American
> Herring Gulls. But to list each one as such implies a level of precision that
> may not be there.
>  
> Thoughts?
>  
> Stefan
>  
> Stefan Woltmann 
> Dept. Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
> 400 Boggs 
> Tulane University
> New Orleans, LA 70118
> swoltman AT tulane.edu
Subject: Countability and Subspecies ID
From: "Woltmann, Stefan" <swoltman AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 11:38:18 -0500
Hi Folks,
 
Very interesting discussion about what is "countable." 
 
It brings up in my mind a slightly different issue I've been wondering about 
lately, namely the presence of "Herring Gull (American)" on e-bird checklists. 

 
I'll be the first to confess that I have myself, on numerous occasions, checked 
off Herring Gull (American) rather than just unadorned Herring Gull. But more 
and more I find myself hesitant about that, and I've stopped doing it. To say 
that what I saw was indeed an American (smithsonianus) Herring Gull is an 
assumption, based on geography. I'll bet it's mostly a very safe assumption. 
Other subspecies of Herring Gull do occur in North America at times, notably 
vegae Herring Gulls in the Northwest. But quite honestly, I don't think I'd 
know a vegae Herring Gull or a Eurasian subspecies if it were sitting on my 
front porch. Some people would, but I bet many of us don't really look closely 
enough at each Herring Gull to say with 100% certainty that it is indeed an 
American one. 

 
Again, I'd be willing to bet that most, if not all of them are American Herring 
Gulls. But to list each one as such implies a level of precision that may not 
be there. 

 
Thoughts?
 
Stefan
 
Stefan Woltmann 
Dept. Ecology & Evolutionary Biology 
400 Boggs 
Tulane University 
New Orleans, LA 70118 
swoltman AT tulane.edu
Subject: Re: Big Day misses
From: "Brian O'Shea" <boshea2 AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 11:35:22 -0500
David/LABird -

At least a couple of those were unintentionally omitted from the list posted 
previously. We had a "Traill's" Flycatcher at Peveto, Herring Gull at East 
Jetty, and Least Tern in a couple of places. But we did miss both kites (too 
foggy in the morning, I guess) and Bobolink, despite a grand effort to locate 
them. It was an outstanding day nonetheless . . . as Richard mentioned, it was 
amazing to watch flocks of warblers falling out of the sky into Peveto Woods, 
or to stand on the beach watching warblers and thrushes come in off the gulf, 
often just a foot or two above the water. 


Cheers,

Brian O'Shea 
Baton Rouge

 
> I'm sure we'll hear about the worst misses, but I note no loon, Mississippi
> Kite, Herring Gull, Least Tern!, non-acadian empidonax, Western Kingbird, or
> Bobolink right off the bat--I'm sure I'm missing others.
Subject: Re: Countability of Canada Goose & summer Mallards
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 10:41:37 -0500
Labird-
    Canada Goose status has been discussed a number of times on this forum
over the past few years.  It's a rather complicated and unique situation
because wild Canadas occurred here historically and are legitimately on the
state list, but have pretty much disappeared as a wild-occurring species.
Meanwhile, Canada Geese have subsequently been deliberately introduced here,
resident feral populations seem to be holding on or even flourishing in some
areas, and there's apparently some evidence to suggest that feral birds can
disperse fairly long distances within their introduced range in the
southeastern US.  More recently, the larger Canada Goose was taxonomically
split from the smaller Cackling Goose, further confusing past and present
status of the two forms.
    Again, there is little or no evidence to indicate that wild Canada Geese
still occur in Louisiana.  So, the assumption is that we are only seeing
birds derived from introduced/feral sources.  It seems doubtful that there
is any gene flow occurring between our feral Canadas and potentially wild
Canadas, e.g., there's no evidence that our "resident" feral birds are
moving north to within the range of wild Canadas, or that wild Canadas are
making it south to LA and mixing with feral birds.  In my opinion, feral
Canadas cannot survive without protected "refugia" such as Rockefeller
Refuge, parks, golf courses, and industrial installations with lawns and
ponds. In other words, the species does not seem to be expanding into and
permanently occupying wild habitat.  This seems to be the situation in
Cameron Parish, where the introduced Canadas expand and contract from the
refuge HQ "refugium."  So, the debate centers on whether we consider Canada
Geese as a "subsidized" species, or do we consider those protected "refugia"
as part of the permanent landscape?  Such considerations would also have
ramifications for species such as Muscovy...
    I'm hoping that the LBRC will make a "ruling" on this problem in the
near future.  The conundrum is whether we can make the case for
re-designating Canada Goose as an "Introduced" species when it's already on
the list based on historical wild occurrence and could potentially still
occur in the wild.....
    In the case of Mallard, as myself and others have pointed out, there's
not a whole lot that can be done as far as countability of "resident"
populations.  The species is a common migrant and wintering bird in the
wild, and there's some evidence that increasing numbers are remaining in LA
during the summer.  There probably is some gene flow between wintering birds
and residents (and between Mallards and Mottled Ducks).  So, I would say
that Mallard countability should be on the honor system.  If you see
Mallards that are normally plumaged, normally shaped, and can fly, or if
they are seen in "wild situations" (e.g., sitting in a ricefield, even if a
potential cripple) then count them.  If they can't fly, are the size of a
goose, have aberrant plumage or soft parts colors, or fail the "bread test,"
then they should not be counted.

