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Updated on Friday, July 3 at 07:08 PM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Western Sandpiper,©Shawneen Finnegan

3 Jul Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !! ["James V. Remsen" ]
3 Jul Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !! ["James V. Remsen" ]
3 Jul Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !! [Bruce Baird ]
3 Jul Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !! ["Harvey L. Patten" ]
3 Jul Cougar Near Powhattan? [Huner Jay V ]
3 Jul Re: south Calcasieu [Ellie Avegno ]
3 Jul south Calcasieu [thomas finnie ]
2 Jul Gardner Quad , 7/2/09, Baltimore Oriole and Double-crested Cormorant [Huner Jay V ]
2 Jul Fw: eBird Report - Gardner Quad , 7/2/09 [Steve Shively ]
2 Jul Fw: eBird Report - Elmer Quad , 7/2/09 [attn. J. Coulson - STKI] [Steve Shively ]
2 Jul Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 7/2/09 [janine robin ]
2 Jul Fw: eBird Report - Madisonville Quad , 7/2/09 ["Harvey L. Patten" ]
2 Jul FW: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 7/2/09 [Glenn Ousset ]
2 Jul Re: Purple Martin Roost in Monroe [Kelby Ouchley ]
1 Jul Purple Martin Roost in Monroe [Robert Rickett ]
1 Jul SBA: Albany Quad, Livingston Parish - 1 Jul 2009 [Devin Bosler ]
1 Jul latest SBA coverage map ["James V. Remsen" ]
1 Jul Church Point Quad , 7/1/09 - Thank a Rice/Crawfish Farmer [Huner Jay V ]
1 Jul Re: Shrikes [Carol Foil ]
1 Jul Re: Shrikes [Paul Conover ]
1 Jul Re: Shrikes [Carol Foil ]
1 Jul Re: Shrikes [miriam ]
1 Jul Black-bellied Whistling Ducks Bayou Desiard [Matt Pardue ]
1 Jul Swainson's Hawk ["Finnie, Tom (thomas)" ]
1 Jul more on Chevron, pelicans. [Paul Conover ]
1 Jul Re: Garden District - July 1, 2009 [Nancy L Newfield ]
1 Jul Garden District - July 1, 2009 ["Jeffrey W. Harris" ]
1 Jul white breasted nuthatch [Steve Shively ]
1 Jul cliff swallows [Steve Shively ]
30 Jun Re: not shrikes, but... [Paul Conover ]
30 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [William McGehee ]
30 Jun Re: not shrikes, but... [Tom Hickcox ]
30 Jun Plaquemine Quad - June 30, 2009 ["Jeffrey W. Harris" ]
30 Jun not shrikes, but... [Paul Conover ]
30 Jun Re: kittiwake ["Woltmann, Stefan" ]
30 Jun kittiwake [eric liffmann ]
30 Jun Re: Small 1st yr. gull [Justin Bosler ]
30 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Buford Myers ]
30 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 6/30/09 [janine robin ]
30 Jun Small 1st yr. gull [eric liffmann ]
30 Jun Re: Current educational paradigms [Ellie Avegno ]
30 Jun Alexandria Quad , 6/30/09 - Persistence of Micro-Habitats [Huner Jay V ]
30 Jun Humlit/Lalit ["Ingold, James" ]
30 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Paul Conover ]
30 Jun FW: eBird Report - Delacroix Quad , 6/30/09 [Glenn Ousset ]
30 Jun Current educational paradigms [miriam ]
30 Jun eBird Report - Gonzales Quad, 6/27/09 [suebroussard ]
29 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09 [Lindsay Seely ]
29 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09 [Lindsay Seely ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes ["James V. Remsen" ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Tom Hickcox ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [David Muth ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference? [David Muth ]
29 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09 [Lindsay Seely ]
29 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09 [Lindsay Seely ]
29 Jun Gardner Quad , 6/29/09 - White-breasted Nuthatch [Huner Jay V ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference? ["James V. Remsen" ]
29 Jun Re: Prothonotary in the yard ["David A. Cagnolatti" ]
29 Jun FW: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 6/29/09 [Glenn Ousset ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Glenn Ousset ]
29 Jun Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference? [Huner Jay V ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Nancy L Newfield ]
29 Jun LA Summer Bird Atlas update ["James V. Remsen" ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes ["Mayberry, Nancy E ACE-IT AT MVN" ]
29 Jun Fw: eBird Report - Portage Quad , 6/28/09 [William Vermillion ]
29 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes ["James V. Remsen" ]
29 Jun Bronzed Cowbirds - LA: St. Gabriel Quad , 6/28/09 ["James V. Remsen" ]
29 Jun White-faced Ibis Ouachita WMA [Matt Pardue ]
29 Jun Re: Prothonotary in the yard [Matt Pardue ]
29 Jun Re: Prothonotary in the yard [Evelyn Cooper ]
28 Jun Prothonotary in the yard [Paul Conover ]
28 Jun Garden District, B. R. - June 28, 2009 ["Jeffrey W. Harris" ]
27 Jun Afeman Quad , 6/27/09, Swallow-tailed Kite in the Piney Woods [Huner Jay V ]
27 Jun Belle D'eau Quad [Marty Floyd ]
27 Jun Re: Loggerhead Shrikes [Paul Conover ]
27 Jun Loggerhead Shrikes ["Harvey L. Patten" ]

Subject: Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !!
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 19:09:11 -0500
On Jul 3, 2009, at 5:00 PM, Harvey L. Patten wrote:

>
>
> If I should do one more survey next week, should I ebird report  
> their presence with an X or should I even attempt to suggest a  
> number, which I think would be almost meaningless for any type of  
> statistical calculation?



Harvey/eBirders -- be sure to also see "The Trouble with X" at

http://ebird.org/content/ebird/news/trouble_with_X


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !!
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 18:57:27 -0500
On Jul 3, 2009, at 5:00 PM, Harvey L. Patten wrote:

>  I have no way of even beginning to estimated their numbers as they  
> continue to increase apparently staging for their southward journey,  
> and so my question is:
>
> If I should do one more survey next week, should I ebird report  
> their presence with an X or should I even attempt to suggest a  
> number, which I think would be almost meaningless for any type of  
> statistical calculation?
>

Harvey/LABIRD: an "X" is treated by eBird like a "1", so an X is  
actually worse than any estimate, no matter how far off.  The atlas  
distribution data will likely be mapped to the nearest order of  
magnitude, e.g., 0.01, 0.10, 1.00, 10.0 etc. birds/party-hour so your  
counts will almost certainly be in the uppermost level and therefore  
whether your absolute estimate is 10K or 100K doesn't affect the  
analysis.

Don't give up so easily on the estimate -- just do your best, and be  
sure to see my tips on counting large numbers in the LOS News
  No.  215 (2008), which you can access from the LOS web site.   
Basically, the idea is to break those swarms down into manageable  
units of 100s and 1000s by thinking of them as lines, squares, or  
cubes.  Brian Sullivan also has articles about this at eBird web site.


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !!
From: Bruce Baird <Bbairdsr AT AOL.COM>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 18:59:14 EDT
Harvey - The highest number of any species reported to eBird for Louisiana  
is Van Remsen's 10,000,000 Tree Swallows, Aug. 20, 1988, which indicates to 
me  that a SWAG is better than an X.
 
Bruce Baird 
 
 
In a message dated 7/3/2009 5:02:58 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
puffin AT BELLSOUTH.NET writes:

Labirders All,

Since I began atlasing the Guste Island/Port  Louis area west of 
Madisonville south of Hwy 22 on June 2nd, the number of Purple Martins has 
steadily 

increased from a few hundred, which were mostly in  dead trees just north of 
Port Louis, to many thousands yesterday (see my ebird  estimate that I 
posted yesterday). 

Just southwest of the gated  entrance to Guste Island (aka Madisonville on 
the Lake), yesterday the dead  trees that also had a good number of 
Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks contained many thousands of martins. I have no 
way 

of even beginning to estimated  their numbers as they continue to increase 
apparently staging for their  southward journey, and so my question is:

If I should do one more  survey next week, should I ebird report their 
presence with an X or should I even attempt to suggest a number, which I think 

would be almost meaningless  for any type of statistical calculation?

All input is graciously  accepted.

Harvey L. Patten
Covington   

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Subject: Purple Martin Party - Suggestions please !!
From: "Harvey L. Patten" <puffin AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 17:00:35 -0500
Labirders All,

Since I began atlasing the Guste Island/Port Louis area west of Madisonville 
south of Hwy 22 on June 2nd, the number of Purple Martins has steadily 
increased from a few hundred, which were mostly in dead trees just north of 
Port Louis, to many thousands yesterday (see my ebird estimate that I posted 
yesterday). 


Just southwest of the gated entrance to Guste Island (aka Madisonville on the 
Lake), yesterday the dead trees that also had a good number of Black-bellied 
Whistling-Ducks contained many thousands of martins. I have no way of even 
beginning to estimated their numbers as they continue to increase apparently 
staging for their southward journey, and so my question is: 


If I should do one more survey next week, should I ebird report their presence 
with an X or should I even attempt to suggest a number, which I think would be 
almost meaningless for any type of statistical calculation? 


All input is graciously accepted.

Harvey L. Patten
Covington
Subject: Cougar Near Powhattan?
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 13:44:19 -0500
My sister in law just drove in from NW Texas. She says that she saw a 
reasonably fresh, dead cougar at the south bound entrance ramp at the 
Powhattan exit on I-49. This is about 20 miles or so north of Natchitoches.

I realize that this is not bird related but figured that folks might be 
interested in the report.

Jay Huner
--
Subject: Re: south Calcasieu
From: Ellie Avegno <elliea AT COX.NET>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 10:58:11 -0500
Beautiful shots. I saw several  Scissortailed flycathchers in W Shreveport
and about 30 miles north in Gilliam around the sunflower trail. My shots are
not nearly as good as yours and I will post one later that is either a
Summer tanager or ? In Gilliam.  There is another mystery bird that hangs
out with the S-tailed flycather on the electrical wires on W. 70th St,
between 3125 and Broadacers Rd, close to Immanuel Baptist Church. I had my
mother with me in Gilliam so I could not stay too long trying for good
shots.  She is almost 91and can't take the heat.
Thanks for sharing. 
 Ellie 

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of thomas finnie
Sent: Friday, July 03, 2009 4:05 AM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] south Calcasieu

The pastureland/plains on Gum Cove Road / Charlie Moss Road / Hwy 108 in
south Calcasieu was quiet this afternoon with the usual mourning dove,
kingbirds, RWB, the boisterous dickcissels, cardinals, orchard orioles,
cattle egrets, scissortailed flycatcher, a red-tailed hawk, brown headed
cowbirds, a painted bunting and a deer.

The painted bunting flew down from the power line and landed on the barbed
wire fence. He was kind enough to allow a picture before he flew off and
disappeared in the thick stuff. The painted bunting is the most colorful and
prettiest bird in North America IMO.

A few pictures:
Painted bunting:
http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0130.jpg
BH Cowbird: http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0063.jpg
Scissortailed flycatcher:
http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_9611.jpg
Subject: south Calcasieu
From: thomas finnie <finnie.tom AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 2009 04:05:26 -0500
The pastureland/plains on Gum Cove Road / Charlie Moss Road / Hwy 108 in
south Calcasieu was quiet this afternoon with the usual mourning dove,
kingbirds, RWB, the boisterous dickcissels, cardinals, orchard orioles,
cattle egrets, scissortailed flycatcher, a red-tailed hawk, brown headed
cowbirds, a painted bunting and a deer.

The painted bunting flew down from the power line and landed on the barbed
wire fence. He was kind enough to allow a picture before he flew off and
disappeared in the thick stuff. The painted bunting is the most colorful and
prettiest bird in North America IMO.

A few pictures:
Painted bunting:
http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0130.jpg
BH Cowbird: http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0063.jpg
Scissortailed flycatcher:
http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_9611.jpg
Subject: Gardner Quad , 7/2/09, Baltimore Oriole and Double-crested Cormorant
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 17:43:47 -0500
Well, when you see a good bird - Jeff Harris' quail, that's when to start a 
quad survey. The nice thing about the surveys is that my ear birding is 
improving. Baltimore Orioles and Orchard Orioles have a blackbird rattle - well 
THEY are blackbirds! I was by the end of my drive way this morning and heard a 
familar rattle that I couldn't place. I see/hear so few Baltimore Orioles that 
I have trouble with the songs and rattles. But, I knew I needed to figure out 
what was making the rattle. About the time I realized that it must be a 
Baltimore Oriole a really beautiful male flew out of the tree across the sky, 
over the house, and toward the lake. Interestingly, the few nesting Chipping 
Sparrows either two or three pairs are calling now. The second Cooper's Hawk 
made a pass at one of the dumb chippers that landed on a power line. It was 
really lucky that the hawks were probably just away from mom and pop and it 
missed! The oriole is new to my Gardner Quad list and may be new to t! 

 he master list. Don't know if quad master Shively has Baltimore Oriole from 
his birding in the quad. - Jay 


Location: Gardner Quad
Observation date: 7/2/09
Notes: Gardner Quad. Frank McGee Estate off LA 1200 on east side of Cotile 
Lake. 1 observer, start 7:00 AM CDST, duration 1 hr 10 min., 1.65 miles. Heard 
an odd rattle when muddling around and found the source - a nice male Baltimore 
Oriole when it flew out of the tree it was foraging around in. No Baltimore 
Orioles for my Gardner Quad records so did a quad survey. Didn't really find 
many songbirds but they were apparently being terrorized by a couple of 
Cooper's Hawks! Thought I saw a Great Blue Heron out in the lake at some 
distance. Turned out to be an immature Double-crested Cormorant. 

