Monday, July 25, 2011

South Africa bound

Tomrrow morning I depart Pittsburgh International Airport. After a full-day layover in Dubai (birding included) I will return to Cape Town, South Africa. The rest of the year will entail numerous trips throughout Southern Africa so keep checking back for updates.

On top of that, I'm the new eBird reviewer, hotspot editor and filter creater for South Africa and will be busy getting South Africa eBird-efficient. Not familiar with eBird? Check out (http://ebird.org/)

If you find yourself in Cape Town, feel free to contact me and I will show you around.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Montana: Part 2

    After the floods ceased and roads dried up, the field season ended quite successfully; we were able to complete our 166 transect goal. It will be interesting to see the outcome for the season. Since my last post back on the June 25th, I covered a lot of miles around Montana surveying the Crow Indian Reservation south of Billings, Powder River near Broadus, Yellowstone River near Hysham, the remote region around CM Russell NWR and the Lewis & Clark National Forest south of Lewistown. In all I only accumulated 10 more state birds but quality made up for that. Not only did I finally pick up Burrowing Owl and Mountain Plover in the northeast, I also saw the only Blue-gray Gnatcatchers in the state at Bear Canyon, Black-billed Cuckoos south of Broadus and the localized Cassin’s Kingbird in the Custer National Forest. I fell well short of my goal of 250 species with 218, however, I spent far less time in the mountains than expected which would explain a lot of easy misses such as Sharp-shinned Hawk, Dusky Grouse, Olive-sided Flycatcher and Pygmy Nuthatch to name a few. Looks like I have an excuse to return and that just might happen next summer as I might be guiding a Glacier/Grasslands/Yellowstone tour.
To wrap up the season, here’s my summer in numbers:

Miles driven: ~10,000
State Birds: 218
Flat Tires: 2
Water crossings: 3
Counties visited: 37 out of 56
Life birds: 3 (Baird’s Sparrow, Sprague’s Pipit and Gray Partridge)
Species of warblers: 18 (Bests: N. Parula, Mourning and Canada)

And a few photos from the field...

Baird's Sparrow

Montana had some of the most amazing cloud formations...not to mention sunrise/sunsets

The reason you do not drive on roads with water rushing over.

Fun times in the Snowy Mountains

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Montana Update

I’ve become really terrible at keeping my blog updated the past 6 months. To be honest, I don’t even have an excuse. However, starting today, I’m going to make an endeavor to blog as regularly as I can – hopefully once a week…at least.
 
My home on wheels for the summer
For those of you who actually read my blog, you probably know by now that I’ve been in Montana this summer conducing point counts throughout Montana. Although I’m employed with the University of Montana, this project is through the Rocky Mountain Bird Observatory and is conducted in several other states including Colorado, Arizona, Idaho and Wyoming. The main objective (in a nutshell) is to create population estimates using detections and distance protocols. Each 1km² transect has 16 points which we conduct 6-minute point counts recording every bird seen and heard as well as distance. After a week of training at the Condon Field Station in the Swan Valley, we were assigned our transects and sent off to our respected regions of the state.

Condon Work Station - Swan Valley
The beginng of the field season was battle against the weather. Montana received record rains and mountain snowpack resulting in serious flooding throughout much of the eastern half of the state. The first few days on the job, three of us were at the Busy Bee Café in Roundup having coffee and planning out our first hitch of the season. A few days and several river crossings later, I was in Malta watching the news and was stunned to see that the Busy Bee Café was now flooded to the roof.

Busy Bee Cafe (not my photo)
As you can imagine, the next couple weeks were chaotic as we squeezed in counts here in there between heavy rains, floods and muddy roads. For those who are not familiar with Montana, when it has rained, you’ll want to avoid dirt roads as much as possible. The dirt here is unique and once it gets wet it turns into what the locals call gumbo; as you drive the mud cakes to your wheels to the point where they stop spinning. Nonetheless, this didn’t stall us and we’ve ended up having a productive field season.

Drive between Roundup and Malta
Considering the vast region I was assigned, I decided it would be a challenge to see how large of a Montana state list I can accumulate. My goal from the beginning was 250 and as of today I’m at 208. With only a couple weeks left in the treasure state, it’s going to be difficult to reach. Tomorrow I’m off to a new area of Montana along the border of Wyoming south and east of Billings. Hopefully I’ll be able to pick up difficulties including Cassin’s Kingbird, Dickcissel, Plumbeous Vireo and Blue-gray Gnatcatcher among some easier birds still missing on my list including Pinyon Jay, Prairie Falcon and Mountain Plover.
Western Tanager

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Montana field work

I’m currently sitting at the gate in Denver International Airport waiting for my flight to Missoula, Montana. This summer I will be working for the University of Montana – Avian Science Center conducting point counts throughout the state. After a week of training at the Condon Work Station in Swan Valley, I’ll head to my designated region of the state – Central Montana. I’ll be surveying everywhere from Big Timber to Miles City north of I-90 to Lewistown and Glasgow (not where you’re thinking). This also includes Billings, the capital, where I will get the chance to shave the beard and clean up every once in a while. The rest of the field season will involve camping wherever I can – mostly BLM lands.