Steve Cardiff


On 5/7/08 8:46 AM, "David Muth"  wrote:

> Richard/Labird:
> 
> I had to get my little dig in about Canadas and Mallard, but Big Day teams
> have been counting them for years. I haven't done a soutwest La. Big Day for 
a 

> long, long time, so I guess these days I'd just follow the convention.
> 
> It is remarkable how many species are possible or even probable now that were
> real long shots 20 years ago. When I started doing Big Days I used to code
> birds by the likelihood of an encounter from 1 (certain) to 5 (fantastic
> luck). Black-bellied Whistling Duck, White-tailed Kite, caracara and
> oystercatcher would have been 5s, Brown Pelicans in Cameron were 4s as were
> Inca Dove and Swainson's Hawk. White-winged Dove was a long shot in late
> April. There were, of course, no collared-doves and House Finches were still
> 5s. I like to think that with those birds available, plus countable mallards
> and Canadas, I'd have broken 200 a couple of times, though obviously by that
> logic Cardiff, Dittmann, Parker and Remsen would have broken 210. I don't
> think any species has dropped off the list of probables, though a few have
> declined in abundance.
> 
> I better stop thinking about this, or I'll be planning a 2009 Big Day.
> 
> BTW, I think we ought to settle on a convention about countability (and, more
> importantly, reportability) of "Rockerfeller" Canadas, and other Canadas and
> Mallards. If we count "wild" breeding mallards in the coastal zone or along
> rivers or in ag farm fields, do we also count golf course free-flying Canadas
> and city park mallards, mixed with white Pekins and pie-bald Muscovies? I've
> always treated them as being in seperate categories from truly wild birds, 
and 

> have tried to hold the line for the CBC, but is that truly the best course?
> Input welcome.
> 
> David Muth
> New Orleans
> 
> ---- Richard Gibbons  wrote:
> 
> =============
> David and LABIRDers,
> 
> Good catch! I accidentally deleted Least Tern and Herring Gull from the
> eBird list when cleaning it up for posting. You are right on the mark
> with shorebirds and waterfowl saving the day.
> 
>  The morning was foggy so perched Mississippi Kites were not detected
> on the snags as we raced southward out of their breeding range. As we
> left Lake Charles without it, we knew it might well be a dip. We found
> what was probably a "Traill's" Flycatcher in Peveto, but without a call
> note or better look, we decided it was best to leave it off.
> 
> The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe just
> unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm falling
> in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to consult and they
> counted them.
> 
> We did not use the 5 minute rule with Red-cockaded Woodpecker as this
> is a World Series of Birding rule that was worked in at some point in
> the past and it just seemed too sloppy.
> 
> The LeConte's was kicked up during a comfort stop alongside a rice
> field. We flushed it three more times to get a good look.
> 
> A scouted Eared Grebe from two days before in Lake Charles and many
> other misses suggests a bigger day is well within reach. If you look at
> the Lyon et al. list, you see there are several species the other team
> missed. It might be worth doing a thorough information share session
> next year for any group interested in making a run at 220.
> 
> 215 is certainly not the limit. If Kansas can get 225, I'm pretty sure
> Louisiana can get 226.
> 
> There's always next year!
> 
> 
> Richard Gibbons
> Baton Rouge, LA
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>       
> 
______________________________________________________________________________ 

> ______
> Be a better friend, newshound, and
> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now.
> http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
> 
> --
> David Muth
> New Orleans
Subject: Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
From: Peter H Yaukey <PYaukey AT UNO.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 09:26:39 -0500
Dave and LAbird-

Sheesh, who would have thought a 209 and a 215 in the same year.  The
ante is being upped.  This is great stuff!

Peter Yaukey

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana
Birds [mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of David Muth
Sent: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 11:39 PM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record

Labird:

Congratulations to both 200+ teams. Having never gotten past the mid
190s I 
know what an accomplishment 208 and 215 are. What strikes me about
both 
lists is the near absence of rare birds. The late scoter flock is a
real 
find, and White-winged remains rare, but late scoters are not
unprecedented. 
Indeed, Ken and Gary Rosenberg and I had all three scoters in a Holly
Beach 
flock with, as I recall, L. Scaup and merganser on a late April big
day 
attempt many moons ago.