Number of species: 28

Double-crested Cormorant 1
Great Egret 2
Cattle Egret 11
Cooper's Hawk 2
Mourning Dove 5
Inca Dove 7
Chimney Swift 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 3
Northern Flicker 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee 3
Great Crested Flycatcher 2
Eastern Kingbird 7
Blue Jay 12
Purple Martin 3
Carolina Chickadee 2
Tufted Titmouse 2
Brown-headed Nuthatch 2
Carolina Wren 3
Eastern Bluebird 3
American Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 14
Brown Thrasher 1
Pine Warbler 2
Chipping Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 9
Baltimore Oriole 1
House Finch 5
House Sparrow 7

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


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Gardner Quad , 7/2/09
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 14:29:23 -0500
Steve Shively, Wildlife Biologist
Calcasieu Ranger District, Kisatchie National Forest
9912 Hwy 28 West
Boyce, LA  71409
318-793-9427
318-793-9430 (fax)
steveshively AT fs.fed.us

----- Forwarded by Steve Shively/R8/USDAFS on 07/02/2009 02:29 PM -----

do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
07/02/2009 02:13 PM

To
steveshively AT fs.fed.us
cc

Subject
eBird Report - Gardner   Quad , 7/2/09








Location:     Gardner   Quad
Observation date:     7/2/09
Notes:      Mostly around Kincaid Lake. 3 party hours, 8.5 miles.
Number of species:     35

Anhinga     1
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     5
Little Blue Heron     2
Turkey Vulture     1
Mississippi Kite     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     2
Broad-winged Hawk     1
Eurasian Collared-Dove     1
Mourning Dove     1
Red-headed Woodpecker     4
Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
Downy Woodpecker     2
Hairy Woodpecker     1
Eastern Wood-Pewee     1
Great Crested Flycatcher     1
White-eyed Vireo     1
Yellow-throated Vireo     1
Blue Jay     3
American Crow     2
Fish Crow     2
Purple Martin     5
Barn Swallow     1
Carolina Chickadee     3
Tufted Titmouse     17
Carolina Wren     13
Eastern Bluebird     4
Northern Parula     5
Pine Warbler     7
Prothonotary Warbler     2
Summer Tanager     1
Northern Cardinal     15
Indigo Bunting     5
Brown-headed Cowbird     1
House Sparrow     3

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Elmer Quad , 7/2/09 [attn. J. Coulson - STKI]
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 14:28:56 -0500
Swallow-tailed kite flew over Valentine Lake.

Steve Shively, Wildlife Biologist
Calcasieu Ranger District, Kisatchie National Forest
9912 Hwy 28 West
Boyce, LA  71409
318-793-9427
318-793-9430 (fax)
steveshively AT fs.fed.us

----- Forwarded by Steve Shively/R8/USDAFS on 07/02/2009 02:27 PM -----

do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
07/02/2009 02:20 PM

To
steveshively AT fs.fed.us
cc

Subject
eBird Report - Elmer Quad , 7/2/09








Location:     Elmer Quad
Observation date:     7/2/09
Notes:      Kincaid and Valentine Lakes. 1 party hour, 2 miles.
Number of species:     24

Great Egret     2
Green Heron     1
Turkey Vulture     1
Swallow-tailed Kite     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk     1
Red-headed Woodpecker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     1
Eastern Kingbird     4
White-eyed Vireo     1
Yellow-throated Vireo     1
Red-eyed Vireo     1
Purple Martin     3
Barn Swallow     4
Carolina Chickadee     1
Tufted Titmouse     1
Carolina Wren     4
Northern Parula     1
Pine Warbler     2
Kentucky Warbler     1
Hooded Warbler     1
Summer Tanager     1
Northern Cardinal     5
Red-winged Blackbird     2

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 7/2/09
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 14:28:30 -0500
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2009 2:14 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 7/2/09


>
>
> Location:     Folsom Quad
> Observation date:     7/2/09
> Notes:      birded my yard,then drove sideroads off of Hwy25 and 450.Many 
> ponds,but no egrets or herons to be found. Large herds of cattle,but no 
> cattle egrets. Meadowlark singing an unfamiliar song.
> Number of species:     35
>From 7:15-10:45 a.m. 6 miles driving,1/4 mile walking
> Black Vulture     3
> Turkey Vulture     4
> Mourning Dove     11
> Chimney Swift     17
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird     3
> Red-headed Woodpecker     2
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     5
> Downy Woodpecker     1
> Northern Flicker     1
> Pileated Woodpecker     2
> Eastern Wood-Pewee     2
> Great Crested Flycatcher     4
> Eastern Kingbird     8
> White-eyed Vireo     4
> Blue Jay     15
> American Crow     5
> Carolina Chickadee     15
> Tufted Titmouse     12
> Brown-headed Nuthatch     4
> Carolina Wren     10
> Eastern Bluebird     6
> Wood Thrush     2
> Gray Catbird     3
> Northern Mockingbird     19
> Brown Thrasher     6
> Hooded Warbler     1
> Eastern Towhee     8
> Northern Cardinal     30
> Blue Grosbeak     2
> Indigo Bunting     4
> Red-winged Blackbird     2
> Eastern Meadowlark     4
> Brown-headed Cowbird     1
> Orchard Oriole     2
> House Finch     10
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Madisonville Quad , 7/2/09
From: "Harvey L. Patten" <puffin AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 12:50:47 -0500
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2009 12:44 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Madisonville Quad , 7/2/09


>
>
> Location:     Madisonville Quad
> Observation date:     7/2/09
> Notes:      Birding for 3.6 miles along Guste Island Rd. to Port Louis 
> from 5:30-9:00 a.m.
> Number of species:     63
>
> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck     20
> Wood Duck     6
> Mottled Duck     2
> Anhinga     5
> Least Bittern     1
> Great Blue Heron     5
> Great Egret     59
> Snowy Egret     17
> Little Blue Heron     33
> Tricolored Heron     8
> Cattle Egret     54
> Green Heron     7
> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron     3
> White Ibis     14
> White-faced Ibis     13
> Mississippi Kite     1
> Cooper's Hawk     1  (Unexpected)
> Red-tailed Hawk     2
> Common Moorhen     3
> Killdeer     2
> Laughing Gull     1
> Mourning Dove     11
> Yellow-billed Cuckoo     4
> Common Nighthawk     1
> Chimney Swift     2
> Belted Kingfisher     1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     11
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Northern Flicker     1
> Pileated Woodpecker     1
> Great Crested Flycatcher     1
> Eastern Kingbird     7
> Loggerhead Shrike     1
> White-eyed Vireo     7
> Blue Jay     8
> American Crow     6
> Fish Crow     7
> Purple Martin     3500  (Probably a low estimate)
> Carolina Chickadee     9
> Tufted Titmouse     2
> Carolina Wren     22
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     4
> Eastern Bluebird     5
> Northern Mockingbird     7
> Brown Thrasher     2
> European Starling     24
> Yellow-throated Warbler     2
> Prothonotary Warbler     3
> Common Yellowthroat     1
> Hooded Warbler     1
> Yellow-breasted Chat     2
> Summer Tanager     3
> Eastern Towhee     6
> Northern Cardinal     33
> Blue Grosbeak     2
> Indigo Bunting     9
> Painted Bunting     3
> Red-winged Blackbird     63
> Eastern Meadowlark     2
> Boat-tailed Grackle     6
> Great-tailed Grackle     27
> Brown-headed Cowbird     8
> Orchard Oriole     3
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
> 
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 7/2/09
From: Glenn Ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 16:27:27 +0000
1 observer, 3 hrs 40 min from 5:50am, 9 miles.
Interesting but not exciting.

Glenn Ousset 


     
-------------- Forwarded Message: --------------
From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net
Subject: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 7/2/09
Date: Thu, 02 Jul 2009 16:19:08 +0000
>
> 
> 
> Location:     Chalmette Quad
> Observation date:     7/2/09
Notes:      East Bank. Back levee west of Paris Rd, Mississippi River and 
batture Violet to Chalmette. Batture woodlots, tree lines, brush, fields, 
> pastures, ponds, shallow open salt water, residences.    
> Number of species:     41
> 
> Black-bellied Whistling-Duck     1     flyover
> Mottled Duck     2
> Anhinga     4
> Great Egret     4
> Little Blue Heron     3
> Cattle Egret     15
> Green Heron     7
> Black-crowned Night-Heron     2
> Yellow-crowned Night-Heron     4
> White Ibis     12
> Black Vulture     3
> Mississippi Kite     4
> Red-shouldered Hawk     1
> Laughing Gull     6
> Gull-billed Tern     4     flyovers
> Rock Pigeon     5     flyover
> Mourning Dove     6
> Monk Parakeet     2
> Yellow-billed Cuckoo     1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Great Crested Flycatcher     1
> Eastern Kingbird     8
> Loggerhead Shrike     4
> Red-eyed Vireo     1
> Blue Jay     6
> American Crow     3
> Purple Martin     4
> Barn Swallow     3
> Carolina Chickadee     6
> Tufted Titmouse     2
> Carolina Wren     2
> Northern Mockingbird     9
> European Starling     75
> Northern Cardinal     5
> Painted Bunting     1
> Red-winged Blackbird     2
> Eastern Meadowlark     1
> Common Grackle     60
> Orchard Oriole     1
> House Sparrow     3
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)

Subject: Re: Purple Martin Roost in Monroe
From: Kelby Ouchley <rockybranch AT CENTURYTEL.NET>
Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 06:35:45 -0500
Perhaps these are some of the same birds, numbering in the hundreds, that I 
saw feeding over Black Bayou Lake yesterday morning.

Kelby Ouchley

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Robert Rickett" 
To: 
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2009 11:10 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Purple Martin Roost in Monroe


> This evening (July 1) there was a fairly large flock of Purple Martins 
> roosting in some medium-size trees in the parking lot of St Francis 
> Community Health Center on Oliver Road, about one block north of the 
> intersection of Oliver and Louisville Avenue.  I estimate the flock to 
> number over a thousand birds.  Hundreds of the birds perched on nearby 
> electric lines and utility poles as others were spiraling into the area.
> Bob Rickett
> Monroe, LA
> 
Subject: Purple Martin Roost in Monroe
From: Robert Rickett <rrickett AT COMCAST.NET>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 23:10:03 -0500
This evening (July 1) there was a fairly large flock of Purple Martins 
roosting in some medium-size trees in the parking lot of St Francis 
Community Health Center on Oliver Road, about one block north of the 
intersection of Oliver and Louisville Avenue.  I estimate the flock to 
number over a thousand birds.  Hundreds of the birds perched on nearby 
electric lines and utility poles as others were spiraling into the area.
Bob Rickett
Monroe, LA
Subject: SBA: Albany Quad, Livingston Parish - 1 Jul 2009
From: Devin Bosler <devinbosler AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 22:59:44 -0500
LABIRD,

      Just trying to fill some holes in the western Florida parishes
while being back in LA for a little while.  The Albany Quad is located
in e. Livingston Parish, north of I-12.  Big misses this morning,
considering the habitat, were YBCU, RHWO, BHNU, and PRAW to name a
few.  Not the best birding but useful data nonetheless.

Location:     Albany Quad
Observation date:     7/1/09
Notes:      A 3-hr (700-1000AM) SBA survey in Albany Quad.
Concentrated effort in sw. corner of quad, ca. 1 mi. NW of Albany
(Livingston Parish). Traveled ca. 2.5 mi. by foot. Began at 28480
Henry White Rd. nr. Pontchartrain Beagle Club property. Henry White
Rd., Forbes Rd., and 0.5 mi. on Pea Ridge Rd. Rural residential,
disturbed mixed pine-hardwood forest, early successional edge, and
regenerating pine clearcuts at various ages. River otter foraging on
crawfish in Parker Branch of Blood River. This portion of the quad
seemingly devoid of waterbirds and raptors. Nothing unexpected.
Overcast with clearing by mid-morning, 75-93 F, and wind calm.
Number of species:     40

Cattle Egret     4
Mourning Dove     6
Chimney Swift     20
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     2
Red-bellied Woodpecker     8
Downy Woodpecker     4
Northern Flicker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     2
Acadian Flycatcher     4
Great Crested Flycatcher     6  (1 at nest box)
Eastern Kingbird     3
White-eyed Vireo     10
Yellow-throated Vireo     2  (1 recently fledged)
Red-eyed Vireo     2
Blue Jay     18
American Crow     7
Fish Crow     3
Purple Martin     16
Carolina Chickadee     16
Tufted Titmouse     15
Carolina Wren     26
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     2
Eastern Bluebird     12
Wood Thrush     4  (2 singing m)
American Robin     2
Northern Mockingbird     3
Brown Thrasher     2
European Starling     1
Northern Parula     2  (1 ad. f, carrying food)
Pine Warbler     5
Common Yellowthroat     4
Hooded Warbler     4
Yellow-breasted Chat     3
Summer Tanager     5
Eastern Towhee     4
Northern Cardinal     32
Indigo Bunting     7
Painted Bunting     4
Brown-headed Cowbird     8
House Sparrow     5

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

Good atlasing,
Devin Bosler
Albany, LA
Subject: latest SBA coverage map
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 22:33:32 -0500
LABIRD -- for Rosemart Seidler's latest map of our coverage for Summer  
Bird Atlas, see:

http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/LSBA-coverage.jpg

You can tell no one wants to go the rice country, the SW coastal area,  
or the lower delta in summer by comparison to:

http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/LWBA-coverage.jpg


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Church Point Quad , 7/1/09 - Thank a Rice/Crawfish Farmer
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 20:45:03 -0500
I wanted to make a morning summer quad census in this quad. I probably could 
have concentrated on songbirds but just could not get away from the waterbirds. 
The issue of shrikes has come up and I'm as guilty as anyone in promoting the 
continuing thread. But, sometimes I wonder if climate and land use changes have 
anything to do with the changes we see with resident birds? For example, look 
at Lowery's last distribution information about Scissor-tailed Flycatchers and 
put STFL in the ebird data consolidation for Louisiana. Look also at where 
White-winged and Inca Doves are now as well as Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks 
and Crested Caracara. With a change in land use and climate - don't get me 
started about who is the culprit on this! - should we be surprised that there 
are changes in bird distributions and numbers? 