Map of Montana showing Swan Valley (upper left), Missoula and my region 

Keep checking back as I report on the field season, post photos and try to catch up on the past 16 months!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

16 Months

Well, I asked for it – not updating my blog for 16 months means I have a lot of catching up to do. To make life easier, I’m going to do it in two, three, maybe four posts. Since my absence, I’ve done a lot of birding in South Africa, worked on the Ohio Breeding Bird Atlas, took a road trip from Oklahoma to New Mexico, explored Algonquin during winter, birded England and France and now back in Ohio enjoying spring migration before heading to Montana for another field job.

Starting where I left off on January 18, 2010, the following day, Gerald Wingate and I drove 120km north of Cape Town to the West Coast National Park. This 106 sq. mile park hugs the South African coastline and offers some of the best shorebirding around. WCNP has several bird hides situated along Langabaan Bay and if timed right, shorebirds galore. By the end of the day we had: Black-winged Stilt, Common-ringed, Kittlitz’s, Chestnut-banded, White-fronted, and Black-bellied Plovers, Blacksmith Lapwing, Sanderling, Little Stint, Curlew, Common, and Marsh Sandpipers, Common Greenshank, Bar-tailed Godwit, Whimbrel and Ruddy Turnstone. Other interesting birds include Cape Crombec, Cape Penduline-Tit, Southern Black Korhaan and several Gray-winged Francolins (see below).


West Coast National Park mudflats


 Grey-winged Francolin (endemic)

Verreaux's Eagle - nesting nearby

This pretty much concluded birding for a while as I attended lectures. After exams were over in late-May, I flew back to Ohio for my second field season working for the Ohio Breeding Bird Atlas II conducting point counts throughout the state. This year was pretty uneventful unlike two years prior when I recorded Upland Sandpipers in Ashland and Harrison Counties, Golden-winged Warbler in Summit County, Clay-colored X Field Sparrow hybrid in Lorain County and helped discover Ohio’s first breeding Common Raven in over 100 years. At the end of the field season, I was Cape Town bound again...

Monday, January 18, 2010

Western Cape Birding

Sorry to my loyal blog followers for not keeping you updated on South Africa. I tried thinking of a defense but the real explanation is birding. The past week I’ve done quite a bit of birding around the Western Cape accumulating lifers and provincial ticks. Most of my birding has been around the northern suburbs so it was great to go further afield and go after some easy target birds. Here’s the breakdown of my week.

Wednesday - January 13, 2010
Last Wednesday I joined the Tygerberg Bird Club on their weekday outing to the Meerendal Wine Estate outside Durbanville. Roughly 30 birders surveyed the estate accumulating nearly 70 species including my first Maccoa Ducks and Black Sparrowhawk. Other interesting finds include 50 White Storks, two endemic Blue Cranes, African Hoopoe, Acacia Pied Barbets and a Pin-tailed Whydah. The Tygerberg Bird Club is a branch of Birdlife South Africa representing the northern suburbs of Cape Town.

Thursday - January 14, 2010
This day was spent doing some target birding around Cape Town with local birder – Gerald Wingate. I've mostly birded the Table View area so it was great to check out new spots and get some easy (and not so easy) lifers out of the way. Our first stop was Dolphin Beach where we quickly picked up two White-backed Ducks among the Yellow-billed Ducks, Cape Shovelers, Red-knobbed Coots, Little and Great Crested Grebes. We continued to the Potsdam Sewage Works where I picked up two more easy birds – Yellow-billed (Intermediate) Egret and Common Sandpiper. It’s probably obvious I haven’t birded Europe yet. Our next stop was the world-renowned Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens, which covers 528 hectares at the base of Table Mountain. These gardens are great for seeing your typical garden and woodland species such as Sombre Greenbuls, Cape Batis, Southern Double-collared, Malachite and Orange-breasted Sunbirds. My targets were African Olive-Pigeon, Lemon Dove and Spotted Eagle-Owl, though only the latter was present. Spotted Eagle-Owls have successfully nested in the gardens for a while now – usually right off the path. After the gardens we continued to a local birders property where he’s had African Wood-Owls roosting behind his house for the past few years. Within a minute of pulling into the driveway, I was face-to-face with three African Wood-Owls – definitely one of the easiest ticks ever. Our next stop was to look for a local rarity - an African Openbill that’s been hanging around Bergvliet. African Openbills recently invaded South Africa and is an exceptional record for the Western Cape so I'm glad to have ticked it in the province. After a quick stop at Cecilia Forest picking up Chaffinch and Red-breasted Sparrowhawk, we continued to our final stop of the day and one of Cape Town’s most popular birding spots – the Strandfontein Sewage Works. These sewage works are perhaps the best waterbird locality in Cape Town hosting thousands of shorebirds, waterfowl, grebes, pelicans, cormorants and flamingos and not to mention my first Swift Terns. I definitely plan to return numerous times to collect data for eBird which is going global this spring.