Picking up 30 species of shorebird (but no Golden Plover, godwit or 
Baird's), 26 warblers (including Cape May and late Palm) and eight
sparrows 
(including LeConte's) make for a solid heart of a Big Day, but the 18
ducks 
and geese, including the scoters and Greater Scaup, are what made this
a 
record run (along with the fallout), in my opinion. Of course, in the
old 
days we did not count introduced Canadas and mallards (just sayin'),
but 
even without them that is a remarkable run, presumably the result of
good 
scouting. Ring-necked strikes me as most unexpected of all.

I'm sure we'll hear about the worst misses, but I note no loon,
Mississippi 
Kite, Herring Gull, Least Tern!, non-acadian empidonax, Western
Kingbird, or 
Bobolink right off the bat--I'm sure I'm missing others.

All of which means 215 is not the limit.

Excellent job.

David Muth
New Orleans


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Richard Gibbons" 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 9:57 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record


> LABIRDers,
>
> The LSU Ornithology group does a big day each year to raise money
for
> research projects. I can tell you that it is true when they say it
is
> hard to get start up funds for field projects. I'm told once you
have
> data from a pilot season and publish something, it becomes easier to
> win grants. I'm personally hoping this is true.
>
> Below is a brief summary of our route and the species list generated
> from eBird. A more complete account of the day will be sent to
donors
> and posted to the Big Day website in the next week or so.
>
> In short, we had a great day and the scoter flock and migrants after
> the front made the day. It was an awesome evening seeing all the
> migrants dropping into Peveto woods.
>
> You can check out the report from last year and see the new t-shirt
> design here.
>
> www.museum.lsu.edu/bigday.html
>
> Richard Gibbons
> Baton Rouge, LA
>
>
>
> Report generated from eBird:
>
> Location:     Louisiana, US
> Observation date:     4/29/07
>
> Observers: Brian O'Shea, Gustavo Bravo, Richard Gibbons,  James
Maley,
> and Phred Benham
> Weather was calm and somewhat foggy in the morning with a cold front
> passing the coast around 2 PM.
>
> We started in the pineywoods of Beauregard and Calcasieu Parish,
worked
> west to a sod farm
> east of Lake Charles, birded the rice country, Lacassine NWR, and
then
> the coastal woodlots and beaches west to Sabine Pass.
>
> Number of species:     215
>
> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
> Fulvous Whistling-Duck
> Canada Goose
> Wood Duck
> Gadwall
> Mallard
> Mottled Duck
> Blue-winged Teal
> Northern Shoveler
> Northern Pintail
> Green-winged Teal
> Ring-necked Duck
> Greater Scaup
> Lesser Scaup
> Surf Scoter
> White-winged Scoter
> Black Scoter
> Hooded Merganser
> Pied-billed Grebe
> American White Pelican
> Brown Pelican
> Neotropic Cormorant
> Double-crested Cormorant
> Anhinga
> Least Bittern
> Great Blue Heron
> Great Egret
> Snowy Egret
> Little Blue Heron
> Tricolored Heron
> Cattle Egret
> Green Heron
> Black-crowned Night-Heron
> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
> White Ibis
> Glossy Ibis
> White-faced Ibis
> Roseate Spoonbill
> Wood Stork
> Black Vulture
> Turkey Vulture
> White-tailed Kite
> Bald Eagle
> Northern Harrier
> Cooper's Hawk
> Red-shouldered Hawk
> Broad-winged Hawk
> Swainson's Hawk
> Red-tailed Hawk
> Crested Caracara
> Merlin
> Peregrine Falcon
> Clapper Rail
> King Rail
> Sora
> Purple Gallinule
> Common Moorhen
> American Coot
> Black-bellied Plover
> Snowy Plover
> Wilson's Plover
> Semipalmated Plover
> Piping Plover
> Killdeer
> American Oystercatcher
> Black-necked Stilt
> American Avocet
> Spotted Sandpiper
> Solitary Sandpiper
> Greater Yellowlegs
> Willet
> Lesser Yellowlegs
> Upland Sandpiper
> Whimbrel
> Long-billed Curlew
> Ruddy Turnstone
> Sanderling
> Semipalmated Sandpiper
> Western Sandpiper
> Least Sandpiper
> White-rumped Sandpiper
> Pectoral Sandpiper
> Dunlin
> Stilt Sandpiper
> Buff-breasted Sandpiper
> Short-billed Dowitcher
> Long-billed Dowitcher
> Wilson's Phalarope
> Laughing Gull
> Bonaparte's Gull
> Ring-billed Gull
> Gull-billed Tern
> Caspian Tern
> Black Tern
> Common Tern
> Forster's Tern
> Royal Tern
> Sandwich Tern
> Black Skimmer
> Rock Pigeon
> Eurasian Collared-Dove
> White-winged Dove
> Mourning Dove
> Inca Dove
> Yellow-billed Cuckoo
> Black-billed Cuckoo
> Barn Owl
> Eastern Screech-Owl
> Great Horned Owl
> Barred Owl
> Common Nighthawk
> Chuck-will's-widow
> Chimney Swift
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird
> Belted Kingfisher
> Red-headed Woodpecker
> Red-bellied Woodpecker
> Downy Woodpecker
> Hairy Woodpecker
> Northern Flicker
> Pileated Woodpecker
> Eastern Wood-Pewee
> Acadian Flycatcher
> Great Crested Flycatcher
> Eastern Kingbird
> Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
> Loggerhead Shrike
> White-eyed Vireo
> Yellow-throated Vireo
> Philadelphia Vireo
> Red-eyed Vireo
> Blue Jay
> American Crow
> Fish Crow
> Purple Martin
> Tree Swallow
> Northern Rough-winged Swallow
> Bank Swallow
> Cliff Swallow
> Barn Swallow
> Carolina Chickadee
> Tufted Titmouse
> Brown-headed Nuthatch
> Carolina Wren
> Sedge Wren
> Marsh Wren
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
> Eastern Bluebird
> Veery
> Gray-cheeked Thrush
> Swainson's Thrush
> Wood Thrush
> American Robin
> Gray Catbird
> Northern Mockingbird
> Brown Thrasher
> European Starling
> Cedar Waxwing
> Blue-winged Warbler
> Golden-winged Warbler
> Tennessee Warbler
> Northern Parula
> Yellow Warbler
> Chestnut-sided Warbler
> Magnolia Warbler
> Cape May Warbler
> Black-throated Green Warbler
> Blackburnian Warbler
> Yellow-throated Warbler
> Pine Warbler
> Prairie Warbler
> Palm Warbler
> Bay-breasted Warbler
> Blackpoll Warbler
> Cerulean Warbler
> Black-and-white Warbler
> American Redstart
> Prothonotary Warbler
> Worm-eating Warbler
> Swainson's Warbler
> Ovenbird
> Northern Waterthrush
> Kentucky Warbler
> Common Yellowthroat
> Hooded Warbler
> Yellow-breasted Chat
> Summer Tanager
> Scarlet Tanager
> Eastern Towhee
> Bachman's Sparrow
> Chipping Sparrow
> Savannah Sparrow
> Le Conte's Sparrow
> Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow
> Seaside Sparrow
> White-throated Sparrow
> White-crowned Sparrow
> Northern Cardinal
> Rose-breasted Grosbeak
> Blue Grosbeak
> Indigo Bunting
> Painted Bunting
> Dickcissel
> Red-winged Blackbird
> Eastern Meadowlark
> Common Grackle
> Boat-tailed Grackle
> Great-tailed Grackle
> Brown-headed Cowbird
> Orchard Oriole
> Baltimore Oriole
> House Finch
> House Sparrow
>
>
>
>
>
> 
>
______________________________________________________________________
______________
> Be a better friend, newshound, and
> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now. 
> http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
> 
Subject: Also This Saturday--IBA Dedication at Sherburne!
From: Jacoulson AT AOL.COM
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 10:17:19 EDT
 