The Church Point Quad includes the Square that Mike Musumeche and I (to a much 
lesser degree AND Billy Leonard, Tibor Mikuska and Greg Richard) censused at 
the end of the 1900s. Our total for an annual cycle was around 190 birds. I 
have now for summer and winter atlases 93 birds. It is 2 hours one way from my 
home to the quad. I'm sure I'd be around 110 if I lived closer. But, we just 
did not have any decent woods in the square and there aren't any decent woods 
in the quad. If I were a Musumeche, Remsen, Dittmann, Cardiff et al. the list 
might be approaching 125. Still the Working Wetland Landscape is really 
important habitat. How many of the 20 million or so birders in the country 
would welcome the opportunity to see ho hum Roseate Spoonbills and Wood Storks 
up close and personal or use an I-pod to call in King Rails? We take what we 
have for granted and that's really sad. Working with land owners and 
conservation organizations is critical to conservation of all of our spec! 

 ies.

The four coots were hanging out with Pied-billed Grebes. I have coots in 
working wetlands EVERY summer for the entire SBA project but STILL cannot see 
evidence of nesting - little coots! This includes Ascension, Rapides and St. 
Landry Parishes. 


By the way, thank you to folks who are good enough to scan my posts. I don't 
try to intentionally fill inboxes with needless commentary. 


Jay Huner

Location: Church Point Quad
Observation date: 7/1/09
Notes: Church Point Quad. General area of LA 358 x LA 751 and toward Church 
Point south along LA 35. 1 observer, start 7:25 AM CDST, duration 1 hr 20 min., 
1 observer. This will probably be my only morning report from this quad. I made 
an early run this morning going to the Rice Field Day at the LSU Rice Research 
Station in Crowley. The waterbird report grossly underestimates the wading 
birds because I could not make it to the area on the west side of the quad 
where I could tell there were lots of birds in shallow water and dewatered 
crawfish systems. I could not get to the King Rail site we censused last week 
with recordings and had between 40 and 60 King Rails in waist high rice. 

Number of species: 33

Fulvous Whistling-Duck 11
Pied-billed Grebe 35
Great Egret 485
Snowy Egret 250
Little Blue Heron 100
Cattle Egret 11
Green Heron 6
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron 1
White Ibis 270
Glossy Ibis 1
White-faced Ibis 395
Roseate Spoonbill 3
Wood Stork 33
King Rail 1
Common Moorhen 8
American Coot 4
Killdeer 6
Black-necked Stilt 115
Mourning Dove 27
Loggerhead Shrike 2
Blue Jay 4
American Crow 5
Purple Martin 3
Carolina Chickadee 1
Carolina Wren 1
Northern Mockingbird 7
Common Yellowthroat 2
Northern Cardinal 28
Painted Bunting 1
Red-winged Blackbird 40
Eastern Meadowlark 30
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
House Sparrow 5

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


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Re: Shrikes
From: Carol Foil <carolsfoil AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 18:12:22 -0500
Thanks Paul.

When I did a similar search last week, I found a Florida investigation
showing that imported fire ants are NOT a factor in shrike decline
there (as could be presumed because shrike decline began well north of
fire ant distribution) and in their discussion, the authors discuss
the potential role of insectides (including those being used to
control ants) that were being used in ag areas at that time (90's)

http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Condor/files/issues/v097n04/p1053-p1056.pdf

It should be noted that current pasture management does not include
chemical control for fire ants in Louisiana, according to Lane the
entomologist.



On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 1:54 PM, Paul Conover wrote:
> Carol Foil wrote:
>> Or maybe their insect prey is what is being poisoned on the roadside,
>> not their bodies.
>>
>
>
>
>
> Carol, Labird,
>        If pesticides are indeed a factor, that's the pathway I'd suspect.
> Permanone, the pesticide I mentioned, is "highly toxic to bees," so
> presumably it affects insects other than mosquitoes. It is "extremely toxic
> to fish and aquatic organisms," so it might well kill other insects with
> aquatic stages (such as dragonflies). If the whole community is contracting,
> the top tier of the system would presumably show the first effects.
>        Pesticide isn't dropping birds on the spot, but maybe there are some
> direct effects from spraying. I can't imagine spray would have a positive
> effect on nestlings and fledglings.
>        Again, all just conjecture.
>        We look at the change in numbers, and we can look for changes in the
> environment. However, we don't have all the historical background associated
> with the numbers, such as: what is the fledgling success rate? were the
> fencerows "clean" or "dirty?" how many nest trees were in the area? how many
> houses? how much traffic? how was the land being used? main crop? etc, etc.
> Unfortunately, so many environmental variables have changed that the magic
> bullet might elude us.
>        Mac had asked about published findings. The problem is, nobody has
> found the direct answer yet. Searching EBSCO, I found the following
> abstracts which demonstrate some of the different routes of investigations:
>
> "ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES ARE NOT IMPLICATED IN THE DECLINE OF THE
> LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE.
>
> By: Herkert, James R.. Condor, Aug2004, Vol. 106 Issue 3, p702-705, 4p, 1
> chart; (AN 14233470)
>
> Abstract: I compared pesticide levels in the eggs of Loggerhead Shrikes
> (Lanius ludovicianus) collected from Illinois in 1995-1996 with those
> reported for the state in 1971-1972. Pesticides were detected in 19 of 21
> (90%) eggs from 1995-1996. DDE was the most frequently detected pesticide,
> occurring in 17 of 21 eggs. DDT was the second most frequent pesticide
> detected and was found in nine eggs. Mean DDE levels in shrike eggs from
> 1995-1996 were 79% lower than in eggs from 1971-1972. Unlike most bird
> species for which pesticide levels are known to have been reduced (whose
> populations have tended to increase), Loggerhead Shrike populations have
> declined during the period in which pesticide levels within their eggs has
> been reduced. These data suggest that organochlorine pesticides are likely
> not driving current Loggerhead Shrike declines in Illinois."
>
>
> "The effects of prairie habitat loss and land-use changes on Loggerhead
> Shrike populations in Kansas.Citation Only Available
> By: Bellar, Christian A.; Maccarone, Alan D. Source: Transactions of the
> Kansas Academy of Science, Vol. 105 (1-2). April 2002. 51-65.
>
> The vast expanse of North American prairie has been reduced by at least 90%
> of its original area. As a result, the populations of many grassland birds
> are in serious decline. This study investigated Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius
> ludovicianus) population trends in Kansas by comparing two Breeding Bird
> Survey (BBS) routes (16 and 17) in north-central Kansas showing more stable
> shrike populations, with two BBS routes (06 and 07) in southern Kansas
> showing more dramatic declines during the last 30 years. With the exception
> of large increases in pesticide use, there have been few land-use changes
> the last 30 years along the two northern routes. Along the southern routes,
> land-use changes include large decreases in pasture, urbanization, loss of
> tree rows, and large increases in pesticide use. Our land-use survey showed
> more pasture, woodland, scattered trees and shrubs, and barbed-wire fences
> in the north, and more wheat, residential areas, and tree rows in the south,
> indicating significant differences between study areas in key habitat
> requirements for breeding Loggerhead Shrikes. Our two-year census of the
> four BBS routes showed a higher density of shrike in the north (3.0/census)
> than the south (1.9/census). The habitat associated with shrikes in the
> north showed a greater amount of pasture and significantly more scattered
> trees and shrubs compared to the south, where shrike habitats were more
> heterogeneous and usually associated with tree rows. The nesting success in
> both areas was relatively low for Loggerhead Shrikes."
>
>
> "The relationship between land-use and the distribution and abundance of
> loggerhead shrikes in south-central Illinois
> By: Smith, Eric L.; Kruse, Kipp C. Source: Journal of Field Ornithology,
> Vol. 63 (4). 1992. 420-427
>
> The abundance and distribution of the Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius
> ludovicianus) was estimated in 32 counties located in south-central Illinois
> (USA) on, or immediately adjacent to the "shrike extirpation line" of Graber
> et al. (1973). A total of 216 shrikes was observed in 22 of the 32 counties
> surveyed, of which only 13 (6%) were north of the extirpation line. Shrikes
> were most common near pastures, hedgerows, cornfields, and residential homes
> and their lawns. Regression analysis revealed that shrike abundance was
> positively correlated with the amount of pasture-hay meadows and covercrops,
> and negatively correlated with the amount of harvested cropland and
> woodland. Land-use practices appear to have influenced the distribution and
> abundance of the Loggerhead Shrike in Illinois."
>
>
> "The role of natural habitats in agricultural systems for bird conservation:
> the case of the threatened Lesser Grey Shrike.
> Giralt, David , Biodiversity and conservation, 2008 July, v. 17, no. 8, p.
> 1997-2012., Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands
>
>
> Birds of agricultural systems are one of the most threatened groups of birds
> in Europe mainly due to their sharp population decline in recent decades.
> Habitat intensification resulting from more productive agricultural
> practices has been proposed as a major cause for these declines. However,
> especially in some regions such as Eastern European and Mediterranean
> countries, little is known about the ultimate factors linked to habitat
> intensification that drive population declines for different species. The
> Lesser Grey Shrike is a good study species for a better understanding of
> such processes since it is closely related to agricultural habitats in
> Europe and has suffered a strong decline in range and population size across
> the western half of the continent. In this study, we explored variations in
> breeding parameters of this shrike related to habitat composition and food
> supply at the territory level. We found that fledgling success of early
> breeders was related to the presence of natural (shrub lands) and
> semi-natural (fallows) habitats in the predominantly agricultural matrix
> that dominated breeding territories. Their influence on fledgling success
> appeared to be mediated by a higher arthropod availability on these
> habitats. Indeed, Lesser Grey Shrike showed a strong preference for these
> habitats as hunting locations. Our results highlight the importance of
> natural habitats in intensified agricultural land mosaics for the
> conservation of bird species. We suggest that management plans should pay
> special attention to the availability of habitats which serve as high
> quality food reservoirs and can potentially contribute to enhance the
> species population viability in an area. Finally, we discuss the possible
> link between agricultural intensification and Lesser Grey Shrike population
> declines in Western Europe."
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Paul Conover
> Lafayette
>



-- 
Carol S Foil
Baton Rouge, LA
CarolSFoil AT gmail.com
Subject: Re: Shrikes
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 13:54:07 -0500
Carol Foil wrote:
 > Or maybe their insect prey is what is being poisoned on the roadside,
 > not their bodies.
 >




Carol, Labird,
	If pesticides are indeed a factor, that's the pathway I'd suspect. 
Permanone, the pesticide I mentioned, is "highly toxic to bees," so 
presumably it affects insects other than mosquitoes. It is "extremely 
toxic to fish and aquatic organisms," so it might well kill other 
insects with aquatic stages (such as dragonflies). If the whole 
community is contracting, the top tier of the system would presumably 
show the first effects.
	Pesticide isn't dropping birds on the spot, but maybe there are some 
direct effects from spraying. I can't imagine spray would have a 
positive effect on nestlings and fledglings.
	Again, all just conjecture.
	We look at the change in numbers, and we can look for changes in the 
environment. However, we don't have all the historical background 
associated with the numbers, such as: what is the fledgling success 
rate? were the fencerows "clean" or "dirty?" how many nest trees were in 
the area? how many houses? how much traffic? how was the land being 
used? main crop? etc, etc. Unfortunately, so many environmental 
variables have changed that the magic bullet might elude us.
	Mac had asked about published findings. The problem is, nobody has 
found the direct answer yet. Searching EBSCO, I found the following 
abstracts which demonstrate some of the different routes of investigations:

"ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES ARE NOT IMPLICATED IN THE DECLINE OF THE 
LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE.

By: Herkert, James R.. Condor, Aug2004, Vol. 106 Issue 3, p702-705, 4p, 
1 chart; (AN 14233470)

Abstract: I compared pesticide levels in the eggs of Loggerhead Shrikes 
(Lanius ludovicianus) collected from Illinois in 1995-1996 with those 
reported for the state in 1971-1972. Pesticides were detected in 19 of 
21 (90%) eggs from 1995-1996. DDE was the most frequently detected 
pesticide, occurring in 17 of 21 eggs. DDT was the second most frequent 
pesticide detected and was found in nine eggs. Mean DDE levels in shrike 
eggs from 1995-1996 were 79% lower than in eggs from 1971-1972. Unlike 
most bird species for which pesticide levels are known to have been 
reduced (whose populations have tended to increase), Loggerhead Shrike 
populations have declined during the period in which pesticide levels 
within their eggs has been reduced. These data suggest that 
organochlorine pesticides are likely not driving current Loggerhead 
Shrike declines in Illinois."


"The effects of prairie habitat loss and land-use changes on Loggerhead 
Shrike populations in Kansas.Citation Only Available
By: Bellar, Christian A.; Maccarone, Alan D. Source: Transactions of the 
Kansas Academy of Science, Vol. 105 (1-2). April 2002. 51-65.

The vast expanse of North American prairie has been reduced by at least 
90% of its original area. As a result, the populations of many grassland 
birds are in serious decline. This study investigated Loggerhead Shrike 
(Lanius ludovicianus) population trends in Kansas by comparing two 
Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) routes (16 and 17) in north-central Kansas 
showing more stable shrike populations, with two BBS routes (06 and 07) 
in southern Kansas showing more dramatic declines during the last 30 
years. With the exception of large increases in pesticide use, there 
have been few land-use changes the last 30 years along the two northern 
routes. Along the southern routes, land-use changes include large 
decreases in pasture, urbanization, loss of tree rows, and large 
increases in pesticide use. Our land-use survey showed more pasture, 
woodland, scattered trees and shrubs, and barbed-wire fences in the 
north, and more wheat, residential areas, and tree rows in the south, 
indicating significant differences between study areas in key habitat 
requirements for breeding Loggerhead Shrikes. Our two-year census of the 
four BBS routes showed a higher density of shrike in the north 
(3.0/census) than the south (1.9/census). The habitat associated with 
shrikes in the north showed a greater amount of pasture and 
significantly more scattered trees and shrubs compared to the south, 
where shrike habitats were more heterogeneous and usually associated 
with tree rows. The nesting success in both areas was relatively low for 
Loggerhead Shrikes."


