Showing posts with label virginia tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label virginia tech. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2015

In Search Of Erwin At Bunche Beach: Pt. II

With luck I have been in the right place at the right time to observe Erwin the Piping Plover at Bunche Beach Preserve.


The Bald Eagle above (image 1) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

As a relative youngster, Erwin had arrived at San Carlos Bay from its nesting area at a lake shore housing development near North Bend, Dodge County, Nebraska when I would photograph her on 7 January 2012.


The Fish Crow above (image 2) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Roseate Spoonbill with Snowy Egret above (image 3) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Great Egret with Snowy Egret above (image 4) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Short-billed Dowitcher above (image 5) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Roseate Spoonbill above (image 6) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

The following "season" I again photographed Erwin on 17 October 2012 and 25 January 2013. I missed Erwin in 2014, but again am focused on her in 2015. Although much earlier than previously observed, it would seem likely that Erwin might have arrived at Bunche by now.


The Tricolored Heron above (image 7) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The fisherman above (image 8) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Roseate Spoonbill above (image 9) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The white morph Reddish Egret with Snowy Egret above (image 10) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Great Egret above (image 11) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

My first effort to find Erwin of late was unsuccessful on 29 August. A follow-up visit to Bunche Beach Preserve on 1 September is represented in this post. As all the expected waders were present, a wave in excess of 80 Fish Crow would make flyovers from west to east by mid morning.


The Forster's Tern above (image 12) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Snowy Plover above (image 13) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Snowy Plover above (image 14) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Piping Plover above (image 15) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Sandwich Tern above (image 16) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

Shorebirds appeared to be in lower numbers than the visit a few days earlier. Tom Obrock had reported his observation of Black and Common Tern at Bunche on 31 August which I didn't see the following morning.


The juvenile Sandwich Tern above (image 17) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Laughing Gull above (image 18) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The juvenile Sandwich Tern above (image 19) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Sandwich Tern with juvenile above (image 20) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Sandwich Tern with juvenile above (image 21) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

My first of season Forster's Tern was observed among a couple of dozen Sandwich Tern. Many trips to Bunche have offered audible memories of the calls of two species in particular. The two recent visits to find Erwin have offered the Sandwich Tern drowning out the solitude while occasionally Willets are most vocal.


The Sandwich Tern above (image 22) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Little Blue Heron with prey above (image 23) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Little Blue Heron with prey above (image 24) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Roseate Spoonbill with White Ibis above (image 25) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Bald Eagle above (image 26) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

It was an unexpected surprise to meet up with wildlife photographer and Constable Robert Doiron visiting from New Brunswick. At one point we began to part ways as I looked at the large expanse of flats before me where I expected Erwin might be. A moment later Robert called to me to advise that Erwin was between us.


The Little Blue Heron above (image 27) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The white morph Reddish Egret above (image 28) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The white morph Reddish Egret above (image 29) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The white morph Reddish Egret above (image 30) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


Constable Robert Doiron above (image 30) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

Gail Campbell and Tom arrived soon thereafter. Though it was still early I had warmed up quickly and was beginning to get very dehydrated. I have ordered a possible remedy for this problem occurring in the summer months, and will advise of its success or failure hopefully soon.


The Double-crested Cormorant above (image 31) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


Erwin the Piping Plover above (image 32) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.


The Snowy Plover above (image 33) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

Meryl Friedrich with the Virginia Tech Shorebird Program has advised me that the Piping Plover with the green flag "PEV" with the blue band on its upper right leg was banded as an adult on the coast of Rhode Island on 14 May 2015.


The banded Piping Plover above (image 34) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

Robert would make a late afternoon visit to Little Estero Lagoon this day to find an American Flamingo which he photographed in flight exceptionally well.


The banded Piping Plover above (image 35) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

After observing Erwin so early in the overwintering season this year, it is my expectation to see her many more times before her return to Nebraska to produce another generation in 2016.


Erwin the Piping Plover above (image 36) was photographed at Bunche Beach Preserve in September 2015.

Please also see In Search Of Erwin At Bunche Beach: Pt. I

Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Makeup Of Bands

I was fascinated to learn more this week about a Piping Plover observed on 6 August 2010 than I would have ever imagined.

The Piping Plover above was photographed at San Carlos Bay: Bunche Beach Preserve in August 2010.

The plover most recently observed at Bunche Beach Preserve had four bands and a flag on its legs.

The reporting of this bird that Tom Obrock had observed five days later we believe to represent the same bird with his documentation seen here.

The Piping Plover above was photographed at San Carlos Bay: Bunche Beach Preserve in August 2010.

An email reply to Tom's report sent to him and myself follows . . .
Thank you for the report and photograph. The green flag on the upper left leg is a regional marker for piping plovers banded on the Missouri River below Gavins Point Dam. Gavins Point Dam is located on the northeast Nebraska - southeast South Dakota about 5 miles upriver from Yankton SD. The plover was banded by researchers from Virginia Tech who are studying piping plover use of sandbars constructed by the Corps of Engineers to provide nesting habitat for piping plovers and least terns on the Missouri. I will forward your report to the VPI researchers and they should be able to provide you with additional information as to when and where the plover was banded. Thanks again. It is nice to know that one of our plovers has already made it back to the wintering grounds.

Greg Pavelka
Wildlife Biologist
US Army Corps of Engineers
Another exciting observation of a banded Piping Plover again made at Bunche Beach Preserve, 5 November 2008, led to my discovery that the bird had been flagged in Argentina and was handled and banded in Chile, Mexico, Venezuela, Suriname, and possibly in the United States.

This plover also had a metal band placed on the upper right leg which remains a mystery without closer observation and better understanding of it.

A great resource for a basic understanding of bands and flags and what they represent may be seen here.

Be sure to report your finding of banded birds.

Please don't hesitate to recommend your favorite website resource to do this.