Join us for the first Louisiana Important Bird Area Recognition  Ceremony!

We invite you to attend the dedication of the  Atchafalaya Basin as in 
Important Bird Area (IBA) on Saturday, May 10th at 1:30 p.m. on behalf of the 
U.S. 

Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the U.S. Army  Corps of Engineers (USACE), 
the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries  (LDWF), and the National 
Audubon Society (NAS). The ceremony will take place at the Sherburne Wildlife 

Management Area headquarters located on Whiskey  Bay Road south of Krotz 
Springs.  The ceremony will be part of Step Outside  Day, an outdoors day held 
annually by the USFWS.  Speakers at the ceremony  will include Danny Breaux, 
USFWS, Neil Lalonde, USACE, XXXX, LDWF, and Paul  Kemp, NAS.

The Atchafalaya Basin is the largest contiguous tract of  bottomland hardwood 
forest in the United States.  It is comprised of  hardwoods, marshes, bayous, 
and cypress stands and is home to over 260 bird  species.  This site supports 
globally important concentrations of Painted  Buntings during migration and 
breeding season and of White Ibis year-round. It is also a migratory stopover 

for globally significant  population of Wood Storks and American White 
Pelicans during fall  migration.

The site is also of continental importance for Little Blue  Herons and 
Roseate Spoonbills, and is an important breeding ground for Prothonotary 
Warblers, 

commonly known as the Swamp Warbler.  Many other  birds are found commonly in 
the Basin, including ducks, shorebirds, and other  wading birds.  The 
Atchafalaya Basin is also an important migratory corridor for Neotropical 
migrant 

songbirds, and holds an unusually high density of breeding forest birds, such 
as 

vireos, wrens, warblers, and  flycatchers.