"The relationship between land-use and the distribution and abundance of 
loggerhead shrikes in south-central Illinois
By: Smith, Eric L.; Kruse, Kipp C. Source: Journal of Field Ornithology, 
Vol. 63 (4). 1992. 420-427

The abundance and distribution of the Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius 
ludovicianus) was estimated in 32 counties located in south-central 
Illinois (USA) on, or immediately adjacent to the "shrike extirpation 
line" of Graber et al. (1973). A total of 216 shrikes was observed in 22 
of the 32 counties surveyed, of which only 13 (6%) were north of the 
extirpation line. Shrikes were most common near pastures, hedgerows, 
cornfields, and residential homes and their lawns. Regression analysis 
revealed that shrike abundance was positively correlated with the amount 
of pasture-hay meadows and covercrops, and negatively correlated with 
the amount of harvested cropland and woodland. Land-use practices appear 
to have influenced the distribution and abundance of the Loggerhead 
Shrike in Illinois."


"The role of natural habitats in agricultural systems for bird 
conservation: the case of the threatened Lesser Grey Shrike.
Giralt, David , Biodiversity and conservation, 2008 July, v. 17, no. 8, 
p. 1997-2012., Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands


Birds of agricultural systems are one of the most threatened groups of 
birds in Europe mainly due to their sharp population decline in recent 
decades. Habitat intensification resulting from more productive 
agricultural practices has been proposed as a major cause for these 
declines. However, especially in some regions such as Eastern European 
and Mediterranean countries, little is known about the ultimate factors 
linked to habitat intensification that drive population declines for 
different species. The Lesser Grey Shrike is a good study species for a 
better understanding of such processes since it is closely related to 
agricultural habitats in Europe and has suffered a strong decline in 
range and population size across the western half of the continent. In 
this study, we explored variations in breeding parameters of this shrike 
related to habitat composition and food supply at the territory level. 
We found that fledgling success of early breeders was related to the 
presence of natural (shrub lands) and semi-natural (fallows) habitats in 
the predominantly agricultural matrix that dominated breeding 
territories. Their influence on fledgling success appeared to be 
mediated by a higher arthropod availability on these habitats. Indeed, 
Lesser Grey Shrike showed a strong preference for these habitats as 
hunting locations. Our results highlight the importance of natural 
habitats in intensified agricultural land mosaics for the conservation 
of bird species. We suggest that management plans should pay special 
attention to the availability of habitats which serve as high quality 
food reservoirs and can potentially contribute to enhance the species 
population viability in an area. Finally, we discuss the possible link 
between agricultural intensification and Lesser Grey Shrike population 
declines in Western Europe."





	

Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: Re: Shrikes
From: Carol Foil <carolsfoil AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 11:49:04 -0500
Or maybe their insect prey is what is being poisoned on the roadside,
not their bodies.

On Wed, Jul 1, 2009 at 11:41 AM, miriam wrote:
> LA's ag chemical picture  over last few yrs has moved from widespread &
> common application of lots of fairly toxic broad-spectrum pesticides to a
> more carefully targetted and net decreased amount of pesticide & herbicide
> use because of the use of patented, genetically-modified crop strains.  So I
> would tend to not to think toward a direct shrike-poison situation.
>
> Don't shrikes eat a lot of small reptiles ?  What abt amphibians?  Are both
> those on the decline?   Maybe they're having trouble finding enough anoles &
> fence lizards to impale on barbed wire.
>
> Hey....maybe they're not finding enough barbed wire.
>
> MiriamLDavey
> BatonRougeLA
>



-- 
Carol S Foil
Baton Rouge, LA
CarolSFoil AT gmail.com
Subject: Re: Shrikes
From: miriam <athena_9 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 11:41:29 -0500
LA's ag chemical picture  over last few yrs has moved from widespread &
common application of lots of fairly toxic broad-spectrum pesticides to a
more carefully targetted and net decreased amount of pesticide & herbicide
use because of the use of patented, genetically-modified crop strains.  So I
would tend to not to think toward a direct shrike-poison situation.
 
Don't shrikes eat a lot of small reptiles ?  What abt amphibians?  Are both
those on the decline?   Maybe they're having trouble finding enough anoles &
fence lizards to impale on barbed wire.
 
Hey....maybe they're not finding enough barbed wire.
 
MiriamLDavey
BatonRougeLA
Subject: Black-bellied Whistling Ducks Bayou Desiard
From: Matt Pardue <tmatthewpardue AT AOL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 11:46:58 -0400
There were 8 BBWD this morning out near the ULM ski ramp. First I have seen 
around campus, and actually the first time I have seen one swimming! Always 
standing on a levee or in a tree. Who knew that these ducks could swim! 

Subject: Swainson's Hawk
From: "Finnie, Tom (thomas)" <tom.finnie AT CPSB.ORG>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 10:17:51 -0500
Driving down Fabacher Road in Calcasieu Parish on this overcast AM produced the 
usual mourning dove, RW Blackbirds, Orchard Orioles, meadow larks, verbose 
dickcissels, ibises and cattle egrets. In the distance was a lone hawk perched 
on a snag searching for breakfast in the field below. My fingers were crossed 
in hopes that it was the Swainson's Hawk that I have seen in the area. Up went 
the binoculars. Everything came into view and it was him, the Swainson's Hawk, 
with his recognizable markings. He stayed idle on the snag allowing a distant 
photo before departing. It was nice to get a more recognizable image of him and 
to know that he is still in this area. 


http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0036.jpg
http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/thomas_1950/DSC_0040.jpg
Subject: more on Chevron, pelicans.
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 09:39:43 -0500
Labird,

http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/acadiana/49564027.html?index=1&c=y


Qi Wiggins, a spokeswoman for Chevron, said the company self-reported 
the incident to the U.S. Department of Wildlife and Fisheries after a 
contractor discovered 35 dead brown pelicans and 11 alive ones inside of 
a temporary caisson — a retaining watertight structure — at the site.

“The pelicans saw a hole and decided to nest and they were unable to fly 
out once in because of their large wing span,” Wiggins said.


Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: Re: Garden District - July 1, 2009
From: Nancy L Newfield <nancy AT CASACOLIBRI.NET>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 08:40:29 -0500
Jeff et Y'All,

At 08:26 AM 7/1/2009, Jeffrey W. Harris wrote:

>I saw a first summer male and an adult male orchard oriole this morning
>during the AM survey of the yard.  Not much else to report.

Since the loss of breeding Orchard Orioles in my 
neighborhood, I wait for the early migrants to 
appear in late June or early July.  Right on 
schedule, I spied a male working the Trumpet 
Creeper yesterday and a female today.

This species has seemed to be in short supply at 
the Covington banding site for the last couple of 
years.  In the past, a pair or two have made 
themselves at home in the yard and have been 
nuisances in the hummer traps.  Last year, there 
were very few visits and this year, we've 
recorded a couple of yearling males in April and a female once in May.

Ruby-throated Hummingbirds also appear in the 
Trumpet Creeper as their nesting season 
wanes.  Don't know if these are post-breeding 
dispersers or actual migrants.  A young male made 
a very, very brief visit on 29 June.

NLN

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Nancy L Newfield
  Casa Colibrí
  Metairie, Louisiana USA
  nancy AT casacolibri.net
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subject: Garden District - July 1, 2009
From: "Jeffrey W. Harris" <jwharris30 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 08:26:40 -0500
Hello Birders,
I saw a first summer male and an adult male orchard oriole this morning
during the AM survey of the yard.  Not much else to report.  I do not
include this in the SBA because I don't want to over-represent a single
location in the Baton Rouge W Quad.
Location: Tulip Street, B.R., LA 70806
Observation date: 7/1/09
Number of species: 20

Mississippi Kite 1
Cooper's Hawk 1
Eurasian Collared-Dove 4
Mourning Dove 6
Chimney Swift 5
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 1
Downy Woodpecker 1
Great Crested Flycatcher 2
Blue Jay 2
Fish Crow 3
Barn Swallow 1
Carolina Wren 1
American Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 5
European Starling 9
Northern Cardinal 3
Orchard Oriole 2
House Finch 3
House Sparrow 7

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Sincerely,
Jeff Harris
Subject: white breasted nuthatch
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 08:02:56 -0500
<
<



Subject: cliff swallows
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Wed, 1 Jul 2009 08:01:13 -0500
<
<



Subject: Re: not shrikes, but...
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 21:29:52 -0500
Nope, no idea. I guess the 'why' might be that the birds were messing on 
a rig...

Paul Conover
Lafayette



Tom Hickcox wrote:
> At 14:33 6/30/2009, Paul Conover wrote:
> 
>> Oil company accused of killing 35 brown pelicans:
>>
>>
>> http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/acadiana/49471777.html
> 
> I saw the article, but it doesn't say how Chevron killed the birds.
> 
> Any ideas how?
> 
> Tom Hickcox
> Baton Rouge
> 
> 
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: William McGehee <msdwmc AT AOL.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 21:25:08 -0400
A few months ago, I did a quick-and- dirty analysis of shrike numbers on the 
last 20 Natchez Audubon Christmas Bird Censuses.?Ouur count circle is a little 
different in that it straddles the river and takes in a good part of Concordia 
Parish, most of it open agricultural land. Much of the Mississippi side is 
similar delta-type habitat. These are the areas where one tends to find most 
shrikes. It appeared to me that shrike numbers appeared to be holding steady 
over ?this period,??with fluctuations probably attributable to weather and 
number of participants. 


For what it's worth,

Bill McGehee
Natchez???


-----Original Message-----
From: James V. Remsen 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Mon, Jun 29, 2009 10:51 pm
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Loggerhead Shrikes


David/LABIRD: right, and with shrikes seemingly thriving for decades in the 
rice country, the sugar cane deserts of the Miss. R. floodplain, suburban 
ballparks, etc., where they've been subjected to who-knows-how-many chemicals 
since at least the 1940s, if whatever has happened recently is due to any sort 
of chemical, it has to be a brand new flavor.? 

?
On Jun 29, 2009, at 9:47 PM, David Muth wrote:?
?
> On mosquito spaying and shrikes: if you look at the trend for New > Orleans 
it? 

> too shows a steady shrike decline (with a real dip for Katrina). But?
> mosquito spraying is not new here. In fact, intense spraying dates > to the?
> 1960s when DDT was routinely used. It might be useful to look and > see if 
the? 

> decline dates to the switch to a different pesticide.?
>?
> David Muth?
> New Orleans?
>?
?
*****************************?
J. V. Remsen?
Museum of Natural Science?
Foster Hall 119?
LSU?
Baton Rouge, LA 70803?
225-578-2855?
najamesLSU.edu?
Subject: Re: not shrikes, but...
From: Tom Hickcox <cometkazie1 AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 19:17:14 -0500
At 14:33 6/30/2009, Paul Conover wrote:

>Oil company accused of killing 35 brown pelicans:
>
>
>http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/acadiana/49471777.html

I saw the article, but it doesn't say how Chevron killed the birds.

Any ideas how?

Tom Hickcox
Baton Rouge
Subject: Plaquemine Quad - June 30, 2009
From: "Jeffrey W. Harris" <jwharris30 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 18:44:47 -0500
Hello Birders,

I heard a Northern bobwhite calling/singing as I worked bees.  Decided to
use lunch break to census my location for the SBA so that the quail could be
included.  This is only the second time that I have found a bobwhite at the
station in 5 years.  The stilts were in the wet area north of the Pecans.  I
saw them as they were spooked by a nearby tractor that was plowing.
Effort:  1 person for 1.25 hours; specific location is on the south end of
Ben Hur Research Experiment Station; east of Ben Hur Road by a little more
than 1/10th mile and near the large Pecan Grove that borders the drainage
canal.  Not an ideal time (began at 2:00 PM).

Location:     Plaquemine Quad
Observation date:     6/30/09
Number of species:     29

Northern Bobwhite     1
Cattle Egret     12
Turkey Vulture     2
Killdeer     3
Black-necked Stilt     2
Eurasian Collared-Dove     5
Mourning Dove     25
Yellow-billed Cuckoo     2
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     2
Great Crested Flycatcher     1
Loggerhead Shrike     2
Blue Jay     4
American Crow     3
Carolina Chickadee     6
Tufted Titmouse     2
Carolina Wren     4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
Eastern Bluebird     2
Northern Mockingbird     2
European Starling     10
Prothonotary Warbler     2
Summer Tanager     1
Northern Cardinal     5
Painted Bunting     2
Red-winged Blackbird     7
Common Grackle     3
Brown-headed Cowbird     2
House Sparrow     5
This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)

Sincerely,

Jeff Harris
Subject: not shrikes, but...
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:33:06 -0500
Oil company accused of killing 35 brown pelicans:


http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/acadiana/49471777.html



Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: Re: kittiwake
From: "Woltmann, Stefan" <swoltman AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:21:59 -0500
Eric/Justin/LABird,
 
Not sure about "black stripe on nape"(?) but the photos are absolutely 
Black-legged Kittiwake. 

 
Good stuff.
 
Stefan
 
Stefan Woltmann 
Dept. Ecology & Evolutionary Biology 
400 Boggs 
Tulane University 
New Orleans, LA 70118 
swoltman AT tulane.edu
http://studentweb.tulane.edu/~swoltman/

________________________________

From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds on 
behalf of eric liffmann 

Sent: Tue 30-Jun-09 14:21
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] kittiwake



Justin/LAbird,
Thanks... That's what I was thinking.  I checked Kauffmann's and he
had listed a black stripe on the nape which is visible in one of the
photos.  I think that clinches it.  Everybody ok with that?
E
Subject: kittiwake
From: eric liffmann <eliffmann AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:21:13 -0500
Justin/LAbird,
Thanks... That's what I was thinking.  I checked Kauffmann's and he
had listed a black stripe on the nape which is visible in one of the
photos.  I think that clinches it.  Everybody ok with that?
E
Subject: Re: Small 1st yr. gull
From: Justin Bosler <justin.bosler AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:48:12 -0700
LABIRD/Eric,

     Your small gull is a first-summer Black-legged Kittiwake.  Notice
the black ear spot, plain greenish-yellow bill, and short, blackish
legs.  Distinguished from a nonbreeding adult by the black 'M' pattern
on the upperwings, which is retained through the first pre-alternate
molt.

