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It's time to crown BC's Best Bird! | Salish Sea Gull project
Contest being adjudicated by Wildlife Rescue. ¡°British Columbia is home to some truly magnificent birds. At Wildlife Rescue, we all have our favourites, and we all know that our favourite bird is the best one there is. However, none of us could agree on what it meant to be the best bird, so we're putting the question to you!¡° https://www.wildliferescue.ca/best-bird-in-bc-2024/thank-you-bcbb/ ECCC¡¯s Salish Sea Gull Project recently completed a successful fifth year of research. In the coming months. As part of this project, ECCC continued to colour-band adult and juvenile Glaucous-winged Gulls throughout their field sites. The public is welcome to submit sightings of colour banded birds through this online form: https://forms.office.com/r/i9PG9zHCfs Pamela Zevit RPBio | Biodiversity Conservation Planner T 604.590.7254 Check out how we are conserving biodiversity in Surrey As a second generation settler, I am a privileged guest working on the shared traditional lands (t¨¦m:¨¦xw) of the s?my¨¢m? (Semiahmoo), q??c?iy?a?? (Katzie), K?ik?????m (Kwikwetlem), q??¨»:n????n? (Kwantlen), Qiq¨¦yt (Qayqayt), Sc??wa¦È?n (Tsawwassen) and x?m?¦Èk??y??m (Musqueam).
Started by Pamela Zevit @
Bird collisions 6
An article about how some architects are trying to incorporate bird-friendly designs into buildings. High time! The article estimates that as many as a billion migrating birds are killed every year in North America from bulding collisions. That number seems awfully high, but the article doesn't say from whence that stat came. But whatever the number, it is a LOT! https://focusingonwildlife.com/news/buildings-kill-a-billion-us-birds-a-year-these-architects-want-to-save-them/?utm_source=mailpoet&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter-post-title_1120 Daniel Bastaja danielbastaja@...
Started by Daniel Bastaja @ · Most recent @
North American Breeding Bird Survey Participation
Hello, I'm sending this email to let you know about the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS) and the need for additional participants to complete survey routes here in BC. Information on the BBS can be found here and a brief summary of why this survey is important is provided below. There is a route vacancy map here and you can contact WIllow English, the National Coordinator for Canada, at bbs@... or 343-573-1192 for further information. I've run a route for a number of years and it's a great way to get outside and have fun while keeping your birding skills sharp and contributing to an important monitoring and conservation program for birds across North America. All the best, Greg Ferguson Richmond -- BBS data is vital for avian conservation The BBS is the most important source of reliable data on population trends for many species in Canada. Environment Climate Change Canada is working on a new website on the State of Canada¡¯s Birds in partnership with Birds Canada, which will showcase BBS data for many species and will be launched later this year. The site will feature accessible information on population numbers and trends. BBS data have also been used for highly impactful studies, such as the one showing that 3 billion birds have been lost from North America in the last 50 years. The trends produced by BBS data are also considered when assessing whether a species should be listed as a Species at Risk. Combining BBS trends with information on landscape and habitat changes has also provided the basis for conservation actions and habitat preservation. These are only a few of the many ways your volunteer efforts are vital to avian conservation. If you would like to know more, this paper has more details.
Started by greg ferguson @
Loony loon 5
CNN did a segment on the Yellow-billed Loon in the Bellagio Hotel fountain in Las Vegas. The bird was captured by the Nevada Department of Wildlife and released at an undisclosed location¡­ presumably Lake Mead. It was in good health. So happy ending to a strange story. :) Daniel Bastaja danielbastaja@...
Started by Daniel Bastaja @ · Most recent @
Bird collisions 4
Just last week we were talking about bird collisions with buildings and now that very thing has claimed a celebrity. Flacco, the Eurasian Eagle Owl that escaped from a zoo and has been living free in lower Manhattan for the past 9 or 10 months collided with a building and died. It was a local celebrity with multiple posts on social media every day about its doings. Too bad. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/feb/26/flaco-owl-death-new-york-central-park-zoo#:~:text=Flaco%20was%20found%20dead%20on,liver%2C%E2%80%9D%20the%20report%20said. In other strange news, if anybody is heading to Vegas in the next day or so, you may want to check the fountain in front of the Bellagio. A Yellow-billed Loon was swimming around in there yesterday! Bizarre! Daniel Bastaja danielbastaja@...