Come out on May 10th for the Neotropical Migratory Songbird  Tour, and stay 
for the Atchafalaya Basin IBA dedication.  You may have a  chance to see 
impressive raptors such as the striking Swallow-tailed Kite or Bald Eagles. 
Look 

for colorful Summer Tanagers, Painted Buntings, and Hooded Warblers. And come 

learn a little more about one of America’s last  great river swamps, a 
national treasure for us, and a site of vital importance  to birds!


Melanie Driscoll
Coordinator, Louisiana IBA  Program
Louisiana Bird Resource Center
LSU Museum of Natural  Science
119 Foster Hall
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
work:   225-578-3116
cell:     225-938-7209
mdriscoll AT audubon.org





**************Wondering what's for Dinner Tonight? Get new twists on family 
favorites at AOL Food.      
(http://food.aol.com/dinner-tonight?NCID=aolfod00030000000001)
Subject: Re: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 09:46:39 -0400
Richard/Labird:

I had to get my little dig in about Canadas and Mallard, but Big Day teams have 
been counting them for years. I haven't done a soutwest La. Big Day for a long, 
long time, so I guess these days I'd just follow the convention. 


It is remarkable how many species are possible or even probable now that were 
real long shots 20 years ago. When I started doing Big Days I used to code 
birds by the likelihood of an encounter from 1 (certain) to 5 (fantastic luck). 
Black-bellied Whistling Duck, White-tailed Kite, caracara and oystercatcher 
would have been 5s, Brown Pelicans in Cameron were 4s as were Inca Dove and 
Swainson's Hawk. White-winged Dove was a long shot in late April. There were, 
of course, no collared-doves and House Finches were still 5s. I like to think 
that with those birds available, plus countable mallards and Canadas, I'd have 
broken 200 a couple of times, though obviously by that logic Cardiff, Dittmann, 
Parker and Remsen would have broken 210. I don't think any species has dropped 
off the list of probables, though a few have declined in abundance. 


I better stop thinking about this, or I'll be planning a 2009 Big Day.

BTW, I think we ought to settle on a convention about countability (and, more 
importantly, reportability) of "Rockerfeller" Canadas, and other Canadas and 
Mallards. If we count "wild" breeding mallards in the coastal zone or along 
rivers or in ag farm fields, do we also count golf course free-flying Canadas 
and city park mallards, mixed with white Pekins and pie-bald Muscovies? I've 
always treated them as being in seperate categories from truly wild birds, and 
have tried to hold the line for the CBC, but is that truly the best course? 
Input welcome. 


David Muth
New Orleans

---- Richard Gibbons  wrote: 

=============
David and LABIRDers,

Good catch! I accidentally deleted Least Tern and Herring Gull from the
eBird list when cleaning it up for posting. You are right on the mark
with shorebirds and waterfowl saving the day.

 The morning was foggy so perched Mississippi Kites were not detected
on the snags as we raced southward out of their breeding range. As we
left Lake Charles without it, we knew it might well be a dip. We found
what was probably a "Traill's" Flycatcher in Peveto, but without a call
note or better look, we decided it was best to leave it off. 

The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe just
unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm falling
in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to consult and they
counted them.

We did not use the 5 minute rule with Red-cockaded Woodpecker as this
is a World Series of Birding rule that was worked in at some point in
the past and it just seemed too sloppy. 

The LeConte's was kicked up during a comfort stop alongside a rice
field. We flushed it three more times to get a good look.

A scouted Eared Grebe from two days before in Lake Charles and many
other misses suggests a bigger day is well within reach. If you look at
the Lyon et al. list, you see there are several species the other team
missed. It might be worth doing a thorough information share session
next year for any group interested in making a run at 220.

215 is certainly not the limit. If Kansas can get 225, I'm pretty sure
Louisiana can get 226.

There's always next year!


Richard Gibbons
Baton Rouge, LA





 
____________________________________________________________________________________ 

Be a better friend, newshound, and 
know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. 
http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ 


--
David Muth
New Orleans
Subject: Recent CENLA Birds
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 07:42:45 -0500
There are three comprehensive parish bird lists - Acadia, Rapides, and St. 
Martin, all the result of Marty Floyd's efforts. I use these parish lists to 
help me decide whether or not to submit 3x5 cards. Recent "Reportable" birds 
based on the Rapides list are:

- Common Loon - 20-30' away from my bulkhead the other day!
- Bald Eagle
- Common Tern - No, I am NOT mistaking it for a Forster's Tern!
- Alder Flycatcher
- White-breasted Nuthatch - "yanking" up a storm and apparently breeding. 
No, I've seen the birds and they are not "late" Red-breasted Nuthatches. 
This is the third spring that I've had the birds here and, for now, this 
location is the southermost documentation of breeding of the species in 
Louisiana to the BEST of my knowledge.
- Tennessee Warbler
- Blackpoll Warbler

I realize that the flycatcher and warblers would be "expected" to pass 
through the area in migration. But, there are next to no records! Also, 
eagles are "ho hum" now; however, their current breeding status here was not 
noted by Floyd, Breedlove, and Cummings (2000) who considered the birds to 
be Rare winter birds. And, the loon is not really a surprise but until 2002 
or 2003, no loons had been reported from Rapides Parish. I think that Jim 
Johnson had the first loon at the reservoir at Woodworth the year before I 
reported one at Cotile Lake, but it was never clear if he submitted a 3x5 
card. Knowing what an astute birder Jim is, I am sure that he recognized the 
uniqueness of his observation and documented it.