     Thanks for providing the photos.  That's a good record and you
should consider submitting it to the Alabama Bird Records Committee
(http://www.bham.net/aos/abrc/).

Good birding,
Justin Bosler

On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 11:18 AM, eric liffmann wrote:
> Greetings LAbirders,
>
> Below is a link to some poor qualitiy photos of a small 1st yr. gull I
> saw on Dauphin Island on May 20th.  I was rehashing my ID and decided
> to ask for help.  If anyone would like to give it a shot, I'd be
> appreciative.  As for LA birds I've had a family of GC flycatchers
> visiting my backyard in BR in the morning and evenings :)
>
> All Best,
> Eric
>
> http://picasaweb.google.com/eliffmann/Birds#
>



-- 
Justin Bosler
Reedsport, OR
justin.bosler AT gmail.com
717-475-9998
http://www.flickr.com/photos/29219448 AT N08/
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Buford Myers <bmyers990 AT EARTHLINK.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:47:11 -0500
All,

In the New Orleans area there was occasional spraying (quite possibly DDT) 
in the 50s. Big time mosquito control didn't get going until the mid-60s 
with the formation of Orleans Parish Mosquito Control. I forget what their 
standard insectcide was back then, but I guarantee you it wasn't DDT or 
similar. Over the years, the insecticides used have changed. The changes may 
have been in part responding to resistance in mosquitoes. In general, the 
changes have been to insecticides with less widespread toxicity. I'm not 
saying that mosquito control programs have no role in the decline of shrikes 
in LA, but there are several reasons to look elsewhere for reasons. There 
have been massive applications of insecticides and herbicides to rice, 
cotton, and other crops  at least back to the 40s, but the decline in 
shrikes in south LA is relatively recent. Are the newer pesticides or other 
chemicals applied to the fields somehow (whether directly or indirectly) 
more harmful to shrikes? Maybe; I don't know. Perhaps suburban sprawl has 
something to do with it, but shrikes generally did quite well in quasi-lawn 
planet situations. Perhaps the increased road traffic plays a part; shrikes 
are notoriously low flyers and frequent roadside areas. But it seem very 
unlikely that increased traffic could contribute significantly to the big 
declines noted. Loggerhead Shrikes have been declining over many parts of 
their former range in the U.S. for decades, far longer than they have in LA. 
And I beleieve that other shrike species in various parts of the world have 
also undergone declines. I have seen speculation about possible reasons for 
the decline of Loggerhead Shrikes in other parts of the U.S., but I don't 
know if there have been any rigorous scientific investigations into the 
reasons. If there have been, I and others on this list would be grateful for 
links or citations.

Mac
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "James V. Remsen" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 10:51 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Loggerhead Shrikes


> David/LABIRD:  right, and with shrikes seemingly thriving for decades  in 
> the rice country, the sugar cane deserts of the Miss. R.  floodplain, 
> suburban ballparks, etc., where they've been subjected to 
> who-knows-how-many chemicals since at least the 1940s, if whatever has 
> happened recently is due to any sort of chemical, it has to be a brand 
> new flavor.
>
> On Jun 29, 2009, at 9:47 PM, David Muth wrote:
>
>> On mosquito spaying and shrikes: if you look at the trend for New 
>> Orleans it
>> too shows a steady shrike decline (with a real dip for Katrina). But
>> mosquito spraying is not new here. In fact, intense spraying dates  to 
>> the
>> 1960s when DDT was routinely used. It might be useful to look and  see if 
>> the
>> decline dates to the switch to a different pesticide.
>>
>> David Muth
>> New Orleans
>>
>
> *****************************
> J. V. Remsen
> Museum of Natural Science
> Foster Hall 119
> LSU
> Baton Rouge, LA 70803
> 225-578-2855
> najamesLSU.edu 
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 6/30/09
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:42:56 -0500
One observer from 7:00 AM till 10:00 AM. Decidious woods, pond, open grassy 
area that borders on woods,  large flower beds with birdbaths.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 1:32 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 6/30/09


>
>
> Location:     Folsom Quad
> Observation date:     6/30/09
> Notes:      observations done in yard and along the street.
> Number of species:     27
>
> Turkey Vulture     1
> Mourning Dove     11
> Chimney Swift     5
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird     2
> Red-headed Woodpecker     3     Juvie feeding on pears in tree
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     3     Juvie in pear tree eating pear
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Northern Flicker     1
> Great Crested Flycatcher     4
> White-eyed Vireo     2     Dark eyes on juvie
> Blue Jay     10
> American Crow     3
> Fish Crow     2
> Carolina Chickadee     8
> Tufted Titmouse     7
> Brown-headed Nuthatch     2
> Carolina Wren     7
> Eastern Bluebird     7
> Wood Thrush     2     Female on nest
> Gray Catbird     3     youngster following parent and being fed
> Northern Mockingbird     4
> Brown Thrasher     4
> Kentucky Warbler     1
> Common Yellowthroat     1
> Eastern Towhee     2
> Northern Cardinal     20
> House Finch     12
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Small 1st yr. gull
From: eric liffmann <eliffmann AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:18:09 -0500
Greetings LAbirders,

Below is a link to some poor qualitiy photos of a small 1st yr. gull I
saw on Dauphin Island on May 20th.  I was rehashing my ID and decided
to ask for help.  If anyone would like to give it a shot, I'd be
appreciative.  As for LA birds I've had a family of GC flycatchers
visiting my backyard in BR in the morning and evenings :)

All Best,
Eric

http://picasaweb.google.com/eliffmann/Birds#
Subject: Re: Current educational paradigms
From: Ellie Avegno <elliea AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 13:16:17 -0500
amen 

-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of miriam
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 7:45 AM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Current educational paradigms

>Will humans ever have the analytical ability to make reasonable risk
assessments? Not under current educational paradigms.>

Perhaps that's the plan.

 

MiriamLDavey

BatonRougeLA
Subject: Alexandria Quad , 6/30/09 - Persistence of Micro-Habitats
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 12:27:58 -0500
The referenced slough is actually a remanent of a swamp/lake complex from the 
early days of Alexandria's history. The water retention ponds provide, if 
nothing else, soil to build up the lots for the expensive homes. I'm perplexed 
that the wooded slough remains as virtually any normal person would consider it 
to be a real eye-sore. Yet, any birder would find it to be a really good place 
to visit. I guess the economy is so lousy that the developers can't afford to 
hit the area with their dozers and create a proper pond with manicured lawns to 
the water's edge, no unsightly trees, and fountains to keep the water clear. - 
Jay Huner 


Location: Alexandria Quad
Observation date: 6/30/09
Notes: Alexandria Quad. Lakes Area Behind Menard High School off LA 28 W. 1 
observer, start 7:50 AM CDST, duration 1 hr 40 min, 1.65 miles. Juvenile White 
Ibis makes 100 birds for quad - summer + winter. Wooded slough/pond on east 
side of complex adjacent to canal obviously important mini-wetland for Wood 
Ducks. Two broods of downy ducklings, one brood of 1/3 grown ducklings, and one 
brood of flying ducklets. Have seen no Wood Duck boxes so ducks using cavities 
in the snags. 

Number of species: 35

Canada Goose 4
Wood Duck 57
Great Blue Heron 1
Great Egret 2
Little Blue Heron 3
Green Heron 2
White Ibis 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Killdeer 4
Eurasian Collared-Dove 5
Mourning Dove 6
Inca Dove 4
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 5
Northern Flicker 1
Pileated Woodpecker 2
Great Crested Flycatcher 4
Eastern Kingbird 2
Loggerhead Shrike 3
White-eyed Vireo 1
Blue Jay 7
Purple Martin 120
Barn Swallow 3
Carolina Chickadee 2
Carolina Wren 6
Eastern Bluebird 7
American Robin 4
Northern Mockingbird 38
Brown Thrasher 7
European Starling 5
Northern Cardinal 19
Red-winged Blackbird 40
Eastern Meadowlark 1
Common Grackle 20
House Sparrow 16

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


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Humlit/Lalit
From: "Ingold, James" <James.Ingold AT LSUS.EDU>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:20:36 -0500
Sorry for the cross posting.

 

Bassett, F. and D. Cubie. 2009. Wintering hummingbirds in Alabama and
Florida: species diversity, sex and age ratios, and site fidelity.
Journal of Field Ornithology 80(2):154-162.

 

Jim Ingold


 
This message is intended only for the use of the Addressee(s) and may contain 
information that is PRIVILEGED, CONFIDENTIAL, and/or EXEMPT FROM DISCLOSURE 
under applicable law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby 
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the information 
contained herein is STRICTLY PROHIBITED. If you received this communication in 
error, please destroy all copies of the message, whether in electronic or hard 
copy format, as well as attachments and immediately contact the sender by 
replying to this email. 

 

 

 
 
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:09:00 -0500
David, Van, Labird,
	I'm only floating pesticide as a possible factor, so none of this is 
presented as anything more than general info. I would guess that a 
patchwork of factors is involved. I do think that increased and faster 
traffic is a big cause. Many roads in the rice country used to be so 
dead you could park in the middle and stay for hours, just 10 or 15 
years ago. Roads that fewer than 10 cars a day once traveled are now 
busy thoroughfares. That's hard to do now. Rice country itself is 
shrinking as development spreads, and the latest trend is rural 
subdivisions. Unbroken expanses of shrike habitat are decreasing.
	The areas I see with the least development, for instance south of 14 
between Kaplan and Gueydan where large family farms are still largely 
intact, still have decent shrike numbers.
	Regarding mosquito programs, it should be noted that urban areas have 
generally had long-running, well-funded mosquito programs. However, even 
mostly urban Lafayette Parish intensified its efforts recently, with 
parish-wide fogging via trucks. Many rural parishes haven't been able to 
provide such coverage (Vermilion Parish is one notable exception).

	Below are some particulars regarding one parish in the shrike mix, 
Acadia Parish.

Acadia Parish revamped their program in 2008, from a one-person 
operation to an intensive one:

Prior to that, according to KLFY TV, "In the past there was a person 
employed by the parish to do the job, but she quit without giving any 
specific reason.  Instead of going with one person to get the job done, 
they contracted a company to do so."

Acadia Parish purchased a plane in 2004 for spraying, but the plane 
needed repairs and was rarely functional. It was for sale as of 2009.

Rayne Today, January 21st, 2009:

"In April 2008, the Acadia Parish Police Jury, decided to go contract 
with its’ four-year-old mosquito control program. The Police Jury drew 
up a set of specifications and advertised for proposals.
After receiving three proposals, the Police Jury chose Mosquito Control 
Contractors, Inc. (MCCI) from New Iberia, who already ran contract 
programs for Lafayette and St. Mary Parishes."

The following changes were made:

• Locating “hot spots” for mosquitoes through more extensive surveillance.
• Precise spraying in “hot spots” and at peak flight times-morning and 
night.
• Creating spraying barriers to prevent mosquito spread from breeding sites.
• Spraying more in April (beginning of season) than was previously done.
• Spraying 7 days per week as opposed to 5 days, thus applying constant 
and continuous “insecticide pressure” on mosquito pests.
• Roadside ditch larviciding of mosquito breeding sites on a regular basis.


The following excerpts detail the cause for changes in programs:

"Distributed 05/21/03

Meanwhile, the May 28 deadline looms for parishes to apply for a share 
of $500,000 available through the state Department of Health and 
Hospitals’ Office of Public Health. Those funds are earmarked to start 
local mosquito control programs.

Book represents one of the 44 parishes in the state without a formal 
mosquito control district – a key statistic that led the LSU AgCenter 
and its partners to hold a series of seven informational meetings on 
mosquito control around the state this spring. The sessions, which also 
are sponsored by the Office of Public Health, the Louisiana Mosquito 
Control Association and the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and 
Forestry, conclude Friday (May 23) in Winnsboro.

The West Nile virus is transmitted from birds to humans and other 
animals by a number of species of mosquitoes, but primarily by the 
Southern House and Asian Tiger mosquitoes. Both species live near homes.

John Quebodeaux, Acadia Parish’s emergency preparedness director, said 
the state money could help local officials convince voters to pass 
additional mosquito control taxes locally.

"We’re trying everything we can. Last year, we spent $200,000 in 
one-time (public health) money on spraying (in Acadia). But to do more, 
it’s going to take more parish support," Quebodeaux said.

Acadia Parish has a one-quarter-cent sales tax proposition on its 
election ballot July 19 to pay for mosquito control outside the city 
limits of Crowley and Rayne. A parishwide half-cent sales tax failed 
last year. The quarter-cent tax would raise an estimated $400,000 to 
$600,000 a year, Quebodeaux said.

"If we could start with $400,000 to $600,000, it would be something," he 
said, adding, "That would give us a start, and if the people were 
satisfied, we could consider expanding from there in another two years."

Others warned West Nile isn’t the only threat. "West Nile probably won’t 
be our last epidemic," said Yates of East Baton Rouge Parish. "The next 
threat is just a plane ride away. New mosquito varieties are easily 
transported into the United States, and mosquitoes don’t recognize 
political boundaries."



Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Delacroix Quad , 6/30/09
From: Glenn Ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 16:07:29 +0000
1 observer, 3 hrs 40 min from 5:50am, 10.5 miles.

Glenn Ousset
-------------- Forwarded Message: -------------- 
From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net 
Subject: eBird Report - Delacroix Quad , 6/30/09 
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 16:00:43 +0000 




Location: Delacroix Quad 
Observation date: 6/30/09 Notes: La 46, Bayou Rd. Brackish marsh, spoil bank 
tree line, Live Oak and 

hardwood woodland, brush, pastures, dry pond. 
Number of species: 35 

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck 12 
Great Egret 2 
Tricolored Heron 1 flyover 
Cattle Egret 17 
Green Heron 6 
Black Vulture 12 
Turkey Vulture 4 
Mississippi Kite 5 
Cooper's Hawk 1 
Laughing Gull 3 flyover 
Rock Pigeon 7 flyover 
Mourning Dove 5 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 4 
Red-bellied Woodpecker 6 
Downy Woodpecker 1 
Eastern Kingbird 2 
White-eyed Vireo 3 
Red-eyed Vireo 1 
Blue Jay 6 
American Crow 14 
Purple Martin 50 
Carolina Chickadee 7 
Tufted Titmouse 5 
Carolina Wren 8 
Northern Mockingbird 5 
European Starling 40 
Northern Parula 6 
Common Yellowthroat 1 
Northern Cardinal 6 
Indigo Bunting 1 
Painted Bunting 5 
Red-winged Blackbird 1 
Common Grackle 1 
Orchard Oriole 1 
House Sparrow 4 

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Current educational paradigms
From: miriam <athena_9 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 07:44:32 -0500
>Will humans ever have the analytical ability to make reasonable risk
assessments? Not under current educational paradigms.>

Perhaps that's the plan.

