*: I originally posted this in April 2012 using 1900 to 2011 data. I have since updated everything to include up to the end of 2013.*
I've wanted to put something like this together for a while now but it wasn't until I read the "Changing Seasons" piece in Volume 65 Number 3 of North American Birds that I had a good way to do it. So what is it? Following this short introduction you'll find a list of 198 of Ontario's fairly common birds and the dates you can reasonably expect to find them returning.
Background: in the article I mentioned above, Marshall Iliff, Brian Sullivan, and Chris Wood (AKA eBird HQ) proposed that we should start using 20% of the peak arrival frequency for a given species to indicate the day that a species arrives on a broad front (I'll refer to this day from here on out as the "mass arrival date". The eBird team showed that this is really a good measure of arrivals since it is largely independent of outliers (exceptionally early individual birds), independent of sampling effort (since it is based on percentages of checklists, not raw number of checklists), and adjusted for species' rarity. Email me if you want a scanned copy of the article.
Methods: I went through the eBird frequency graphs (for all data years 1900-2013) for each species reported in Ontario. Frequency is a common statistic eBird calculates - it is the percentage of checklists reported for a given date/location which have a positive observation for a given species. I didn't include species that are very rare in Ontario during spring migration, species which don't show an appreciable widespread seasonally predictable change in frequency (i.e. resident and irruptive species), or species which are more frequently encountered during the winter season and just decrease through spring migration (i.e. they don't show a spring migration spike in frequency). That left me with 201 species. For each of the 201 spring migrants I collected the date and value (frequency) of the spring migration peak and then calculated what the mass arrival date frequency would be and what date the average mass arrival date in Ontario is (Figure 1). For species which overwinter in parts of Ontario I corrected for the "winter frequency" by calculating the mass arrival date as:
M = 0.2 X (P - W) + W
Where:
M = mass arrival date
P = peak arrival date
W = winter frequency
Results: Well, first of all to most of you this information won't be new, but I think it is interesting to put some hard numbers to things. Keep in mind when looking at the results that these results show the average date that the species arrives on a relatively widespread front across Ontario. So, the actual date will obviously be earlier along Lake Erie but later in Thunder Bay - interpret accordingly. Before the final results, here's a neat figure showing the number of species arriving en masse per week during the course of spring migration.
OK, here are the results, now get out there and find some spring migrants and be sure to report your findings to eBird so we can compare how advanced (or not) this year has been!
02 Feb - | Horned Lark |
05 Feb - | American Crow |
20 Feb - | Redhead |
26 Feb - | Gadwall |
Northern Pintail | |
Canvasback | |
Bufflehead European Starling |
|
28 Feb - | Tundra Swan |
American Wigeon | |
02 March - | Snow Goose |
Canada Goose | |
Ring-billed Gull | |
03 March - | Mallard |
Lesser Scaup | |
Red-breasted Merganser | |
American Coot | |
04 March - | Cackling Goose |
Hooded Merganser | |
Red-winged Blackbird House Finch* |
|
07 March - | Red-necked Grebe |
Common Grackle | |
08 March - | Ring-necked Duck |
09 March - | Horned Grebe |
Sandhill Crane | |
10 March - | Ross's Goose |
Eurasian Wigeon | |
Northern Shoveler | |
Green-winged Teal | |
Killdeer | |
American Robin | |
11 March - | Red-shouldered Hawk |
Little Gull | |
12 March - | American Woodcock |
13 March - | Merlin |
14 March - | Turkey Vulture |
Northern Harrier | |
Song Sparrow | |
16 March - | Eastern Bluebird |
17 March - | Pied-billed Grebe |
18 March - | Wood Duck |
Golden-crowned Kinglet | |
Eastern Meadowlark | |
Brown-headed Cowbird | |
20 March - | Red-throated Loon |
21 March - | Great Blue Heron |
Rusty Blackbird | |
22 March - | American Kestrel |
25 March - | Northern Flicker |
Eastern Phoebe | |
Brown Creeper | |
Winter Wren | |
Fox Sparrow | |
27 March - | Blue-winged Teal |
28 March - | Pectoral Sandpiper |
Belted Kingfisher | |
30 March - | Dark-eyed Junco |
31 March - | Wilson's Snipe |
01 April - | Bonaparte's Gull |
02 April - | Double-crested Cormorant |
Tree Swallow | |
03 April - | Great Egret |
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker | |
Field Sparrow | |
Vesper Sparrow | |
04 April - | Osprey |
06 April - | Common Loon |
Sharp-shinned Hawk | |
Greater Yellowlegs | |
07 April - | Cooper's Hawk |
Hermit Thrush | |
08 April - | Lesser Yellowlegs |
Purple Finch | |
09 April - | Caspian Tern |
10 April - | Black-crowned Night-Heron |
13 April - | Louisiana Waterthrush |
Pine Warbler | |
Swamp Sparrow | |
14 April - | American Bittern |
Forster's Tern | |
Ruby-crowned Kinglet | |
Eastern Towhee | |
Savannah Sparrow | |
15 April - | Surf Scoter |
Barn Swallow | |
Chipping Sparrow | |
American Goldfinch | |
16 April - | Broad-winged Hawk |
Brown Thrasher | |
Yellow-rumped Warbler | |
White-throated Sparrow | |
17 April - | American White Pelican |
Northern Rough-winged Swallow | |
18 April - | Virginia Rail |
19 April - | Purple Martin |
20 April - | Cliff Swallow |
21 April - | Yellow-throated Warbler* Worm-eating Warbler* |
22 April - | Black Scoter |
Upland Sandpiper | |
23 April - | Willet |
24 April - | Green Heron |
Sora | |
Spotted Sandpiper | |
Common Tern | |
Bank Swallow | |
25 April - | Long-billed Dowitcher |
Blue Jay | |
26 April - | Solitary Sandpiper |
Blue-headed Vireo | |
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher | |
Palm Warbler | |
27 April - | Wilson's Phalarope |
White-eyed Vireo | |
House Wren | |
Marsh Wren | |
Northern Waterthrush | |
28 April - | Sedge Wren |
Grasshopper Sparrow | |
30 April - | Common Gallinule |
Dunlin | |
Chimney Swift | |
Red-headed Woodpecker | |
American Pipit | |
Black-and-white Warbler | |
Nashville Warbler | |
Kentucky Warbler | |
Black-throated Green Warbler | |
01 May - | Eastern Whip-poor-will |
Warbling Vireo | |
Wood Thrush | |
Gray Catbird | |
Ovenbird | |
Blue-winged Warbler | |
Orange-crowned Warbler | |
Hooded Warbler | |
Lincoln's Sparrow | |
White-crowned Sparrow | |
Rose-breasted Grosbeak | |
02 May - | Ruby-throated Hummingbird |
Least Flycatcher | |
Eastern Kingbird | |
Yellow-throated Vireo | |
Veery | |
Golden-winged Warbler | |
Prairie Warbler Blackburnian Warbler |
|
Orchad Oriole | |
Baltimore Oriole | |
03 May - | Great Crested Flycatcher |
Prothonotary Warbler | |
Common Yellowthroat | |
Northern Parula | |
Black-throated Blue Warbler | |
Yellow-breasted Chat | |
Clay-colored Sparrow | |
Scarlet Tanager | |
Indigo Bunting | |
Bobolink | |
04 May - | Black-bellied Plover |
Semipalmated Plover | |
Least Sandpiper | |
Swainson's Thrush | |
Cerulean Warbler | |
Magnolia Warbler | |
05 May - | Cape May Warbler |
06 May - | Least Bittern |
American Golden-plover | |
Short-billed Dowitcher | |
Black Tern | |
Gray-cheeked Thrush | |
American Redstart | |
Kirtland's Warbler | |
Summer Tanager | |
07 May - | Common Nighthawk |
Tennessee Warbler | |
08 May - | Ruddy Turnstone |
Sanderling | |
Black-billed Cuckoo | |
Philadelphia Vireo | |
Red-eyed Vireo | |
Connecticut Warbler | |
Bay-breasted Warbler | |
Canada Warbler | |
Wilson's Warbler | |
09 May - | Semipalmated Sandpiper |
Cedar Waxwing | |
10 May - | Yellow-billed Cuckoo |
Eastern Wood-pewee | |
Acadian Flycatcher | |
Blackpoll Warbler | |
11 May - | Brant |
12 May - | Olive-sided Flycatcher |
Willow Flycatcher | |
Mourning Warbler | |
13 May - | Yellow-bellied Flycatcher |
15 May - | White-rumped Sandpiper |
17 May - | Red-necked Phalarope |
18 May - | Whimbrel |
20 May - | Red Knot |
Alder Flycatcher |
*these species are barely calculable due to a pretty weak peak
Anyways, I hope you find this information interesting/helpful. Please let me know of any errors you see. It will only get better as more eBird data comes in.
Last updated March 1, 2014.
Terrific list and thanks for taking the time and making the effort to put it together.
ReplyDeleteHey Mike, I've noticed a few species that you're missing: European Starling, Blackburnian Warbler, Worm-eating Warbler, House Finch (perhaps too erratic, but there's a noticeable peak in early may on the graph)
ReplyDeleteThanks Reuven! The Blackburnian was definitely an oversight so I have added it in. Worm-eating Warbler and House Finch (and to a lesser extent European Starling) I had purposely excluded because when you start looking at the daily frequencies the pattern isn't very clear. However, I have added them in anyways!
ReplyDeleteAny birds known for setting up nest in a backyard BBQ?... Has a yellow beak, black feathers and orange legs... the nest is the size of my BBQ...
ReplyDeleteHi Stephen, most likely a European Starling. You can google lots of photos of this!
DeleteI know someone who keeps an arrival date list for Timmins. It will be interesting to compare your list with hers. We are probably a week or 2 behind southern Ontario.
ReplyDelete