Started by Daniel Bastaja @ · Most recent @
FW: FREE Webinar March 27th: An Evolutionary Perspective on Molt presented by Peter Pyle
FYI, please follow up with the organizers if you have nay questions. Pamela Zevit RPBio | Biodiversity Conservation Planner T 604.590.7254 Check out how we are conserving biodiversity in Surrey As a second generation settler, I am a privileged guest working on the shared traditional lands (t¨¦m:¨¦xw) of the s?my¨¢m? (Semiahmoo), q??c?iy?a?? (Katzie), K?ik?????m (Kwikwetlem), q??¨»:n????n? (Kwantlen), Qiq¨¦yt (Qayqayt), Sc??wa¦È?n (Tsawwassen) and x?m?¦Èk??y??m (Musqueam). From: The Institute for Bird Populations <mswalker@...> Sent: Friday, March 1, 2024 9:44 AM To: Zevit, Pamela <Pamela.Zevit@...> Subject: FREE Webinar March 27th: An Evolutionary Perspective on Molt presented by Peter Pyle March 1, 2024 We hope you can join us for a FREE webinar "An Evolutionary Perspective On Molt" Wednesday, March 27th at 2pm Eastern/1pm Central/12pm Mountain/11am Pacific Time Presented by IBP Biologist Peter Pyle In a recent paper in the Journal of Avian Biology entitled "Moult terminology: envisioning an evolutionary approach", Peter Pyle and co-authors propose, illustrate, and discuss how molt strategies may have evolved across avian lineages. Staunch advocates of the Humphrey-Parkes (H-P) system of molt and plumage terminology, they aim to familiarize readers with this system and increase their understanding of its evolutionary framework. In this webinar, Peter Pyle will discuss how the four main molt strategies defined by Howell et al. (2003) may have evolved along lineages of an evolutionary tree. An evolutionary perspective makes the endeavor of understanding avian molt less daunting. "Once one envisions the evolutionary bases of H-P, the categorization and study of molts becomes much less confusing, much more satisfying, and actually rather enjoyable," says Pyle. ? REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED To register use the button below Hope to see you there! The IBP team Register www.birdpop.org The Institute for Bird Populations | PO Box 518, Petaluma, CA 94953 Unsubscribe pamela.zevit@... Update Profile | Constant Contact Data Notice Sent by mswalker@... powered by Try email marketing for free today!
Started by Pamela Zevit @
Is Our Food Waste Creating a Murder of Crows?
More insight from ongoing research at UBC. Feed: The Revelator Posted on: Wednesday, February 7, 2024 5:01 AM Author: Rebecca Heisman Subject: Is Our Food Waste Creating a Murder of Crows? Last summer a team of researchers from the University of British Columbia headed into the field to study the food web linking aocal bird community. But their destination wasn¡¯t a temperate rainforest or rocky coastline ¡ª it was urban Vancouver on trash day. Their goal: untangling hidden ways in which food in the city¡¯s trash cans may shape its ecosystem. The project is the brainchild of Dan Forrest, a Ph.D. student at the university¡¯s Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, who says urban trees held special significance for him while he was growing up in Philadelphia. ¡°I depended on these urban parks and green spaces to get a bit of respite from the urban hustle and bustle,¡± he says. But not everyone enjoyed the same benefits he did. ¡°I saw that these spaces weren¡¯t distributed evenly everywhere around the city.¡± Some people, often those in richer, whiter neighborhoods, had greater access than others to urban nature. Even then, he worried the trend would expand and worsen. ¡°I knew that urbanization was fast becoming one of the major forces for change in our world.¡± When he arrived in Vancouver as a grad student, he and other students and faculty members noticed large numbers of crows and gulls coming onto campus to raid trash cans. How, they wondered, was the easy availability of food waste affecting the urban ecosystem? It¡¯s not a small question, as 30-40% of food in the United States ¡ª and as much as 60% in Canada ¡ª ends up uneaten and in the trash. This can be a bonanza for urban wildlife ¡ª including crows, who tend to thrive in cities. Photo by Burkhard Kaufhold on Unsplash But if food waste attracts unusual numbers of these gregarious, intelligent birds, could it create ripple effects through the rest of the local bird community? In addition to eating trash, crows often prey on other birds, raiding their nests to eat eggs and young. According to Forrest, Vancouver¡¯s robin population has been declining for decades, while black-capped chickadees have been holding steady or even increasing; he wonders if this could be, at least in part, because robins¡¯ open cup nests are more vulnerable to crows than chickadee nests hidden in tree cavities. These questions eventually became the focus of his dissertation research, which began last summer. Forrest and a group of undergraduate research assistants woke up before sunrise to walk through neighborhoods across the city, note trash receptacles with visible food waste, and observe the behavior of birds in the area. ¡°What were they doing? Were they eating, calling, interacting with another species?¡± says Forrest. ¡°And if they were eating something, what was it?¡± He¡¯s still analyzing the data, but it¡¯s already clear that human trash ¡°is making up a substantial portion of crows¡¯ diet [in Vancouver],¡± says Forrest, and ¡°they¡¯re congregating in areas where there¡¯s lots of food waste.