Information about birds, birding, and how to protect birds in the Laramie, Wyoming area, including our local Habitat Heroes program.
Wednesday, March 4, 2015
Colorado and Wyoming eBird Blog
Attention eBirders of Wyoming! There is new blog out there, Colorado and Wyoming eBird, which was spearheaded by Tony Leukering, the lead eBirder reviewer for Colorado, and with contributions from eBird reviewers from across Wyoming and Colorado. The eBird review teams of the two states see this blog as a way to impart information about all aspects of the eBird review process to the region's eBirders, with its primary purpose to make the review system more transparent. Posts will include essays on how filters are created, how they work, what filters mean for entering checklists, as well as information on how to get the most out of eBird, from using all of the data output tools to exploring the birds of different regions. For those of you who don't use eBird, check it out here. Its a fantastic resource for finding out what can be seen in your area, planning out a birding trip in a new and exciting place, and keeping track of your own sightings. Please check the new Wyoming and Colorado eBird blog here, and let us know what you think!
Sunday, March 1, 2015
Laramie CBC Results
The Laramie Christmas Bird Count, held on Sunday, December 14th, tallied 44 species and included one new species to the count: an adult male Great-tailed Grackle was found by Craig Benkman near Optimist Park. Since the count, additional Great-tailed Grackles have been found in the same area, totaling 18 individuals, by far the largest count of this species in Wyoming in winter. The count also tallied a total of 3,802 individuals. Twenty-seven people participated this year, birding in 11 teams, a new Other highlights included a male White-winged Crossbill on the University of Wyoming campus with a flock of Red Crossbills, 4 Lapland Longspurs, and a Northern Shrike along the Laramie River. Detailed results were included in our January newsletter.
Many thanks to everyone who participated and helped to make the Laramie Christmas Count a great success this year!
Lapland Longspur (Calcarius lapponicus) © Shawn Billerman |
Great-tailed Grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) © Shawn Billerman |
Thursday, February 26, 2015
RESCHEDULED: Snowshoe Trip now MARCH 1
Tracks in snow © Julie Hart |
Join Laramie Audubon Society on a Snow Tracking Field Trip this Sunday. Bring your snowshoes or cross-country skis and wear your layered winter clothing. Gary Beauvais, Director of the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, will lead us on a trek through the snow at Chimney Park (USFS). Gary will show us various tracks in the snow and help us learn to identify who made the tracks. This is a great way to enjoy the outdoors on a winter morning.
Meet at 8am at Coal Creek Coffee (downtown Laramie) on Sunday, March 1, to caffeinate and carpool. We will drive out to Chimney Park Trailhead in the US Forest, 32 miles southwest of Laramie on Hwy 230. Bring snacks, maybe a lunch, and water. Be sure to dress for the weather. We usually return to Laramie around 1pm.
There is a $5 fee per vehicle at the trailhead unless you have an annual pass. Be sure to display your pass (if you have one) on your dashboard.
If you have any questions, you may call Vicki Henry at 307-760-9518.
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Upcoming talk by Mike Lockhart
Green Violetear. Photo © Mike Lockhart. |
We will start the mingling and refreshments at 6:30 pm and at 7:00 pm Mike, a retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, will share photos and video clips from his travels and work. He is the former Recovery Coordinator for the black-footed ferret project and has had a long career working with raptors and other wildlife, including many years assisting in polar bear capture and satellite telemetry studies in Alaska. His tropical travels include trips to Costa Rica, Panama, and Ecuador. Mike will present a series of photos and videos of spectacular vistas and species from extremes in environments and color. His photos are truly exceptional and his knowledge about wildlife is profound. You will not want
to miss this program!
Friday, February 20, 2015
Feb. 21 Field Trip - depends on weather -- Please read message below.
The weather may not cooperate with our field trip on Saturday
morning. If it is snowing on Saturday morning at 7:30am, or if the roads
are icy between Laramie and Chimney Park, we will postpone our snow
tracking trip to Sunday, March 1, meeting at Coal Creek Coffee at 8am, then
carpooling to Chimney Park.
You
may call Vicki Henry at 760-9518 after 7am on Saturday, Feb., 21, or watch for
an email announcing the postponement.
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Snow Tracking Field Trip at Chimney Park on Saturday morning, February 21
Join us on a Snow Tracking Field Trip this Saturday, February 21.
Bring your cross-country skis or snowshoes and wear your layered winter
clothing. Gary Beauvais, Director of the Wyoming Natural Diversity
Database, will lead us on a trek through the snow at Chimney Park (USFS).
