Winter Birds of the Great Swamp NWR, Feb. 9, 2014

Driving is much easier than walking in glacial northern New Jersey this winter. A motor trek through the large northern and western lakes of Morris County this morning confirmed what one already knows – it is a good and safe time period for ice fishing. Not one gull, waterfowl or bird of any kind was seen on the snow covered frozen surfaces of Lake Hopatcong or Budd Lake, nor were any expected.

The Great Swamp is getting more coverage this season thanks to the convenience of Pleasant Plains and other roads in the area. An American Kestrel continues to winter here. A Merlin was reported again today. One is being sporadically reported form The Swamp this winter. A hardy Brown Thrasher was reported for the second day in a row, possibly a leftover from the Great Swamp Christmas Bird Count in December 2013. Brown Creepers are being reported. Plenty of Dark-eyed Juncos, White-throated, Song and American Tree Sparrows can be found, especially near the feeders at the Helen Fenske Visitor’s Center.

Approximately 100 American Robins were in the melt water near the 90-degree bend in the road on Pleasant Plains Road. They would scurry to the trees when a car came and immediately return to the puddles as soon as the car passed. Wild Turkeys were foraging across from the Raptor Trust on White Bridge Road. Yesterday’s light-morph Rough-legged Hawk was not reported today.

Thanks to Jim Mulvey, Margo D. Beller, Jeff Ellerbusch, Simon Lane and Randy Little for their correspondences and/or eBird listings.

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Waterfowl on the Raritan River, Feb. 6, 2014

The ice floes have cleared, for now, and the Raritan River along the D&R Towpath in Franklin Township hosts the largest congregation of waterfowl in the mocosocoBirds region. Here are Jeff Ellerbusch’s totals from this afternoon:

107 Canada Geese
18  Am. Black Ducks
395 Mallards
4 Redhead drakes
134 Ring-necked Ducks
1 Greater Scaup hen seen in flight band on water. Photographed. A tough bird to find in Somerset County.
9 Lesser Scaup
34 Bufflehead
53 Common Goldeneye
1 Pied-billed Grebe
380 Ring-billed Gulls
20 Herring Gulls
1 Iceland Gull, adult type seen in flight
3 Great Black-backed Gulls.

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Snowbound birders; diversions, Feb. 5, 2014

Eastern Bluebird, Great Swamp NWR, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Eastern Bluebird, Great Swamp NWR, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

When the Eastern Bluebird, above, was photographed 10 days ago, winter was hard but bearable. The word bearable does not apply anymore. Our road is not plowed as of 11:00 a.m. after the latest wintry weather event. Nothing unusual there as we must be the last on the list in Morris Township. The feeder action is slow. Bird reports in the mocosocoBirds area are sparse this week. Here are a few:

From Elizabeth Murphy in the Morris area:
“A Ruby-crowned Kinglet has been visiting our feeders consistently for about a month now. The bird feeds on the suet two or three times a day, usually mid-morning, staying for only a couple of moments each time. He does not come everyday (or it is hard to track because of work), but does seem to be a fairly regular feeder at this point.”

A Cackling Goose was in Washington Township (Long Valley) near the Gillette Trail on Feb. 4 (Mike Britt).

An eBird report from the far west of Morris, namely, little-known Waterloo Lakes – actually a section of the Musconetcong River (the border between Morris and Warren Counties and Morris and Sussex Counties west of Stanhope): 40 Canada Geese, 20 Am. Black Ducks, 20 Mallards, 25 Ring-necked Ducks, 15 Bufflehead, 15 Hooded Mergansers, 1 Common Mergansers, 1 Great Blue Heron (Robert Templin).

10 Red-headed Woodpeckers, at least, continue at Troy Meadows on Feb. 2 (Jill Homcy).

This may be of interest to some readers. It may make others cry. The impending weekend storm has the potential to be the worst of the season: See here.

Diversions:

You can view a Burrowing Owl Live Cam courtesy of Birding Adventures at this link.

In case you ever considered purchasing the Squirrel Stopper SQC05 Black Squirrel Stopper Pole and Baffle Set for $149.99, view the Amazon 1-out-of-5-stars reviewer’s video at this link.

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Emberizid Trends and a Plea to eBird Users, Feb. 3, 2014

This post addresses the following topics:

  • Emberizid (sparrow family) trends in the month of January for the past five years using eBird data.
  • Making eBird checklist submissions more meaningful. 
  • Links to understanding the eBird review and data quality process.

Do you notice more Eastern Towhees than usual this winter in the mocosocoBirds area? Based on January data, the numbers bear this out as illustrated in the tables below. All combined Morris and Somerset County data is from the eBird database.

