Showing posts with label arrival dates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arrival dates. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 April 2014

It's rarity season

We've started into what is arguably one of the most exciting times of the year for birding in Ontario. It's exciting because over the next week or two we should see about 1/3 of our Ontario bird species arrive back into the province. But from a birding perspective it is also really exciting because this is one of the best times of the year to find rare birds. Just check out this list from the last week or so:
Greater White-fronted Goose in Durham, Lambton, Dufferin, Kawartha Lakes, and York
Eurasian Wigeon in Durham, Elgin, and Ottawa
Eared Grebe in Chatham-Kent
Cattle Egret in Essex
Snowy Egret in Perth
Swainson's Hawk in Hamilton
Black Vulture in Northumberland and Essex
Marbled Godwit in Essex
A very early Acadian Flycatcher in Essex
Fish Crow in Hamilton and Toronto
Bell's Vireo in Middlesex
Worm-eating Warbler in Essex
Yellow Palm Warbler in Essex
Yellow-throated Warbler in Essex and Niagara
Prairie Warbler in Niagara and Norfolk
Blue Grosbeak in Perth
Spotted Towhee in Toronto
Yellow-headed Blackbird in Ottawa and Norfolk
Painted Bunting in Muskoka and Ottawa (sight report submitted to OBRC)

(species in bold are OBRC review list species)
remember this guy from last year?
And that's just the one's I know about, I'm sure there are more out there plus even more that haven't been found yet. We're prime time for all sorts of rarities, including a Swallow-tailed Kite, like the one I saw last year.

And there are lots of goodies outside of Ontario too, with European Golden-Plover and Black-tailed Godwit in Newfoundland today and a Willow Ptarmigan in New York.

Anyways, that's a pretty nice list from the past week, what will the next weeks bring? It looks like we won't be back to south winds until the 29th when we should get the next push of birds, but the nice thing about this time of year is birds move in pretty well any conditions. On schedule for the next week are the following birds:
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

That's a hefty list! Get out there and see what you can find!!!

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Will the winter ever end? The first week of April

It's finally starting to feel more like spring every day, though slowly. But if you check the weather as frequently as I do or you're reading Brandon's weather bird blog you'll know that we're still going to be getting at best seasonal temperatures for the next while. I'm OK with seasonal temperatures at this point.

Thankfully, the worst is likely behind us and we are into April. The birds that will arrive over the next 3-4 weeks are a bit less dependent on weather than March migrants, so we'll probably stay pretty much "on schedule" from here on out, despite cooler weather.

Personally, I had a great start to April with a big movement of birds all day going past my office window. Check out my eBird checklist from the morning - I tried my best to work but almost 10,000 Canada Geese going by is a bit of a distraction! I've got my yard list up over 50 species now with my first Tree Swallow this morning.
10,000+ Canadas and 152 Snow Geese passed by on April 1

Two Snow Geese right over my house!
This is 1 of 2 (the ugly one) Red-shouldered Hawks from 1 April
I had a meeting in Prince Edward County yesterday evening so on the way made a quick stop at Kaiser X-Road. This place is great all spring because there is a big flooded field that attracts waterfowl and later on shorebirds and Little and Bonaparte's Gulls. It was still mostly ice covered but there were loads of waterfowl including Snow Goose and Tundra Swan. Here's the full list.

Anyways what do we have to look forward to arriving this week? Lots! Many of these species have already begun arriving in the extreme SW part of the province (and beyond) so keep an eye out for them this week:
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
Osprey on nest
One of my favourite signs of springs is when Ospreys show up back on nests. They are always really amazing because it seems like one day there are none and then the next day all of a sudden almost every nest  is occupied.

Saturday, 22 March 2014

The last week of March

This past week has really started to feel like spring! I had my firsts of several species including Snow Goose, Ruddy Duck, Wood Duck, Sandhill Crane, Killdeer, Green-winged Teal, Bonaparte's Gull, American Woodcock, and Great Blue Heron. Part of that list was because I've been down at Long Point but I think many of those species have spread north into much of southern Ontario now.
What do you think of this "white" goose?
"I came all the way for this?"

I think basically this past week served to "catch up" for alot of species, check out the eBird figures for our old friends RWBL and COGR:

We're pretty much bang on with last year at this time

That being said, it doesn't look like winter is ready to release us quite yet and we're getting a reminder of that for the first half of the week. For the birds that are "scheduled" to arrive this week, looking at the list I'm not too optimistic that we'll end March on schedule. Most of the birds that normally arrive this week are passerines and I'm not going to hold my breath that we'll see the first "mass arrival" of Eastern Phoebes. Anyways, here's the list of species that normally arrive this week (for methodology and full spring list click here):
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

Saturday, 1 March 2014

Updated guide to spring arrival dates

Over the past couple of weeks I have updated a project I started a couple of years ago - a guide to spring arrival dates for Ontario birds. Check it out for a complete listing of when to expect each species coming back to Ontario over the next couple of months.

Whether or not it feels like it it's March now and that means that birds are coming! Today's warm weather and warm weather (it's all relative!!) again later this week could very well spur some migrants into southern Ontario. And don't forget things having been moving for a couple weeks now, especially crows and Horned Larks.

Using the guide, the following species usually start arriving en masse in the first week of March:

Snow Goose
Canada Goose
Ring-billed Gull
Mallard
Lesser Scaup
Red-breasted Merganser
American Coot
Cackling Goose
Hooded Merganser
Red-winged Blackbird
Red-necked Grebe
Common Grackle

Coming soon
Anyways, check out the full list and see what you can find!

Saturday, 21 April 2012

Guide to spring arrival dates in Ontario


*: 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.