¡± The next step will be to connect the presence of crows with overall urban bird diversity across Vancouver neighborhoods, drawing on a range of data sources. In addition to nest predation, ¡°there could be a number of different reasons why there are fewer [bird] species around where there are crows ¡ª because they¡¯re scared of the crows, or they¡¯re being outcompeted by the crows,¡± says Forrest. Photo by Veronica Dudarev on Unsplash Forrest is already in touch with the city government, and if it does turn out that crows attracted by trash are having negative impacts on bird communities, he hopes to work with officials to make changes that will benefit both birds and people, such as introducing more crow-resistant trash bins or improving trash pickup services in lower-income areas ¡ª changes that could be made in other cities, too. Forrest¡¯s project adds to a rich body of research on the dynamics of urban bird communities. Past studies have uncovered complex relationships between bird feeders (another artif
Started by Pamela Zevit @
Research - Hummingbirds and Screech Owl
Hello I thought the following research papers would be of interest to this group. Best, Greg Richmond Demographic mechanisms and anthropogenic drivers of contrasting population dynamics of hummingbirds. 2024. English et al. Biol Conserv 289. Western screech-owl occupancy in the face of an invasive predator [Barred owl]. 2023. Rugg et al. Global Ecol and Conserv 48.
Started by greg ferguson @
[bcvibirds] Whooper Swan in WA
FYI Begin forwarded message: From: "Robert Hay via groups.io" <rbhay2020@...> Date: 18 February 2024 at 10:44:39 am GMT-8 To: [email protected] Subject: [bcvibirds] Whooper Swan in WA Reply-To: [email protected] ?FYI - seen yesterday in Puget Sound, WA. To watch out for in southwestern BC. Bob Hay Cassidy, BC
Started by Robert Hay @
Pinyon Jay
Group I see no reports for 2 weeks and wondering if it¡¯s just lack of visitation or if it¡¯s actually gone. Any negative reports? Keith Taylor
Started by pat.mary.taylor @
list of required photos
Group I am now down to just a few required photos I know are available. A good night of collecting last evening thanks in part to Mike Yip. Any further help like sending contact emails for Mike Tyson and Don CEcile would be appreciated. Keith Taylor
Started by pat.mary.taylor @
Save the Hooded Grebe 2
https://icfcanada.org/our-projects/projects/hooded_grebe I was fortunate to have observed one species that may go extinct if man does not intervene, the Hooded Grebe. The population has decreased by 80% in the past few years due in part to their breeding lakes drying likely from Global warming. The population stands at 700 individuals, most of which nest on the Strobel Plateau of Patagonia, a relatively small area. The 700 birds remaining only produced 1 chick last year. Though possibly a cycle, the weed that normally reaches the surface of the lakes upon which the grebe nests is not surfacing. Researchers have developed an artificial platform upon which they place the weed and some birds are using these with copulation noted this year. The population has begun to rise at some 2%. I met these researchers and they are very dedicated. Rainbow trout were introduced into many lakes for sportsmen who pay $1000 a night to fish because with the rich food source they can grow to 35 pounds. However, the fish consume much of the food the grebes require, The team are dragging nets to remove them but this is slow going and money is needed to fund better methods. Introduced Mink kill grebes and can take several at a time because historically the grebes have never had land predators and are unwarry. The mink too are slowly being eradicated with one of the researchers having trained dogs to kill them. I encourage those who can donate to this cause to do so. The link on top leads to a donation request. Keith Taylor Victoria BC
Started by pat.mary.taylor @ · Most recent @
ID help 2
hello everyone! Can tou tell me if these are black turnstones in winter plumage ? It was filmed on Bowen Island. Thanks in advance! V¨¦ro
Started by Veronique Martinaud @ · Most recent @
Photos required for Birds of Vancouver Island 2
Group: Some of you may know I'm attempting to place a photo of every bird species seen on Vancouver Island with a photo taken on the Island. I have been greatly successful and the list attached notes those still required. A Gyrfalcon photo must be out there as with the long stay Falcated Duck. Danny Tyson has a shot of the Campbell River Garganey of which I have a copy from American Birds that is unrecognizable and hope his copy can be recognized. I've written Mike Bentley who has an excellent Philadelphia Vireo shot from Jordan River with no answer as yet. Any help is appreciated. Keith Taylor
Started by pat.mary.taylor @ · Most recent @
New Western Hummingbird Partnership website, rufous hummer migration tracking and more
The WHP has a brand-new website. Rufous hummingbird conservation is also a focus through the Partners in Flight Road to Recovery initiative¡¯s Tipping Point list, and you can track or contribute to rufous migration through the Journey North migration tracker. Pamela Zevit RPBio | Biodiversity Conservation Planner T 604.590.7254 Check out how we are conserving biodiversity in Surrey As a second generation settler, I am a privileged guest working on the shared traditional lands (t¨¦m:¨¦xw) of the s?my¨¢m? (Semiahmoo), q??c?iy?a?? (Katzie), K?ik?????m (Kwikwetlem), q??¨»:n????n? (Kwantlen), Qiq¨¦yt (Qayqayt), Sc??wa¦È?n (Tsawwassen) and x?m?¦Èk??y??m (Musqueam).