The number of people using eBird has risen dramatically in the past few years. Total numeric accumulations will certainly favor the most recent years. With that in mind, the following tables use averages and percentages, which carry more meaning in a comparative scenario.

Here are descriptions of the terms used:

  • Abundance – the average number of individuals per checklist. For example, 0.09 Eastern Towhees in 2014 means there was an average of .09 Eastern Towhees submitted per checklist. This may not appear like much but it is the highest number in the past five years.
  • Frequency – the percentage of checklists where a species was observed. In January 2014, 6% of all checklists had Eastern Towhee, the highest percentage in the 5 year sample period. 
  • Checklist – eBird users, please take noteOnly the following checklists are used in Abundance and Frequency reports (and consequently the Bar Graphs as well) according to eBird documentation. 
    • First, the checklist must be complete. In other words, you must answer Yes to the question: Are you submitting a complete checklist of the birds you were able to identify? Answering Yes satisfies the criteria for Frequency reports.
    • Abundance requires a complete checklist that also has species counts, i.e., no Xs. It is hoped the reason is obvious. You cannot tally the non-numeric X.

All the tables are based on the combined data of Morris and Somerset Counties.
Frequency Table (% of checklists) for January of the years sampled:

Frequency 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010
Eastern Towhee 6.0% 0.3% 3.8% 2.0% 0.0%
Am. Tree Sparrow 12.9% 18.8% 8.2% 24.9% 20.7%
Chipping Sparrow 0.7% 0.3% 0.2% 0.0% 0.0%
Field Sparrow 2.2% 3.0% 4.6% 4.1% 6.2%
Savannah Sparrow 1.2% 3.0% 1.6% 3.0% 7.6%
Fox Sparrow 2.8% 3.2% 3.4% 0.0% 2.8%
Song Sparrow 28.1% 28.5% 20.5% 39.6% 25.5%
Swamp Sparrow 4.0% 3.8% 2.2% 4.6% 6.9%
White-throated Sparrow 31.1% 27.5% 33.8% 56.3% 42.1%
White-crowned Sparrow 0.8% 2.7% 2.4% 3.6% 0.0%
Dark-eyed Junco 32.9% 38.3% 33.8% 68.5% 46.2%

Abundance Table (average per checklist) for January of the years sampled:

Abundance 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010
Eastern Towhee 0.09 0.00 0.06 0.02 0.00
Am. Tree Sparrow 0.74 2.44 0.40 1.17 1.20
Chipping Sparrow 0.02 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Field Sparrow 0.06 0.08 0.33 0.07 0.09
Savannah Sparrow 0.07 0.10 0.07 0.04 0.35
Fox Sparrow 0.05 0.04 0.18 0.00 0.04
Song Sparrow 1.55 1.44 1.06 1.17 0.99
Swamp Sparrow 0.13 0.10 0.04 0.07 0.14
White-throated Sparrow 3.44 2.74 6.25 3.88 3.56
White-crowned Sparrow 0.02 0.12 0.07 0.04 0.00
Dark-eyed Junco 5.37 5.86 4.08 6.42 4.80

Here is another example of how submitting a complete checklist affects the numbers. 695 checklists were submitted to eBird from the combined counties of Morris and Somerset in January 2014. Only 598 met the Frequency criteria (complete checklist); only 588 satisfied the Abundance criteria (complete checklist and numeric species count). That means 14% and 15.4% respectively of the checklists were not used for these reports. This is the same data used for bar graphs , a valuable tool for determining date ranges of species in a particular region. Incomplete and X’d records will appear on the Range and Point Maps and on personal and regional lists but not on other reports requiring completed checklists and numerical species tallies. It is hoped that eBird users will embrace the concept of taking their checklists to the next level and make them useful for all types of data reports.

Checklists Table -total number of checklists submitted for January of the years sampled (Morris and Somerset combined). Note that more than 1/3 of 2011’s submitted checklists were not used.

Checklists 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010
Total 695 774 684 316 192
% Freq not used 14.0% 22.4% 27.3% 37.7% 24.5%
% Abun not used 15.4% 23.5% 28.2% 39.2% 28.6%

It is a convenient shortcut to X certain families, such as gulls, or abundant species, such as European Starlings. Unfortunately, as mentioned earlier, this attitude renders the checklist unusable for certain data reports and research, which is the crux of eBird. The exact amount is not necessary, but simply a number representing proportion is serviceable.

For example, a quick scan shows that there are 1,000 gulls on Lake Hopatcong and that the majority are Herring Gulls. Simply listing 600 Hering Gulls 375 Ring-billed Gulls and 5 Gull spp. is sufficient. The exact number is not important – just a relative proportion, or ratio. If they are too distant to identify, 1,000 gull spp. will suffice. In any case, it is the use of a numeral that is important, not that each separate individual was counted. So, please: Avoid the ‘X’ and say ‘Yes’ to complete checklists.