Kirstenbosch National Gardens


Saturday - January 16, 2010

On Saturday Charles Hesse, Carolina Castaño and I visited Intaka Island which is smack dab in the middle of Century City. This massive development took roughly $1.4 billion USD to build and includes residential neighborhoods, entertainment and Africa’s largest mall. To comply with conservation measures, a 16-hectare wetland area was created in the middle of this high-density development. As bad as it seems, the birds appear to be content and Peregrine Falcons even nest on one of the large buildings overlooking the wetlands.


Intaka Island

Nesting Platforms at Intaka



Bird Hide at Intaka

Sunday, January 17, 2010
Yesterday the three of us joined the Cape Bird Club on their outing to the Paarl Sewage Works (see a pattern here?). Paarl is approximately one and a half hours northeast of Cape Town in the heart of the winelands…and Afrikaans culture. The town hosts a monument for the Afrikaans language as well as a museum. It is apparently one of the only towns in South Africa pronounced differently in English and Afrikaans – English, Paarl is pronounced like ‘marl’ and Afrikaans it’s ‘Pair uhl’. The sewage works offered fabulous birding and good numbers – nearly 400 Blacksmith Lapwings and 800 Hartlaub’s Gulls! Some of the highlights include Hottentot Teal, African Fish-Eagle, Booted Eagle and African Harrier-Hawk among others. I also added six birds to my list and a few province ticks.



Informal settlement near Paarl Bird Sanctuary

Monday, January 18, 2010
Today I joined Gerald Wingate with some atlasing for the South Africa Bird Atlas Project near Philadelphia. I know what you’re thinking, wrong Philadelphia. We surveyed one pentad accumulating 75 species, which is quite good for an area of mostly wheat farming. Some of the highlights include Spotted Eagle-Owl, 17 Blue Cranes, Martial Eagle, two Lanner Falcons and a Giant Kingfisher – not to mention good numbers including 1,550 Southern Red Bishops! Although certain habitats don’t look inviting to bird, you would be surprised what you might find. I remember doing breeding bird atlasing around northern Ohio two summers ago and was shocked by the number of Vesper Sparrows in corn fields. If I didn’t survey the corn fields, I would have had no idea Vesper Sparrows were relatively common breeders.

Tomorrow Gerald Wingate and I are heading to West Coast National Park at 5:30am, which reminds me I need to get some sleep!

Saturday, January 2, 2010

African Penguins


The African Penguin, also known as Jackass Penguin due to their donkey-like call, is endemic to Namibia and South Africa. They are the only species of penguin to breed in Africa, mainly on offshore islands. However, since the 1980’s, two populations were established on the mainland due to the decline of predators; the Simon's Town population being the most well-known due to its close proximity to Cape Town and Betty’s Bay (east of Cape Town), which is where I took these photos.


Unfortunately only 10% remain from the estimated 1.5 million back in 1910. Many factors contribute to this substantial decline including egg harvesting for human consumption, commercial fishing and oil pollution. In 2000, an iron-ore tanker sank off Cape Town oiling about 19,000 adult penguins during the height of the most successful breeding year on record. After three months and tens of thousands of volunteers, 91% of the penguins were successfully rehabilitated and released. This was the largest animal rescue in history.



Today this vulnerable species continues to decline. Fortunately, nearly all of the offshore islands are now protected and the mainland populations patrolled. If you ever find yourself in Cape Town, be sure to visit one of the populations and your small fee will go a long ways in helping the conservation of the African Penguins. Many thanks to the South African National Foundation for the Conservation of Coastal Birds (SANCCOB), which has one of the world’s highest successes rates in saving oiled seabirds.