 

MiriamLDavey

BatonRougeLA
Subject: eBird Report - Gonzales Quad, 6/27/09
From: suebroussard <suebrou AT COX.NET>
Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 01:33:21 -0500
Labird,

I had two swallows fly over that sure looked to be Tree Swallows, but was not 
fast enough to get the bins on them. When I turned around a third was flying 
toward me and was lower than the other two. It flew directly over about 20 feet 
above my head. Had an excellent view of snow white underside from head to tail. 
Will submit 3x5 per Van's request. 


Sadly I found that two more of the woodlots I bird have succumb to the evil 
bull dozers. :-( 



Location:     Gonzales Quad
Observation date:     6/27/09
Notes: One observer, 7:05-9:35am, 14.5 miles. Hwy 30, Robert Wilson Rd, Vulcan 
Rd. and a stop at one of the bar pits behind the Ms. levee. The Black Vultures 
were all at one roost on the Brittany communication tower (Hwy 30 at Hwy 941). 
The majority of the Cattle Egrets were in one recently mown pasture. The Tree 
Swallows were flyovers while I had stopped at the lake on Rayco Sanders Rd. 

Number of species:     38

Anhinga     2
Great Egret     2
Snowy Egret     1
Little Blue Heron     1
Cattle Egret     70
Black Vulture     75
Mississippi Kite     3
Killdeer     8
Mourning Dove     18
Chimney Swift     6
Downy Woodpecker     3
Great Crested Flycatcher     2
Loggerhead Shrike     3
White-eyed Vireo     2
Blue Jay     2
American Crow     4
Fish Crow     3
Purple Martin     5
Tree Swallow     3
Carolina Chickadee     5
Carolina Wren     7
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     2
Eastern Bluebird     3
Northern Mockingbird     19
European Starling     50
Prothonotary Warbler     4
Common Yellowthroat     2
Hooded Warbler     1
Yellow-breasted Chat     1
Eastern Towhee     5
Northern Cardinal     25
Painted Bunting     1
Red-winged Blackbird     16
Eastern Meadowlark     3
Common Grackle     12
Brown-headed Cowbird     4
Orchard Oriole     5
House Sparrow     8
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09
From: Lindsay Seely <linzseely AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:15:49 -0700
Party hours- 2. Worked NE corner of quad (Hwy 74 to 3115 to River Road to 73).



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: linzseely AT yahoo.com
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 4:21:11 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09



Location:    Carville Quad--East Bank
Observation date:    6/27/09
Number of species:    43

Mallard    10
Great Blue Heron    4
Great Egret    7
Snowy Egret    7
Little Blue Heron    1
Cattle Egret    60
White Ibis    6
Roseate Spoonbill    3
Black Vulture    3
Mississippi Kite    3
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    5
Rock Pigeon    22
Eurasian Collared-Dove    3
Mourning Dove    10
Yellow-billed Cuckoo    1
Chimney Swift    5
Ruby-throated Hummingbird    1
Downy Woodpecker    3
Eastern Kingbird    2
Loggerhead Shrike    2
White-eyed Vireo    4
American Crow    18
Fish Crow    2
Purple Martin    2
Barn Swallow    4
Carolina Chickadee    14
Tufted Titmouse    5
Carolina Wren    18
Eastern Bluebird    10
Northern Mockingbird    18
Brown Thrasher    1
European Starling    20
Prothonotary Warbler    3
Eastern Towhee    3
Northern Cardinal    13
Indigo Bunting    3
Painted Bunting    1
Red-winged Blackbird    26
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Common Grackle    1
Brown-headed Cowbird    20
House Sparrow    3

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




      
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09
From: Lindsay Seely <linzseely AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:18:29 -0700
Party hours- 1. Worked with Dr. Remsen along River Road. Nice numbers of 
Anhingas. And a few visits from plant security guards! 


Lindsay Seely

 

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: linzseely AT yahoo.com
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 4:34:12 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09



Location:    Carville Quad--East Bank
Observation date:    6/27/09
Number of species:    37

Anhinga    12
Great Blue Heron    2
Great Egret    8
Snowy Egret    5
Little Blue Heron    7
Cattle Egret    18
Green Heron    1
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron    1
White Ibis    4
Black Vulture    7
Mississippi Kite    1
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    3
Eurasian Collared-Dove    1
Mourning Dove    7
Yellow-billed Cuckoo    1
Red-bellied Woodpecker    2
Downy Woodpecker    4
Eastern Kingbird    1
Blue Jay    1
American Crow    1
Fish Crow    4
Cliff Swallow    25
Barn Swallow    6
Carolina Chickadee    4
Tufted Titmouse    1
Northern Mockingbird    15
European Starling    12
Prothonotary Warbler    2
Northern Cardinal    7
Painted Bunting    1
Red-winged Blackbird    6
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Common Grackle    8
Brown-headed Cowbird    5
Orchard Oriole    1
House Sparrow    3

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




      
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 22:51:24 -0500
David/LABIRD:  right, and with shrikes seemingly thriving for decades  
in the rice country, the sugar cane deserts of the Miss. R.  
floodplain,  suburban ballparks, etc., where they've been subjected to  
who-knows-how-many chemicals since at least the 1940s, if whatever has  
happened recently is due to any sort of chemical, it has to be a brand  
new flavor.

On Jun 29, 2009, at 9:47 PM, David Muth wrote:

> On mosquito spaying and shrikes: if you look at the trend for New  
> Orleans it
> too shows a steady shrike decline (with a real dip for Katrina). But
> mosquito spraying is not new here. In fact, intense spraying dates  
> to the
> 1960s when DDT was routinely used. It might be useful to look and  
> see if the
> decline dates to the switch to a different pesticide.
>
> David Muth
> New Orleans
>

*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Tom Hickcox <cometkazie1 AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 22:03:28 -0500
At 21:47 6/29/2009, David Muth wrote:


>On mosquito spaying and shrikes: if you look at the trend for New Orleans it
>too shows a steady shrike decline (with a real dip for Katrina). But
>mosquito spraying is not new here. In fact, intense spraying dates to the
>1960s when DDT was routinely used. It might be useful to look and see if the
>decline dates to the switch to a different pesticide.

They were spraying in Shreveport in the '40s when I was a pup.  I 
remember kids running down the street following the truck.  My 
college prof dad forbade me from doing it.

It wouldn't surprise me if the spraying in New Orleans went back a 
couple of decades before the '60s.

Tom
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 21:47:42 -0500
On mosquito spaying and shrikes: if you look at the trend for New Orleans it 
too shows a steady shrike decline (with a real dip for Katrina). But 
mosquito spraying is not new here. In fact, intense spraying dates to the 
1960s when DDT was routinely used. It might be useful to look and see if the 
decline dates to the switch to a different pesticide.

David Muth
New Orleans

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "James V. Remsen" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 9:49 AM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Loggerhead Shrikes


On Jun 27, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Paul Conover wrote:

> Harvey, Van, Labird,
> Regarding the shrike decline, I've suggested that the building boom
> in the country, which results in blacktopping roads and creating
> more traffic, might be playing a role.

Paul/LABIRD:  a role, yes, but minor only?  We noticed no difference
between the gravel road areas of the Crowley E quad vs. the paved, and
many of the latter have been paved for as long as I can remember.  I
think the recent decline has something specific to do with the rice
country.  For example, yesterday I had 7 shrikes in ca. 13 miles of
heavy traffic, all-paved roads around St. Gabriel (ca. 0.5 shrikes/
mile) vs. only 2 in ca. 38 miles in Crowley E quad (ca. 0.05 shrikes/
mile, i.e., an order of magnitude lower), where we saw dramatically
fewer cars/hour.


>
> Also worth noting is the increase in mosquito spraying in recent
> years. Or, as the Lafayette Parish website states,
>
> "One of the greatest successes for Lafayette Consolidated Government
> was its management of the mosquito control program, even when faced
> with the challenge of Louisiana’s west nile virus outbreak."
>
> <>

>
> This mild sassafrassy savior anoints the roadsides with a thick fog
> (apparently only in ditches where no surface water is present when
> the wind isn't blowing). Roadsides are, of course, prime Loggerhead
> Shrike territory.
>
> It would be worth investigating the effects on shrikes, but you
> could prove it killed Jesus and I'm afraid the people would still
> beg for it. I would rather take my chances with the mosquitoes,
> personally.



This sort of thing sounds more likely, especially if these programs
began in late 1990s (or whenever the decline began).  Will humans ever
have the analytical ability to make reasonable risk assessments?  Not
under current educational paradigms.



*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference?
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 21:38:53 -0500
Van/Labird:

While there seems to be a real (=significant) downward trend, I wonder if 
there is not the hint of a 20 year cycle, with low points in 1964, 1985,and, 
maybe, in 2005.

David Muth
New Orleans

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "James V. Remsen" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 5:19 PM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference?


On Jun 29, 2009, at 12:42 PM, Huner Jay V wrote:

>>
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> I wonder if someone could provide some frame of reference for shrike
> numbers?
>
> --


LABIRD -- as posted previously for similar queries, you can create
your own analysis using CBC data at:

http://audubon2.org/cbchist/graph.html

or BBS data at:

http://www.mbr-pwrc.usgs.gov/bbs/bbs.html


As far as I know, there isn't anywhere in LA with suitable habitat
where shrikes are extinct, so no need to report every observation.


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09
From: Lindsay Seely <linzseely AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:18:29 -0700
Party hours- 1. Worked with Dr. Remsen along River Road. Nice numbers of 
Anhingas. And a few visits from plant security guards! 


Lindsay Seely

 

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: linzseely AT yahoo.com
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 4:34:12 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09



Location:    Carville Quad--East Bank
Observation date:    6/27/09
Number of species:    37

Anhinga    12
Great Blue Heron    2
Great Egret    8
Snowy Egret    5
Little Blue Heron    7
Cattle Egret    18
Green Heron    1
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron    1
White Ibis    4
Black Vulture    7
Mississippi Kite    1
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    3
Eurasian Collared-Dove    1
Mourning Dove    7
Yellow-billed Cuckoo    1
Red-bellied Woodpecker    2
Downy Woodpecker    4
Eastern Kingbird    1
Blue Jay    1
American Crow    1
Fish Crow    4
Cliff Swallow    25
Barn Swallow    6
Carolina Chickadee    4
Tufted Titmouse    1
Northern Mockingbird    15
European Starling    12
Prothonotary Warbler    2
Northern Cardinal    7
Painted Bunting    1
Red-winged Blackbird    6
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Common Grackle    8
Brown-headed Cowbird    5
Orchard Oriole    1
House Sparrow    3

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





Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09
From: Lindsay Seely <linzseely AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:15:49 -0700
Party hours- 2. Worked NE corner of quad (Hwy 74 to 3115 to River Road to 73).



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: linzseely AT yahoo.com
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 4:21:11 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Carville Quad--East Bank , 6/27/09



Location:    Carville Quad--East Bank
Observation date:    6/27/09
Number of species:    43

Mallard    10
Great Blue Heron    4
Great Egret    7
Snowy Egret    7
Little Blue Heron    1
Cattle Egret    60
White Ibis    6
Roseate Spoonbill    3
Black Vulture    3
Mississippi Kite    3
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    5
Rock Pigeon    22
Eurasian Collared-Dove    3
Mourning Dove    10
Yellow-billed Cuckoo    1
Chimney Swift    5
Ruby-throated Hummingbird    1
Downy Woodpecker    3
Eastern Kingbird    2
Loggerhead Shrike    2
White-eyed Vireo    4
American Crow    18
Fish Crow    2
Purple Martin    2
Barn Swallow    4
Carolina Chickadee    14
Tufted Titmouse    5
Carolina Wren    18
Eastern Bluebird    10
Northern Mockingbird    18
Brown Thrasher    1
European Starling    20
Prothonotary Warbler    3
Eastern Towhee    3
Northern Cardinal    13
Indigo Bunting    3
Painted Bunting    1
Red-winged Blackbird    26
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Common Grackle    1
Brown-headed Cowbird    20
House Sparrow    3

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





Subject: Gardner Quad , 6/29/09 - White-breasted Nuthatch
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:37:09 -0500
Picked up a White-breasted Nuthatch this morning so did a Quad report. This is 
the first one I've seen since back in the winter. I have heard them calling a 
few times during the spring and earlier in June. One has to be pretty careful 
on using calls to identify this bird because Blue Jays can make calls like a 
nuthatch. However, they usually start calling in more conventional jay tones. 
Nuthatches keep tooting. I just checked and it appears that the White-breasted 
Nuthatches that Steve Shively is reporting have to be about 10-15 miles away to 
the south and, likely the east from my location on Cotile Lake. 


Haven't detected any Brown-headed Nuthatches for a week or more but had at 
least three different very vocal pairs this morning. - Jay Huner 


Location: Gardner Quad
Observation date: 6/29/09
Notes: Gardner Quad. Frank McGehee Estate, East Side of Cotile Lake off LA 
1200. Vernon Parish. 1 observer, start 7:30 AM CDST, duration 1.0 hr, 1.3 
miles. Happened on a White-breasted Nuthatch and decided to go ahead and make a 
quad survey. 