Gary will show us various tracks in the snow and help us learn to identify who
made the tracks. This is a great way to enjoy the outdoors on a winter
morning.
Snow tracking field trip. Photo by Julie Hart. |
There is a $5 fee per vehicle at the trailhead unless you have an annual pass. If you have one, be sure to display your pass on your dashboard.
If you have any questions, you may call Vicki at 307-760-9518.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Upcoming talk by Shawn Billerman
Our next evening meeting is tomorrow, Wednesday January 28th at 6:30 pm in the Berry Biodiversity Center auditorium. After mingling and refreshments, Shawn Billerman will continue his Difficult Bird ID series at 7 pm with a session on sparrows, longspurs, and finches. We will learn how to identify these tricky species so we're ready for spring migration!
McCown's Longspur, Albany Co. WY. Photo © Shawn Billerman. |
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Whose feather is it?
Have you ever found a bird feather and wondered what species it came from? The Forensics Lab of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service can help with their Feather Atlas. You can compare your feather to similar feathers by choosing 1) a pattern and 2) the most striking color from an array of choices. Then browse through high quality pictures to determine which feather matches yours! You can also browse through their library of images by common name or taxonomy.
Monday, December 15, 2014
Brambling in Carbon County
On the morning of November 21st, Francis and Janice Bergquist discovered a strange bird coming to their feeder. After sending a photo to Matt Fraker, word quickly went out that they were hosting a Brambling (Fringilla montifringilla) at their feeders, a finch native to much of Europe and Asia. While regularly encountered during migration on Alaskan islands in the Bering Sea, with double-digit flocks sometimes being recorded, Brambling are very rare anywhere in the lower 48 states.
Like other "winter" finches of North America, such as crossbills and redpolls, some years are definitely better for Brambling in the lower 48 than others. This year seems to be just such a year, with at least two found in Washington, one in northern California, one in Montana, and one as far east as Ontario. Hawaii even got their first record of Brambling when a flock of 15 was discovered. So, when I got a phone call that a Brambling was found in Wyoming, I wasn't too surprised.
Pending acceptance by the Wyoming Bird Records Committee, this represents the third time Brambling has been found in the state, with both of the other records coming in November of 1985, another "irruption" year for the species.
Over the weekend, a bunch of graduate students at the University of Wyoming here in Laramie made the trek to Saratoga. We were treated to wonderful views of this beautiful little finch. Over the course of the hour we were watching the bird, it hung out in the large spruce next to the house, in mixed company with House Sparrows and House Finches, and would feed on the ground. In between foraging bouts, the Brambling would hide in the dense cover of the spruce, trying to avoid being noticed by the Sharp-shinned Hawk that was constantly patrolling the feeders. Many thanks to the Bergquists for graciously allowing birders to come see this beautiful bird.
Brambling - Carbon Co., WY, © Libby Megna |
Like other "winter" finches of North America, such as crossbills and redpolls, some years are definitely better for Brambling in the lower 48 than others. This year seems to be just such a year, with at least two found in Washington, one in northern California, one in Montana, and one as far east as Ontario. Hawaii even got their first record of Brambling when a flock of 15 was discovered. So, when I got a phone call that a Brambling was found in Wyoming, I wasn't too surprised.
Pending acceptance by the Wyoming Bird Records Committee, this represents the third time Brambling has been found in the state, with both of the other records coming in November of 1985, another "irruption" year for the species.
Brambling - Carbon Co., WY, © Shawn Billerman |
Over the weekend, a bunch of graduate students at the University of Wyoming here in Laramie made the trek to Saratoga. We were treated to wonderful views of this beautiful little finch. Over the course of the hour we were watching the bird, it hung out in the large spruce next to the house, in mixed company with House Sparrows and House Finches, and would feed on the ground. In between foraging bouts, the Brambling would hide in the dense cover of the spruce, trying to avoid being noticed by the Sharp-shinned Hawk that was constantly patrolling the feeders. Many thanks to the Bergquists for graciously allowing birders to come see this beautiful bird.
Friday, December 12, 2014
Red Knot Listed as Federally Threatened
Big news came out of the US Fish and Wildlife Service on Tuesday, December 9 when they announced that the rufa subspecies of the Red Knot (Calidris canutus) would be listed as federally threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The US Fish and Wildlife Service sites extensive coastal development along the East Coast of the United States and climate change as two important factors contributing to the drastic, rapid decline of this incredible species.