Started by Pamela Zevit @
Vultures 4
Not exactly about BC birds, but a great article in this week¡¯s New Yorker magazine about the fight to save South Asia¡¯s vultures. Like many New Yorker feature articles, it is a bit long, but very interesting. As many of you are aware, many vulture populations in Asia suffered 99% population declines. .. one of the sharper bird population declines in history. Some species went from too numerous to count to critically endangered in a matter of a decade or so. All because of the use of diclofenac. Another tragic example of how nature is being devastated by man¡¯s activities. Anyway, I hope this link works. :) https://www.newyorker.com/news/letter-from-nepal/consider-the-vulture?utm_source=nl&utm_brand=tny&utm_mailing=TNY_Daily_013124&utm_campaign=aud-dev&utm_medium=email&utm_term=tny_daily_digest&bxid=6476ec260d84718081016f12&cndid=74152650&hasha=ab8768ecda2feeb1877dba4e42ad12ea&hashb=c41a5acd37891ee61ab84a039c043deac28e79ef&hashc=127080106935e5485585deb34e67b07d3fae062b88076ab5e2b8d42c65f7a8a3&esrc=OIDC_SELECT_ACCOUNT_PAGE&mbid=CRMNYR012019 Daniel Bastaja danielbastaja@... <mailto:danielbastaja@...>
Started by Daniel Bastaja @ · Most recent @
Film short on Purple Martins 3
Gorgeous short from Emergence Magazine on the annual migration roost of purple martins in Austin Texas. Reflecting on the martins we have here on the South Coast and what it would be like to experience such a large aggregation. This film is great in showing how birds can link community and people from different walks of life, issues on bird-friendly design, inner city habitat etc. ¡°Stumbling across thousands of purple martins circling above a strip mall parking lot in his neighborhood in Austin, Texas, filmmaker Henry Davis was struck by the apparent incongruence of the birds¡¯ intricate patterning with the shopping center¡¯s monuments to modernity, commerce, and excess. Henry returned with his camera over the following week, joining the patchworked community¡ªshoppers, employees, passersby, and avid birdwatchers alike¡ªwho gathered to bear witness to the birds¡¯ spellbinding presence. The resulting film, premiering online this week, is a mosaic of funny, sorrowful, and contemplative moments: a fleeting convergence that reveals the deeper entwinement of everyday human life with the creatures who inhabit the Earth alongside us.¡± https://emergencemagazine.org/film/exit-238/? Pamela Zevit RPBio | Biodiversity Conservation Planner T 604.590.7254 Check out how we are conserving biodiversity in Surrey As a second generation settler, I am a privileged guest working on the shared traditional lands (t¨¦m:¨¦xw) of the s?my¨¢m? (Semiahmoo), q??c?iy?a?? (Katzie), K?ik?????m (Kwikwetlem), q??¨»:n????n? (Kwantlen), Qiq¨¦yt (Qayqayt), Sc??wa¦È?n (Tsawwassen) and x?m?¦Èk??y??m (Musqueam).