Number of species: 29

Great Egret 1
Cattle Egret 1
Green Heron 1
Mourning Dove 7
Inca Dove 3
Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
Downy Woodpecker 1
Pileated Woodpecker 3
Eastern Wood-Pewee 3
Great Crested Flycatcher 2
Eastern Kingbird 1
Yellow-throated Vireo 1
Blue Jay 7
Purple Martin 15
Barn Swallow 6
Carolina Chickadee 5
Tufted Titmouse 4
White-breasted Nuthatch 1
Brown-headed Nuthatch 6
Carolina Wren 5
Eastern Bluebird 6
American Robin 5
Northern Mockingbird 14
Summer Tanager 2
Northern Cardinal 9
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Orchard Oriole 2
House Finch 13
House Sparrow 5

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


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference?
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 17:19:13 -0500
On Jun 29, 2009, at 12:42 PM, Huner Jay V wrote:

>>
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> I wonder if someone could provide some frame of reference for shrike
> numbers?
>
> --


LABIRD -- as posted previously for similar queries, you can create  
your own analysis using CBC data at:

http://audubon2.org/cbchist/graph.html

or BBS data at:

http://www.mbr-pwrc.usgs.gov/bbs/bbs.html


As far as I know, there isn't anywhere in LA with suitable habitat  
where shrikes are extinct, so no need to report every observation.


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Prothonotary in the yard
From: "David A. Cagnolatti" <dcagnolatti AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 17:11:04 -0400
For the past two breeding seasons, I have had prothonotary warblers 
nesting in a small ceramic birdhouse -- one that was never intended for 
nesting and I thought was for decorative purposes only - on my back 
patio.  THey raised two broods of 4 each last year and they are on the 
second brood of four this year.

Dave Cagnolatti
University Club
1 mi north of St. Gabriel


On Mon, Jun 29, 2009 at 4:09 PM , Evelyn Cooper wrote:

> Hi Paul:
>
> Count yourself lucky to even have one in your yard.
>
> LBBS members former Gov. Mike Foster, Franklin, reported to me he has 
> had
> two nesting on his trail around his property. Bobbie Boykin, 
> Prairieville,
> sent me a picture of a female PROW in her box in  her yard. Dennis 
> LaBatt
> near Epps has them nesting in his yard, but no such luck for me.
>
> Evelyn Cooper
> www.labayoubluebirdsociety.org
> http://www.purplemartins.com/RTC/index.php
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana 
> Birds
> [mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Paul Conover
> Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 8:52 PM
> To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
> Subject: [LABIRD-L] Prothonotary in the yard
>
> Labird,
> 	A female Prothonotary Warbler was in my backyard this evening,
> bathing in a mister set up in a fig tree. It also sampled some figs.
> 	This bird appears to be a wanderer, as there are no nesters within 
> miles of my neighborhood. I'm sure we're all wondering what effect 
> this weather will have on nesting, and sightings such as this may 
> offer us some clues.
>
>
> Paul Conover
> Lafayette
> No virus found in this incoming message.
> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 8.5.339 / Virus Database: 
> 270.12.93/2206 - Release Date: 06/27/09
> 17:55:00
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 6/29/09
From: Glenn Ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 18:05:09 +0000
1 observer, 3 hrs from 6:00am, 3.5 miles.
Only limited vocalizing today, except for wrens.

Glenn Ousset


-------------- Forwarded Message: -------------- 
From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net 
Subject: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 6/29/09 
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 17:27:17 +0000 




Location: Little Woods Quad 
Observation date: 6/29/09 
Notes: Audubon La Nature Center and vicinity in eastern New Orleans. 
Number of species: 35 

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck 2 
Wood Duck 3 
Mallard (Domestic type) 25 
Anhinga 4 
Great Egret 5 
Cattle Egret 1 
Green Heron 6 
Black-crowned Night-Heron 2 
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron 4 
White Ibis 4 
Mississippi Kite 5 
Red-shouldered Hawk 1 
American Coot 1 
Killdeer 2 
Laughing Gull 1 
Mourning Dove 1 
Monk Parakeet 4 low flyover 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 1 
Chimney Swift 3 
Red-bellied Woodpecker 1 
Downy Woodpecker 1 
Great Crested Flycatcher 3 
Eastern Kingbird 4 
Loggerhead Shrike 4 2 juveniles 
Blue Jay 3 
American Crow 10 
Fish Crow 2 
Purple Martin 4 
Barn Swallow 1 
Carolina Chickadee 5 
Carolina Wren 6 
Northern Mockingbird 3 
European Starling 30 
Northern Cardinal 7 
House Sparrow 10 

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Glenn Ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 17:52:39 +0000
Nancy, Labird:
The national decline of Loggerhead Shrike is not easy to explain because our 
past experience in southeast Louisiana has been that they do quite well in even 
highly urbanized habitat, such as large manicured lawns with scattered small 
trees. In several past years I saw them occupy such habitat in Lafreniere Park 
in Metairie. This year they nested in Joe Brown Park in eastern New Orleans and 
have continuously occupied the abandoned part of the nearby Lake Forest Plaza 
parking lot. 


Glenn Ousset
-------------- Original message from Nancy L Newfield : 
-------------- 



> Nancy et al., 
> 
> At 10:59 AM 6/29/2009, Mayberry, Nancy E wrote: 
> 
> >Regarding recent posts concerning low numbers of shrikes, I saw an adult 
> >feeding two fledglings on 24 June, around 5:20 PM. They were on Behrman Hwy 
> >just before the intersection with Poe St as you head towards Holiday Drive, 
> >in one of the newly planted trees on the green space immediately next to the 

> >Brechtal Golf Course fence. 
> 
> I observed an adult Loggerhead Shrike on the 
> corner of General De Gaulle and LB Landry 
> [westbank New Orleans] one day last week. The 
> area seems very urban for a shrike, but I saw it 
> hop down and snag an insect of some kind. Eatin' good in the 'hood. 
> 
> NLN 
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
> Nancy L Newfield 
> Casa Colibrí 
> Metairie, Louisiana USA 
> nancy AT casacolibri.net 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 
Subject: Loggerhead Shrikes - Frame of Reference?
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 12:42:38 -0500
1. At 10:59 AM 6/29/2009, Mayberry, Nancy E wrote:
 
Regarding recent posts concerning low numbers of shrikes, I saw an 
adultfeeding two fledglings on 24 June, around 5:20 PM. They were on Behrman 
Hwy just before the intersection with Poe St as you head towards Holiday 
Drive,in one of the newly planted trees on the green space immediately next 
to the Brechtal Golf Course fence.
 
2. I observed an adult Loggerhead Shrike on thecorner of General De Gaulle 
and LB Landry [westbank New Orleans] one day last week.  The area seems very 
urban for a shrike, but I saw it hop down and snag an insect of some kind.  
Eatin' good in the 'hood.
 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>   Nancy L Newfield
>   Casa Colibrí
>   Metairie, Louisiana USA
>   nancy AT casacolibri.net
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I wonder if someone could provide some frame of reference for shrike 
numbers? I find Loggerhead Shrikes in typical open field habitat in Rapides 
and Vernon Parishes. There are 2-3 pairs in the Lakes area off LA 28 W 
behind Menard High, 2-3 pairs along the Red River between the old bridge and 
the recreaton/boat launch area, and 2-3 pairs in the general area between 
the older Wal-Mart and the NRCS office on Government Street. On my trip to 
the Afeman Quad in Vernon Parish, I found what seemed to be 2 pairs in a 
very large - several hundred acre - pasture/hay field area which, 
incidentally had a lot of meadowlarks. I would rate shrikes in this area as 
Uncommon - found in expected habiat. 

So, are these numbers pale remanents of past years where many pairs should 
have been encountered?

Jay Huner

--
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Nancy L Newfield <nancy AT CASACOLIBRI.NET>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 12:20:04 -0500
Nancy et al.,

At 10:59 AM 6/29/2009, Mayberry, Nancy E wrote:

>Regarding recent posts concerning low numbers of shrikes, I saw an adult
>feeding two fledglings on 24 June, around 5:20 PM. They were on Behrman Hwy
>just before the intersection with Poe St as you head towards Holiday Drive,
>in one of the newly planted trees on the green space immediately next to the
>Brechtal Golf Course fence.

I observed an adult Loggerhead Shrike on the 
corner of General De Gaulle and LB Landry 
[westbank New Orleans] one day last week.  The 
area seems very urban for a shrike, but I saw it 
hop down and snag an insect of some kind.  Eatin' good in the 'hood.

NLN

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Nancy L Newfield
  Casa Colibrí
  Metairie, Louisiana USA
  nancy AT casacolibri.net
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subject: LA Summer Bird Atlas update
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 11:21:35 -0500
LABIRD:  tough LA birders continue to pump out quad data, despite the  
ridiculous heat (overnight low at my place this AM was 80, an all-time  
high dawn temp).  Most recent unofficial (emphasis) stats now posted at:

http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/LSBAQuadStats.htm

At least 80 quads, i.e., ca. 10% of all LA quads, now have at least 10  
p-hrs, and there are dozens that need only one 2-3 hour sample period  
to reach that threshold.    This is all conservative because there are  
lots of data yet to be entered, including some of my own, and lots of  
data entered that I don't yet know about (in fact, if your quad is  
under-represented in the stats, please get me up-to-date).

Only 17 more days until the end of atlas period.


*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: "Mayberry, Nancy E ACE-IT AT MVN" <Nancy.E.Mayberry@USACE.ARMY.MIL>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 10:59:06 -0500
Regarding recent posts concerning low numbers of shrikes, I saw an adult
feeding two fledglings on 24 June, around 5:20 PM. They were on Behrman Hwy
just before the intersection with Poe St as you head towards Holiday Drive,
in one of the newly planted trees on the green space immediately next to the
Brechtal Golf Course fence.

N


Nancy E. Mayberry
Visual Information Specialist
ACE-IT Information Products Services
7400 Leake Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70118
504-862-1599
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Portage Quad , 6/28/09
From: William Vermillion <vermillion_william AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 08:04:02 -0700
3 hours 10 minutes, 2.07 miles on foot.  



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: vermillion_william AT yahoo.com
Sent: Monday, June 29, 2009 9:23:08 AM
Subject: eBird Report - Portage Quad , 6/28/09



Location:     Portage Quad
Observation date:     6/28/09
Notes: Portage Quad, Atchafalaya Basin, Indian Bayou Recreation Area (U.S. Army 
Corps of Engineers). Young hardwood forest, some open fields, some older 
forest, drainage canals attracting wading birds. 

Number of species:     45

Wood Duck     2
Anhinga     3
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     15
Snowy Egret     8
Little Blue Heron     28
Tricolored Heron     1
Cattle Egret     1
Black-crowned Night-Heron     1
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron     16
White Ibis     140
Roseate Spoonbill     1
Swallow-tailed Kite     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     2
Yellow-billed Cuckoo     7
Barred Owl     4
Chimney Swift     2
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     5
Red-bellied Woodpecker     8
Downy Woodpecker     2
Pileated Woodpecker     3
Acadian Flycatcher     2
White-eyed Vireo     29
Yellow-throated Vireo     2
Red-eyed Vireo     9
Blue Jay     3
American Crow     15
Fish Crow     3
crow sp.     2
Northern Rough-winged Swallow     4
Carolina Chickadee     3
Tufted Titmouse     5
Carolina Wren     11
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
Prothonotary Warbler     4
Swainson's Warbler     1
Common Yellowthroat     12
Yellow-breasted Chat     27
Eastern Towhee     6
Northern Cardinal     31
Indigo Bunting     10
Painted Bunting     8
Red-winged Blackbird     3
Common Grackle     1
Brown-headed Cowbird     14

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




      
Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 09:49:20 -0500
On Jun 27, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Paul Conover wrote:

> Harvey, Van, Labird,
> 	Regarding the shrike decline, I've suggested that the building boom  
> in the country, which results in blacktopping roads and creating  
> more traffic, might be playing a role.

Paul/LABIRD:  a role, yes, but minor only?  We noticed no difference  
between the gravel road areas of the Crowley E quad vs. the paved, and  
many of the latter have been paved for as long as I can remember.  I  
think the recent decline has something specific to do with the rice  
country.  For example, yesterday I had 7 shrikes in ca. 13 miles of  
heavy traffic, all-paved roads around St. Gabriel (ca. 0.5 shrikes/ 
mile) vs. only 2 in ca. 38 miles in Crowley E quad (ca. 0.05 shrikes/ 
mile, i.e., an order of magnitude lower), where we saw dramatically  
fewer cars/hour.


>
> 	Also worth noting is the increase in mosquito spraying in recent  
> years. Or, as the Lafayette Parish website states,
>
> "One of the greatest successes for Lafayette Consolidated Government  
> was its management of the mosquito control program, even when faced  
> with the challenge of Louisiana’s west nile virus outbreak."
>
> <>

>
> 	This mild sassafrassy savior anoints the roadsides with a thick fog  
> (apparently only in ditches where no surface water is present when  
> the wind isn't blowing). Roadsides are, of course, prime Loggerhead  
> Shrike territory.
>
> 	It would be worth investigating the effects on shrikes, but you  
> could prove it killed Jesus and I'm afraid the people would still  
> beg for it. I would rather take my chances with the mosquitoes,  
> personally.



This sort of thing sounds more likely, especially if these programs  
began in late 1990s (or whenever the decline began).  Will humans ever  
have the analytical ability to make reasonable risk assessments?  Not  
under current educational paradigms.



*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Bronzed Cowbirds - LA: St. Gabriel Quad , 6/28/09
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 09:30:16 -0500
LABIRD:  a late morning spin to try to plug a few holes in the St.  
Gabriel Quad bar chart yielded 2 male Bronzed Cowbirds in two spots on  
River Road at the outskirts of St. Gabriel.  Unfortunately, this is  
near the southern limit of the breeding range of Baltimore Oriole and  
one of the only reliable breeding areas for the species near Baton  
Rouge, as well as an area with reasonably high densities of Orchards.   
Full list below.