And, for what it's worth, I am seeing a few suspicious Tree Swallows 
suggesting that they will or are breeding around here for the third year in 
a row.

Jay Huner
Subject: Mallard/Canada Goose - Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 07:28:19 -0500
> 
> The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe just
> unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm 
> falling in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to 
> consult and they counted them.

My attitude is that if they can fly and interact with other birds of the 
same species then there is "gene flow". How many Mallards and Canadas 
from "up North" visit and stay with their more sedentary Louisiana 
relatives? About the only way to know is do chromosome work and see how much 
gene flow is occurring. The chances of securing the funds to do this is slim 
and none?

Wonder how much gene flow there is between the area Mallard flock and the 
area Mottled Ducks?! 

I can assure anyone who is not a hunter that when ducks and geese are legal 
game, the hunters don't watch to decide if they are shooting a "feral" duck 
or goose!

Since this "might" be a "positive" thread on LABIRD, does anyone know how it 
is that Muscovy is now "countable" in Florida? Based on my experience in 
southern Florida, both Hill and Common Mynas are apparently more numerous 
and breeding on a more sustainable basis than Red-whiskered Bulbuls.

I'm guessing that one can encounter Muscovys all over the place in Florida. 
I've never seen a Muscovy come into decoys in Louisiana so, except 
for "parks", they don't seem to have a "wild" breeding presence in our state.

Regards,


Jay Huner
Subject: Deleted Species and Comments from LSU Big Day List
From: Richard Gibbons <rgibbo3 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Wed, 7 May 2008 05:06:25 -0700
David and LABIRDers,

Good catch! I accidentally deleted Least Tern and Herring Gull from the
eBird list when cleaning it up for posting. You are right on the mark
with shorebirds and waterfowl saving the day.

 The morning was foggy so perched Mississippi Kites were not detected
on the snags as we raced southward out of their breeding range. As we
left Lake Charles without it, we knew it might well be a dip. We found
what was probably a "Traill's" Flycatcher in Peveto, but without a call
note or better look, we decided it was best to leave it off. 

The Mallards and Rockefeller Canada Geese are sloppy and maybe just
unacceptable. I'd be interested to hear what others think. I'm falling
in line with the past LSU Big Days which I was able to consult and they
counted them.

We did not use the 5 minute rule with Red-cockaded Woodpecker as this
is a World Series of Birding rule that was worked in at some point in
the past and it just seemed too sloppy. 

The LeConte's was kicked up during a comfort stop alongside a rice
field. We flushed it three more times to get a good look.

A scouted Eared Grebe from two days before in Lake Charles and many
other misses suggests a bigger day is well within reach. If you look at
the Lyon et al. list, you see there are several species the other team
missed. It might be worth doing a thorough information share session
next year for any group interested in making a run at 220.

215 is certainly not the limit. If Kansas can get 225, I'm pretty sure
Louisiana can get 226.

There's always next year!


Richard Gibbons
Baton Rouge, LA





 
____________________________________________________________________________________ 

Be a better friend, newshound, and 
know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. 
http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ 

Subject: Re: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 6 May 2008 23:38:36 -0500
Labird:

Congratulations to both 200+ teams. Having never gotten past the mid 190s I 
know what an accomplishment 208 and 215 are. What strikes me about both 
lists is the near absence of rare birds. The late scoter flock is a real 
find, and White-winged remains rare, but late scoters are not unprecedented. 
Indeed, Ken and Gary Rosenberg and I had all three scoters in a Holly Beach 
flock with, as I recall, L. Scaup and merganser on a late April big day 
attempt many moons ago.

Picking up 30 species of shorebird (but no Golden Plover, godwit or 
Baird's), 26 warblers (including Cape May and late Palm) and eight sparrows 
(including LeConte's) make for a solid heart of a Big Day, but the 18 ducks 
and geese, including the scoters and Greater Scaup, are what made this a 
record run (along with the fallout), in my opinion. Of course, in the old 
days we did not count introduced Canadas and mallards (just sayin'), but 
even without them that is a remarkable run, presumably the result of good 
scouting. Ring-necked strikes me as most unexpected of all.