The rufa Red Knot is one of the most incredible long-distance migrants on the planet, with some individuals regularly migrating 18,000 miles in a single year from their breeding grounds in the high Canadian Arctic to their wintering grounds in Tierra del Fuego in southern Argentina ("Moonbird" is part of this subspecies) . In the spring, huge flocks of Red Knots migrate north, stopping at traditional stopover sites along the East Coast of North America to fuel up not only for the rest of their journey to the arctic, but also to gain important resources for the breeding season (US Fish and Wildlife Service 2013). One of the most famous stopover sites for the Red Knot is coastal Delaware Bay in Delaware and New Jersey, where Red Knots gorge themselves on horseshoe crab eggs. Regular surveys at sites along Delaware Bay, as well as wintering sites in Chile and Argentina documented drastic declines in the early 2000s, with populations declining 75%. Many of these declines in the early 2000s were attributed to excessive horseshoe crab harvesting, reducing their food source at key stopover sites. While populations have stabilized recently, future coastal development and habitat changes due to future change may be detrimental to the Red Knot (US Fish and Wildlife Service 2014).
To read more about the listing of the Red Knot and other fun facts about Red Knots, visit the US Fish and Wildlife Service's website here.
Red Knot (Calidris canutus) - Tompkins Co., NY (photo © Jay McGowan) |
The rufa Red Knot is one of the most incredible long-distance migrants on the planet, with some individuals regularly migrating 18,000 miles in a single year from their breeding grounds in the high Canadian Arctic to their wintering grounds in Tierra del Fuego in southern Argentina ("Moonbird" is part of this subspecies) . In the spring, huge flocks of Red Knots migrate north, stopping at traditional stopover sites along the East Coast of North America to fuel up not only for the rest of their journey to the arctic, but also to gain important resources for the breeding season (US Fish and Wildlife Service 2013). One of the most famous stopover sites for the Red Knot is coastal Delaware Bay in Delaware and New Jersey, where Red Knots gorge themselves on horseshoe crab eggs. Regular surveys at sites along Delaware Bay, as well as wintering sites in Chile and Argentina documented drastic declines in the early 2000s, with populations declining 75%. Many of these declines in the early 2000s were attributed to excessive horseshoe crab harvesting, reducing their food source at key stopover sites. While populations have stabilized recently, future coastal development and habitat changes due to future change may be detrimental to the Red Knot (US Fish and Wildlife Service 2014).
To read more about the listing of the Red Knot and other fun facts about Red Knots, visit the US Fish and Wildlife Service's website here.
Monday, December 8, 2014
Volunteers needed for 115th Christmas Bird Count
Common Redpoll. Photo © Shawn Billerman. |
Volunteers can call ahead (307-286-1972) or meet at Coal Creek Coffee at 7:30 am on the day of the count to get data forms and team assignments. Some teams walk, while others drive through their territory. Volunteers will reconvene at The Grounds Internet and Coffee Lounge at 12:00 pm to drop off morning reports and regroup for those continuing in the afternoon.
Volunteers should wear warm, layered clothing and boots, and bring water, snacks and binoculars if you have them. Feeder watchers are also welcome. Volunteers are invited to a chili supper where results will be compiled beginning at 4 pm the home of Shay Howlin. Potluck items welcome, but not required. Please contact Shay Howlin if you would like to be assigned a route early, would like forms for feeder watching, or have any questions (307-286-1972; wolfhowlin@gmail.com).
Gray-crowned Rosy-finch. Photo © Shawn Billerman. |
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Proposed Wyoming Toad Conservation Area
The area along Old Laramie River road, which falls under the proposed Wyoming Toad Conservation Area, is the best habitat in Albany County for Chestnut-collared Longspurs. Photo (c) Shawn Billerman. |
The Service needs to see a big show of support for our local refuges and wildlife for this project to go through. So, please come to a public meeting on Thursday, December 4, 2014 at 5:30 pm at the Albany County Fairgrounds. The Service will provide more information about the project and try to gauge how much support there is for wildlife conservation in the Laramie valley. Let's show the agency how much we care about our birds, our own Wyoming toad, and other local wildlife by attending this Thursday's meeting.
If you can't attend the meeting, USFWS is requesting public comments via email (wtca_comments@fws.gov) or US mail:
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Attn: Amy Thornburg, Planning Team Leader
134 Union Boulevard, Suite 300
Lakewood, CO 80228
For more information about the proposal, see the USFWS's site, USFWS's news release, a short pamphlet explaining the proposal, or the in-depth Draft Environmental Assessment and Land Protection Plan.
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