Here is a relevant article regarding eBird data entry from the Illinois Bird Forum from 2012 entitled The Trouble with ‘X’.

Click on the hyper-link for more information about How to make your eBird checklists more valuable.

Click on the hyper-link to learn more about Understanding the eBird review and data quality process.

Posted in Historical, Morris County, Somerset County | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

2014 Southwest Morris Winter Bird Count: Final Results

The 30th annual Southwest Morris Winter Bird Count took place on January 19, 2014. This winter survey, founded, compiled and organized by Dave Harrison, functions in a similar way to Christmas Bird Counts but is not reported to the National Audubon Society. This count is for hardy birds and hardened birders. The count circle centers around Chester Township and includes bits of neighboring counties as well.

Dave’s account of the results follow:

The final results for the count were pretty awesome. We ended up with 91 species, tying the previous high in 1999. There were two new count species, Cackling Goose and House Wren, bringing the 30-year composite list for the count to 128.
Other significant finds/misses follow:
Mute Swan – 83 was new high count beating the previous high of 80
Northern Shoveler – only the 6th record
American Wigeon – the most significant miss – only the 10th time we haven’t found one
Lesser Scaup – 7th record
Bald Eagle – 9th record and the 4 individuals tie the previous high count
American Kestrel – none since 2006 and the 13th time we have missed the species. No longer really expected since it has been missed 11 out of the past 12 years.
Northern Saw-whet Owl – 5th record
Red-headed Woodpecker – 4th record
Red-bellied Woodpecker – new high count of 70 beat the previous high of 65
Common Raven – 7th record and annual since 2009
American Pipit – 6th record
Dark-eyed Junco – new high count of 847 beat the previous high of 784

I always think that the new high counts are especially significant and are most likely to represent true population trends.

Dave Harrison

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Sandhill Cranes, Rusty Blackbirds, Jan. 31, 2014

As January draws to a close, there was a bit of relief this afternoon from the frigid winter of 2014 as the temperature climbed above freezing, reaching the high 30s Fahrenheit. The current forecast for Sunday has 50 degrees as the daytime high temperature.

3 of the Sandhill Cranes of Franklin Township were viewed late this afternoon. This writer saw them at 3:30 p.m. and Julie Buechner observed them an hour later at the same location. That location is in the Raritan River. Take Randolph Road north to its terminus and turn right onto Weston Canal Road. At approximately half way between Randolph Road and Apgar Drive, the 3 cranes were on ice or some frozen earth at the edge of the river across from the canal. Trying to stop and look is impossible as Weston Canal Road is a very busy county road. The best you can do is drive slowly and look quickly unless you want to pull off at a nearby street and walk along Weston Canal Road (not recommended).

5 Rusty Blackbirds were joined by a flock of 30 Red-winged Blackbirds this afternoon at the end of Woodland Road, Great Swamp NWR.

The final results of Dave Harrison’s Southwest Morris Winter Bird count will be posted soon.

Posted in Morris County, Somerset County | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Rough-legged Hawk, Field Notes, Jan. 30, 2014

Rough-legged hawk, Great swamp NWR, NJ, Jan. 30, 2014 (photo by Mitch Van Beekum)

Rough-legged hawk, Great swamp NWR, NJ, Jan. 30, 2014 (photo by Mitch Van Beekum)

After not being reported since Jan. 25-26, a dark-morph Rough-legged Hawk was photographed by Mitch Van Beekum at 12:30 p.m. today as it soared over the Bluebird parking lot on Pleasant Plains Road, Great Swamp NWR.
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From Alan Boyd at Lake Musconetcong:
On Wednesday morning (Jan. 29) there were two Bald Eagles feasting on a dead Mute Swan within 100 feet of 50-60 other Mute Swans that were sleeping on the ice near a patch of open water. Also on the water were 15 Ring-necked Ducks and 1 Ruddy Duck.

Bald Eagle feasting on a swan at Lake Musconetcong, NJ, Jan. 29, 2014 (photo by Alan Boyd).

Bald Eagle feasting on a swan at Lake Musconetcong, NJ, Jan. 29, 2014 (photo by Alan Boyd).

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55 Horned Larks were in the same field as approximately 1,500 Canada Geese on the Norz farm fields along River Road in Hillsborough, NJ. No other species were found among the Horned Larks or Canada Geese (J. Klizas).
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From Jennifer Brooks at Loantaka Brook Reservation:
The drake Northern Pintail was seen again today at Loantaka, along with 4 Hooded Mergansers, the group of resident Green-wing Teal, and the other regulars including Black Ducks, Mallards, Canada Geese and the Mute Swan.
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From Jimmy Lee at Colonial Park on Jan. 28:
One adult Red-headed Woodpecker in the area of the nature trail at Colonial Park about 2:40 pm.
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Jacob Socolar found a Pine Warbler near Negri-Nepote Grasslands on Jan. 25. You can read his comments on his eBird checklist here.