Started by Pamela Zevit @ · Most recent @
Birding Chile, Antarctica, South Georgia & The Falkland Islands 4
Birding Chile, Antarctica, South Georgia & The Falkland Islands We have just returned from a 6-week birding trip to Chile, Antarctica, South Georgia & The Falkland Islands. Chile section: Our travels took us from Vancouver to Santiago, where we met our good friend and bird guide Julian Vid¨®z and then flew up to Arica and drove to Putre to look for the high-altitude species in the high Andes. From there we drove back down to Arica to bird the coastal area at Calleta Vitor and the Chaca Valley. We then flew back down to Santiago and drove up to the Fallerones ski area and valley in the Andes for several specific species and from there we drove to Concepci¨®n in south-central Chile. We left Julian at Torres del Paine so he could spend a few days over Christmas with his family, which did not stop us from birding on Christmas Day when we found a spectacular life bird ¨C the near-threatened and shy Spectacled Duck! Not many people can say they had a duck for their Christmas present as opposed to their Christmas lunch! We met up with Julian again at Torres del Paine and made our way to Punta Arenas and across the border into Tierra del Fuego province in Argentina and down to Ushuaia to board the boat for the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and on to the Antarctic peninsula! Some of the highlights of the Chile section of the trip were: Searching for the near threatened Diademed sandpiper-plover which Carol almost didn¡¯t make as she had really bad altitude sickness ¨C we¡¯d been up in the high Andes for two days at 15,000+ feet and on the first day we had to bring her down as she thought she was dying. Still, that didn¡¯t deter us from going back up the following morning at 6 am, and after a hike UP another few hundred feet to a bog area Julian had scoped out in November, we got it! As I said to Carol if you must die birding, at least let it be for a bird like this!! The next was for Chilean Woodstar, the critically endangered endemic hummingbird with fewer than 50 remaining in two tiny fragments of habitat in the Chaca valley. Searching the vast high Andes plains at Putre for Puna Tinamou ¨C perhaps the ultimate needle in a haystack but we got it! A pelagic feeding frenzy at Calleta Vitor where we found a deserted beach on the coast with a feeding frenzy of thousands of Gray and Franklin¡¯s gulls, Peruvian boobies, Elegant terns, Peruvian pelicans, Red-legged and Guanay cormorants, Black skimmers and South American sealions all competing for food ¨C to be there on the beach amidst it all was magical! And a special day on Chiloe Island when fabulous views of Flightless Steamer Duck finally took our life list to 6,000 species which we had seemed to be inching towards forever! Antarctica, South Georgia & The Falkland Islands section: ¡°Glittering white, shining blue, raven black, in the light of the sun the land looks like a fairy tale. Pinnacle after pinnacle, peak after peak ¨C crevassed, wild as any land on our globe, it lies unseen and untrodden¡± -- Captain Roald Amundsen, 1911 Amundsen offered his description of Antarctica over a century ago but the superlatives still apply today and no one who goes to Antarctica can be untouched by its raw wilderness and exquisite natural beauty. The legendary wildlife still flourishes and during the austral summer, seals, whales, countless penguins, and other pelagic birds flock to the Southern Ocean to feed on the huge schools of krill, the vital link in the Antarctic food chain. With stunning scenery surrounded by rocky headlands and snow-capped mountains with thousands of seabirds around us; penguins, albatrosses, giant-petrels, petrels and diving petrels, shearwaters and skuas. In the Falklands we visited a colony of Southern Rockhopper Penguins and Black-browed Albatross. South Georgia was another highlight where we wandered among thousands of King Penguins and visited a colony of Macaroni Penguins. And on reaching the Antarctic Peninsula visiting a colony of more than a million Adelie Penguins on Danger Island, taking our penguin species list to 9 for the trip, and watching feeding frenzies of s
Started by Derek Matthews @ · Most recent @
Results for BC Bird of the Year - 2023 Edition 2
In what was the tightest race in years, up until this past weekend that is, we finally had a clear winner break out ahead for the win. Votes were nicely spread out between 12 different candidates this year, which is higher than usual, and an indication of just how many great birds were found this year. #1 with 29% of the votes - Pinyon Jay #2 with 19% of the votes - Pallas's Bunting #3 with 12% of the votes - Summer Tanager So West Van's very obliging Jay wears the crown this year. Hopefully you got to see it. It's not too late if you haven't. 2024 is already off to a decent start. It feels like it may be a Gray Wagtail or a Tropicbird kind of year doesn't it? It's good to have goals. Kevin Neill Victoria, BC
Started by Kevin Neill @ · Most recent @
Danny Tyson re Garganey photo
If Danny Tyson is reading this, could you send me the photo of the Garganey you took at Campbell River? This if the image is recognizable compared to that in your ebird report. Is for the free online birds of Vancouver Island. Keith Taylor Victoria BC
Started by pat.mary.taylor @
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