Begin forwarded message:

> From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org
> Date: June 29, 2009 9:22:56 AM CDT
> To: najames AT lsu.edu
> Subject: eBird Report - LA: St. Gabriel Quad , 6/28/09
>
>
>
> Location:     LA: St. Gabriel Quad
> Observation date:     6/28/09
> Notes:      From Bayou Paul Road to River Road to St. Gabriel to  
> Hunt Correctional entrance and return on Hwy. 30.  95(!), mostly  
> sunny, s/0-10.
> Number of species:     39
>
> Anhinga     1
> Great Blue Heron     1
> Great Egret     1
> Little Blue Heron     2
> Cattle Egret     4
> Green Heron     2
> Black Vulture     10
> Mississippi Kite     4
> Killdeer     4
> Black-necked Stilt     3
> Eurasian Collared-Dove     1
> Mourning Dove     23
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird     2
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     2
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Great Crested Flycatcher     1
> Eastern Kingbird     6
> Loggerhead Shrike     7
> Blue Jay     7
> Fish Crow     2
> Purple Martin     2
> Cliff Swallow     15
> Barn Swallow     4
> Carolina Chickadee     2
> Tufted Titmouse     1
> Eastern Bluebird     1
> Northern Mockingbird     33
> Brown Thrasher     2
> European Starling     13
> Common Yellowthroat     2
> Northern Cardinal     6
> Red-winged Blackbird     17
> Eastern Meadowlark     2
> Common Grackle     21
> Bronzed Cowbird     2     males displaying on lawns in St. Gabriel
> Brown-headed Cowbird     1
> Orchard Oriole     2
> Baltimore Oriole     3
> House Sparrow     9
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/ 

> )

*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: White-faced Ibis Ouachita WMA
From: Matt Pardue <tmatthewpardue AT AOL.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 09:29:12 -0400
There are about 10 or 12 White-faced Ibis and a few whites also?in the field in 
front of the observation deck on the waterfowl refuge at Ouachita WMA. They 
have been there every time I have swung thru for the last 2 weeks. The 
moist-soil field is now a small ditch so has them and the egrets/herons pretty 
concentrated. Very photogenic if anyone is interested. 

Subject: Re: Prothonotary in the yard
From: Matt Pardue <tmatthewpardue AT AOL.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 09:25:57 -0400
I got a picture a couple of weeks ago of a prothon using a relatives air 
conditioning unit on Lake D'arbonne for its "cavity", too concealed to get an 
egg count though 



-----Original Message-----
From: Evelyn Cooper 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Mon, Jun 29, 2009 6:14 am
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] Prothonotary in the yard



Hi Paul:

Count yourself lucky to even have one in your yard.

LBBS members former Gov. Mike Foster, Franklin, reported to me he has had
two nesting on his trail around his property. Bobbie Boykin, Prairieville,
sent me a picture of a female PROW in her box in  her yard. Dennis LaBatt
near Epps has them nesting in his yard, but no such luck for me.

Evelyn Cooper
www.labayoubluebirdsociety.org
http://www.purplemartins.com/RTC/index.php


-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Paul Conover
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 8:52 PM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Prothonotary in the yard

Labird,
    A female Prothonotary Warbler was in my backyard this evening,
bathing 
in a mister set up in a fig tree. It also sampled some figs.
    This bird appears to be a wanderer, as there are no nesters within 
miles of my neighborhood. I'm sure we're all wondering what effect this 
weather will have on nesting, and sightings such as this may  offer us 
some clues.


Paul Conover
Lafayette
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com 
Version: 8.5.339 / Virus Database: 270.12.93/2206 - Release Date: 06/27/09
17:55:00
Subject: Re: Prothonotary in the yard
From: Evelyn Cooper <emcooper AT BAYOU.COM>
Date: Mon, 29 Jun 2009 07:14:00 -0500
Hi Paul:

Count yourself lucky to even have one in your yard.

LBBS members former Gov. Mike Foster, Franklin, reported to me he has had
two nesting on his trail around his property. Bobbie Boykin, Prairieville,
sent me a picture of a female PROW in her box in  her yard. Dennis LaBatt
near Epps has them nesting in his yard, but no such luck for me.

Evelyn Cooper
www.labayoubluebirdsociety.org
http://www.purplemartins.com/RTC/index.php


-----Original Message-----
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds
[mailto:LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Paul Conover
Sent: Sunday, June 28, 2009 8:52 PM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Prothonotary in the yard

Labird,
	A female Prothonotary Warbler was in my backyard this evening,
bathing 
in a mister set up in a fig tree. It also sampled some figs.
	This bird appears to be a wanderer, as there are no nesters within 
miles of my neighborhood. I'm sure we're all wondering what effect this 
weather will have on nesting, and sightings such as this may  offer us 
some clues.


Paul Conover
Lafayette
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com 
Version: 8.5.339 / Virus Database: 270.12.93/2206 - Release Date: 06/27/09
17:55:00
Subject: Prothonotary in the yard
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 28 Jun 2009 20:52:16 -0500
Labird,
	A female Prothonotary Warbler was in my backyard this evening, bathing 
in a mister set up in a fig tree. It also sampled some figs.
	This bird appears to be a wanderer, as there are no nesters within 
miles of my neighborhood. I'm sure we're all wondering what effect this 
weather will have on nesting, and sightings such as this may  offer us 
some clues.


Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: Garden District, B. R. - June 28, 2009
From: "Jeffrey W. Harris" <jwharris30 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 28 Jun 2009 08:13:39 -0500
Hello Birders,
Watched for 1.25 hrs on the porch this morning.  Picked up a yard bird, an
American kestrel as it was being mobbed by the locals.  Yard count at 137
(yeah, yeah, Jerry, but who's counting...?).
Location: Tulip Street, B.R., LA 70806
Observation date: 6/28/09
Number of species: 21

Mississippi Kite 1
American Kestrel 1
Rock Pigeon 2
Eurasian Collared-Dove 3
Mourning Dove 5
Inca Dove 2
Chimney Swift 6
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 1
Great Crested Flycatcher 2
Blue Jay 2
Fish Crow 2
Carolina Chickadee 2
American Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 5
European Starling 5
Northern Cardinal 4
Red-winged Blackbird 1
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
House Finch 5
House Sparrow 10

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Sincerely,
Jeff Harris
Subject: Afeman Quad , 6/27/09, Swallow-tailed Kite in the Piney Woods
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2009 12:27:47 -0500
The Afeman Quad is about 20-30 minutes south of home. Have 10 hours for the 
quads I've been working so thought to see what I could find. The kite was a 
treat. Still searching for a year roadrunner in ANY quad. 


Jay Huner

Location: Afeman Quad
Observation date: 6/27/09
Notes: Afeman Quad. West of Cora along LA 463 in NE Vernon Parish between 
Pitkin and Hineston. Rolling hills. Mostly pine covered. Low areas with mixed 
hardwood and pine. Some larger pasture areas. 1 observer, start 6:30 AM CDST, 
4.0 hr duration, 12.3 miles. Swallow-tailed Kite nice bird at 10:00 AM about 
1.5 miles west of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church on LA 463 around mile marker 14. 
Second trip to area. First quad survey. Started at Red-cockaded Woodpecker 
colony at NE corner of Fort Polk. Either it's abandonned or the birds were out 
of their cavities by 6:30 AM!? Still cannot find a roadrunner in reasonably 
decent habitat. One resident reported seeing them from time to time running 
across local roads! 

Number of species: 55

Wood Duck 4
Wild Turkey 1
Great Blue Heron 2
Great Egret 1
Little Blue Heron 2
Cattle Egret 43
Green Heron 1
Black Vulture 3
Turkey Vulture 2
Swallow-tailed Kite 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Killdeer 2
Mourning Dove 14
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 2
Red-headed Woodpecker 2
Red-bellied Woodpecker 10
Downy Woodpecker 2
Northern Flicker 2
Pileated Woodpecker 1
Acadian Flycatcher 2
Great Crested Flycatcher 9
Eastern Kingbird 5
Loggerhead Shrike 5
White-eyed Vireo 34
Yellow-throated Vireo 1
Red-eyed Vireo 1
Blue Jay 15
American Crow 45
Fish Crow 18
Purple Martin 6
Barn Swallow 12
Carolina Chickadee 8
Tufted Titmouse 8
Carolina Wren 5
Eastern Bluebird 3
Wood Thrush 4
Northern Mockingbird 11
European Starling 20
Pine Warbler 2
Prothonotary Warbler 3
Swainson's Warbler 1
Kentucky Warbler 3
Common Yellowthroat 3
Hooded Warbler 13
Yellow-breasted Chat 44
Eastern Towhee 6
Northern Cardinal 33
Blue Grosbeak 1
Indigo Bunting 1
Painted Bunting 1
Red-winged Blackbird 2
Eastern Meadowlark 35
Common Grackle 2
Brown-headed Cowbird 2
Orchard Oriole 5

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


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Belle D'eau Quad
From: Marty Floyd <Progne99 AT AOL.COM>
Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2009 12:01:43 EDT
Van - brings this quad to 10.5 party-hours - Marty Floyd
 
Location:     Belle D'eau Quad
Observation date:   6/27/09
Number of species:     60
15 miles (13  car, 2 foot)
7:45 - 9:45AM

Great Blue Heron     2
Great Egret      4
Snowy Egret     1
Little Blue Heron      3
Tricolored Heron     1
Cattle Egret      16
Green Heron     1
White Ibis      2
Black Vulture     1
Turkey Vulture      2
Mississippi Kite     4
Red-tailed Hawk      1
Killdeer     3
Eurasian Collared-Dove      3
White-winged Dove     1
Mourning Dove      13
Yellow-billed Cuckoo     1
Common Nighthawk   1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird     2
Red-headed  Woodpecker     3
Red-bellied Woodpecker      6
Downy Woodpecker     2
Hairy Woodpecker   1
Pileated Woodpecker     2
Eastern  Wood-Pewee     1
Great Crested Flycatcher      2
Eastern Kingbird     2
Loggerhead Shrike   2
White-eyed Vireo     7
Yellow-throated  Vireo     1
Red-eyed Vireo     3
Blue  Jay     8
American Crow     4
Fish  Crow     2
Purple Martin     12
Tree  Swallow     3
Northern Rough-winged Swallow      4
Barn Swallow     15
Carolina Chickadee      9
Tufted Titmouse     2
Carolina Wren      2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
Eastern Bluebird   2
Northern Mockingbird     26
Brown  Thrasher     2
European Starling      14
Prothonotary Warbler     1
Yellow-breasted Chat   1
Summer Tanager     3
Northern Cardinal   22
Blue Grosbeak     2
Indigo Bunting   21
Painted Bunting     17
Dickcissel   3
Red-winged Blackbird     10
Eastern  Meadowlark     8
Common Grackle      7
Brown-headed Cowbird     2
Orchard Oriole   5
House Sparrow     2

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

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Subject: Re: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2009 10:40:00 -0500
Harvey, Van, Labird,
	Regarding the shrike decline, I've suggested that the building boom in 
the country, which results in blacktopping roads and creating more 
traffic, might be playing a role.
	Also worth noting is the increase in mosquito spraying in recent years. 
Or, as the Lafayette Parish website states,

"One of the greatest successes for Lafayette Consolidated Government was 
its management of the mosquito control program, even when faced with the 
challenge of Louisiana’s west nile virus outbreak."

	Without the spraying, I don't know if there would've been enough left 
alive to bury the victims of the West Nile plague. Or the Y2K bug, for 
that matter. The quote bears proof that the spraying was so successful 
that it reduced the virus from its deadly proper noun form to a 
relatively harmless common noun.


	The current poison being used in Lafayette, Acadia, and St. Mary 
Parishes is Permanone 30-30, whose stat sheet can be found here:

http://www.mcci.info/permanone.pdf

	In addition to its "mild sassafrass-type" odor, Permanone 30-30 
provides a "statistically significant increase in the incidence of lung 
and liver tumors...in female mice receiving diets containing 375 and 750 
mg/kg/day of permethrin technical over 85 weeks."

	As well, "This product is extremely toxic to fish and aquatic 
organisms. For terrestrial uses, do not apply directly to water, or to 
areas where surface water is present, or to intertidal areas below mean 
high water mark. Do not apply when weather conditions favor drift from 
areas treated. Drift or runoff from treated areas may be
hazardous to aquatic organisms in neighboring areas. Do not contaminate 
water by cleaning of equipment or disposal of equipment wash waters.
This product is highly toxic to bees exposed to direct treatment on 
blooming crops or weeds. Do not apply this product or allow it to drift 
to blooming crops or weds while bees are actively visiting the treatment 
area. Do not apply when winds speeds exceed 10 mph."

	This mild sassafrassy savior anoints the roadsides with a thick fog 
(apparently only in ditches where no surface water is present when the 
wind isn't blowing). Roadsides are, of course, prime Loggerhead Shrike 
territory.

	It would be worth investigating the effects on shrikes, but you could 
prove it killed Jesus and I'm afraid the people would still beg for it. 
I would rather take my chances with the mosquitoes, personally.

Paul Conover
Lafayette









Harvey L. Patten wrote:
> A recent post by Dr. Remsen concerning current low numbers of shrikes prompts 
this post. This morning at the Mandeville Post Office I spied what I thought 
was a family of House Sparrows feeding in the shade at the base of a Live Oak 
tree. On closer inspection they turned out to be a family of two adult 
Loggerhead Shrikes feeding two chicks. On my way home I spied a fifth on a wire 
about 1/4 mile from the post office. 

> 
> I have seen others in various locations in the Covington/Mandeville area in 
recent days. 

> 
> Harvey L. Patten
> Covington  
> 
> 
Subject: Loggerhead Shrikes
From: "Harvey L. Patten" <puffin AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Sat, 27 Jun 2009 09:22:23 -0500
A recent post by Dr. Remsen concerning current low numbers of shrikes prompts 
this post. This morning at the Mandeville Post Office I spied what I thought 
was a family of House Sparrows feeding in the shade at the base of a Live Oak 
tree. On closer inspection they turned out to be a family of two adult 
Loggerhead Shrikes feeding two chicks. On my way home I spied a fifth on a wire 
about 1/4 mile from the post office. 


I have seen others in various locations in the Covington/Mandeville area in 
recent days. 


Harvey L. Patten
Covington