I'm sure we'll hear about the worst misses, but I note no loon, Mississippi 
Kite, Herring Gull, Least Tern!, non-acadian empidonax, Western Kingbird, or 
Bobolink right off the bat--I'm sure I'm missing others.

All of which means 215 is not the limit.

Excellent job.

David Muth
New Orleans


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Richard Gibbons" 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, May 06, 2008 9:57 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record


> LABIRDers,
>
> The LSU Ornithology group does a big day each year to raise money for
> research projects. I can tell you that it is true when they say it is
> hard to get start up funds for field projects. I'm told once you have
> data from a pilot season and publish something, it becomes easier to
> win grants. I'm personally hoping this is true.
>
> Below is a brief summary of our route and the species list generated
> from eBird. A more complete account of the day will be sent to donors
> and posted to the Big Day website in the next week or so.
>
> In short, we had a great day and the scoter flock and migrants after
> the front made the day. It was an awesome evening seeing all the
> migrants dropping into Peveto woods.
>
> You can check out the report from last year and see the new t-shirt
> design here.
>
> www.museum.lsu.edu/bigday.html
>
> Richard Gibbons
> Baton Rouge, LA
>
>
>
> Report generated from eBird:
>
> Location:     Louisiana, US
> Observation date:     4/29/07
>
> Observers: Brian O'Shea, Gustavo Bravo, Richard Gibbons,  James Maley,
> and Phred Benham
> Weather was calm and somewhat foggy in the morning with a cold front
> passing the coast around 2 PM.
>
> We started in the pineywoods of Beauregard and Calcasieu Parish, worked
> west to a sod farm
> east of Lake Charles, birded the rice country, Lacassine NWR, and then
> the coastal woodlots and beaches west to Sabine Pass.
>
> Number of species:     215
>
> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
> Fulvous Whistling-Duck
> Canada Goose
> Wood Duck
> Gadwall
> Mallard
> Mottled Duck
> Blue-winged Teal
> Northern Shoveler
> Northern Pintail
> Green-winged Teal
> Ring-necked Duck
> Greater Scaup
> Lesser Scaup
> Surf Scoter
> White-winged Scoter
> Black Scoter
> Hooded Merganser
> Pied-billed Grebe
> American White Pelican
> Brown Pelican
> Neotropic Cormorant
> Double-crested Cormorant
> Anhinga
> Least Bittern
> Great Blue Heron
> Great Egret
> Snowy Egret
> Little Blue Heron
> Tricolored Heron
> Cattle Egret
> Green Heron
> Black-crowned Night-Heron
> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron
> White Ibis
> Glossy Ibis
> White-faced Ibis
> Roseate Spoonbill
> Wood Stork
> Black Vulture
> Turkey Vulture
> White-tailed Kite
> Bald Eagle
> Northern Harrier
> Cooper's Hawk
> Red-shouldered Hawk
> Broad-winged Hawk
> Swainson's Hawk
> Red-tailed Hawk
> Crested Caracara
> Merlin
> Peregrine Falcon
> Clapper Rail
> King Rail
> Sora
> Purple Gallinule
> Common Moorhen
> American Coot
> Black-bellied Plover
> Snowy Plover
> Wilson's Plover
> Semipalmated Plover
> Piping Plover
> Killdeer
> American Oystercatcher
> Black-necked Stilt
> American Avocet
> Spotted Sandpiper
> Solitary Sandpiper
> Greater Yellowlegs
> Willet
> Lesser Yellowlegs
> Upland Sandpiper
> Whimbrel
> Long-billed Curlew
> Ruddy Turnstone
> Sanderling
> Semipalmated Sandpiper
> Western Sandpiper
> Least Sandpiper
> White-rumped Sandpiper
> Pectoral Sandpiper
> Dunlin
> Stilt Sandpiper
> Buff-breasted Sandpiper
> Short-billed Dowitcher
> Long-billed Dowitcher
> Wilson's Phalarope
> Laughing Gull
> Bonaparte's Gull
> Ring-billed Gull
> Gull-billed Tern
> Caspian Tern
> Black Tern
> Common Tern
> Forster's Tern
> Royal Tern
> Sandwich Tern
> Black Skimmer
> Rock Pigeon
> Eurasian Collared-Dove
> White-winged Dove
> Mourning Dove
> Inca Dove
> Yellow-billed Cuckoo
> Black-billed Cuckoo
> Barn Owl
> Eastern Screech-Owl
> Great Horned Owl
> Barred Owl
> Common Nighthawk
> Chuck-will's-widow
> Chimney Swift
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird
> Belted Kingfisher
> Red-headed Woodpecker
> Red-bellied Woodpecker
> Downy Woodpecker
> Hairy Woodpecker
> Northern Flicker
> Pileated Woodpecker
> Eastern Wood-Pewee
> Acadian Flycatcher
> Great Crested Flycatcher
> Eastern Kingbird
> Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
> Loggerhead Shrike
> White-eyed Vireo
> Yellow-throated Vireo
> Philadelphia Vireo
> Red-eyed Vireo
> Blue Jay
> American Crow
> Fish Crow
> Purple Martin
> Tree Swallow
> Northern Rough-winged Swallow
> Bank Swallow
> Cliff Swallow
> Barn Swallow
> Carolina Chickadee
> Tufted Titmouse
> Brown-headed Nuthatch
> Carolina Wren
> Sedge Wren
> Marsh Wren
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
> Eastern Bluebird
> Veery
> Gray-cheeked Thrush
> Swainson's Thrush
> Wood Thrush
> American Robin
> Gray Catbird
> Northern Mockingbird
> Brown Thrasher
> European Starling
> Cedar Waxwing
> Blue-winged Warbler
> Golden-winged Warbler
> Tennessee Warbler
> Northern Parula
> Yellow Warbler
> Chestnut-sided Warbler
> Magnolia Warbler
> Cape May Warbler
> Black-throated Green Warbler
> Blackburnian Warbler
> Yellow-throated Warbler
> Pine Warbler
> Prairie Warbler
> Palm Warbler
> Bay-breasted Warbler
> Blackpoll Warbler
> Cerulean Warbler
> Black-and-white Warbler
> American Redstart
> Prothonotary Warbler
> Worm-eating Warbler
> Swainson's Warbler
> Ovenbird
> Northern Waterthrush
> Kentucky Warbler
> Common Yellowthroat
> Hooded Warbler
> Yellow-breasted Chat
> Summer Tanager
> Scarlet Tanager
> Eastern Towhee
> Bachman's Sparrow
> Chipping Sparrow
> Savannah Sparrow
> Le Conte's Sparrow
> Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow
> Seaside Sparrow
> White-throated Sparrow
> White-crowned Sparrow
> Northern Cardinal
> Rose-breasted Grosbeak
> Blue Grosbeak
> Indigo Bunting
> Painted Bunting
> Dickcissel
> Red-winged Blackbird
> Eastern Meadowlark
> Common Grackle
> Boat-tailed Grackle
> Great-tailed Grackle
> Brown-headed Cowbird
> Orchard Oriole
> Baltimore Oriole
> House Finch
> House Sparrow
>
>
>
>
>
> 
> 
____________________________________________________________________________________ 

> Be a better friend, newshound, and
> know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile.  Try it now. 
> http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ
> 
Subject: Corrections to LSU Big Day Post
From: Richard Gibbons <rgibbo3 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 6 May 2008 20:25:11 -0700
Sorry y'all. The year was 2008, not 2007. I've edited the original
entry in eBird. Also, the report from last year hasn't been transferred
to the new website yet. So if you want to read it, it will be up
sometime in the next week or so.

Richard Gibbons
Baton Rouge, LA


 
____________________________________________________________________________________ 

Be a better friend, newshound, and 
know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. 
http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ 

Subject: LSU Big Day Sets New Louisiana Record
From: Richard Gibbons <rgibbo3 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Tue, 6 May 2008 19:57:05 -0700
LABIRDers,

The LSU Ornithology group does a big day each year to raise money for
research projects. I can tell you that it is true when they say it is
hard to get start up funds for field projects. I'm told once you have
data from a pilot season and publish something, it becomes easier to
win grants. I'm personally hoping this is true.

Below is a brief summary of our route and the species list generated
from eBird. A more complete account of the day will be sent to donors
and posted to the Big Day website in the next week or so.

In short, we had a great day and the scoter flock and migrants after
the front made the day. It was an awesome evening seeing all the
migrants dropping into Peveto woods.

You can check out the report from last year and see the new t-shirt
design here.

 www.museum.lsu.edu/bigday.html

Richard Gibbons
Baton Rouge, LA



Report generated from eBird:

Location:     Louisiana, US
Observation date:     4/29/07

Observers: Brian O'Shea, Gustavo Bravo, Richard Gibbons,  James Maley,
and Phred Benham
Weather was calm and somewhat foggy in the morning with a cold front
passing the coast around 2 PM.

We started in the pineywoods of Beauregard and Calcasieu Parish, worked
west to a sod farm
 east of Lake Charles, birded the rice country, Lacassine NWR, and then
the coastal woodlots and beaches west to Sabine Pass.

Number of species:     215

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
Fulvous Whistling-Duck
Canada Goose
Wood Duck
Gadwall
Mallard
Mottled Duck
Blue-winged Teal
Northern Shoveler
Northern Pintail
Green-winged Teal
Ring-necked Duck
Greater Scaup
Lesser Scaup
Surf Scoter
White-winged Scoter
Black Scoter
Hooded Merganser
Pied-billed Grebe
American White Pelican
Brown Pelican
Neotropic Cormorant
Double-crested Cormorant
Anhinga
Least Bittern
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Snowy Egret
Little