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Wednesday Field Notes, Jan. 29, 2014

Birding is slow in the mocosocoBirds region so far this week. Most bodies of water are frozen, there is a persistent snow cover and it is cold. The current forecast for the coming weekend is for the Fahrenheit teperature to reach a high of 40 degrees on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, the first true break in the deep freeze for some time. Although 40 degrees may feel balmy to us considering the recent chill, it is actually only two degrees higher than the historical average for Morristown during those dates according to the AccuWeather web site

The Sandhill Cranes were reported Sunday, Jan. 26 on Randolph Road, Franklin Township near the water company (Sheryl Sackie). They were seen again yesterday, Jan. 28 on the other side of Weston Canal Rd. as described by Tina Pirro in a JerseyBirds post

The Rough-legged Hawks of the Great Swamp NWR have not been reported since Jan. 26.

1 Redhead drake was seen at the Chatham Sewage Ponds on Jan. 27 (Jim Mulvey). It was not present today.

The Horned Larks of Turkey Brook Park, Mt. Olive Township continue through Jan. 28 (Jamie Glydon).

Northern Pintail and Green-winged teal continue at Kitchell Pond at Loantaka Brook Reservation as of Jan. 26 (Chris Thomas), one of the very few patches of open water in Morris County. The following photo is by Chris Thomas.

Northern Pintail

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Trumpeter Swans in Morris and Somerset Counties, Jan. 27, 2014

Trumpeter Swan, Indian Lake, Denville, NJ,  Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

Trumpeter Swan, Indian Lake, Denville, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

If one travels among the many lakes of Morris County and the few in Somerset County, there is the slim possibility of seeing a Trumpeter Swan (TRUS). Do not get excited. It has been my onerous duty on many occasions to inform a puzzled and/or excited observer that the TRUS they saw is not of genuinely wild origin.

Here is the story in brief. In approximately 2009, local birders began noticing a pair of TRUS on a private pond on Lloyd Road in Bernardsville. This caused some excitement for a brief time but the swans’ fearless approach to Homo sapiens signaled that they were not of wild stock. Sure enough, it was learned that the swans were a gift to the property owners (one can go online and purchase Trumpeter Swans and other waterfowl, for a price). That settled that, until the next year, 2010, when the captive pair gave birth to six cygnets. Jim Gilbert has a wonderful photo of the brood in his Flickr photostream, here.

A visit to the pond in 2011 revealed that three of the youngsters had left. Eventually, one was seen regularly at the Friends Blind at the Wildlife Observation center of the Great Swamp NWR. It kept company with a Tundra Swan into May of that year. Another TRUS appeared at Lake Parsippany for one day. The mocosocoBirds post for that sighting and links to photos of the Great Swamp swans is here. Later that winter, a TRUS spent time at Indian Lake in Denville. Two were on Leddell’s Pond in Mendham Twp. in 2012. One TRUS spent most of the summer of 2013 at Mt. Hope Lake. Currently, one is the small unfrozen section of Indian Lake in Denville – and on it goes.

Three immature Trumpeters reported in 2014 at Lake Assunpink, Monmouth County have been validated, or confirmed, on eBird. Keep in mind, this does not mean they are accepted as individuals of wild origin. That is for the New Jersey Bird Record Committee to decide.

As for any Morris and Somerset sightings, they will NOT be confirmed on eBird. The Bernardsville captive pair have poisoned the local waters, if you will. A discussion with an eBird administrator agrees that they should not be validated. This default action pertains to the Morris and Somerset County TRUS only.

Do we know where all of these TRUS come from? Of course not. Without an identification band to determine its origin, a TRUS could have come from anywhere. This does not mean they should go unreported. It is of great scientific and research value to track the appearances of these birds. Invalidating a record on eBird only means it will not show in reports. It does not delete the record. It does not imply the observer is a bad person. On the contrary, if TRUS become established in New Jersey at a later date, current records may be revisited. Remember that although many people use eBird as a listing software, it is primarily a research tool of enormous magnitude. Do not fear reporting!

Posted in Historical, Morris County, Somerset County | Tagged , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Sunday Field Notes – Puddle Ducks, Jan. 26, 2014

Puddle Ducks

Gadwall at Speedwell Village, Morristown, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Gadwall at Speedwell Village, Morristown, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

There are a few small patches of open water in frozen Morris County. The pond at Speedwell Village, across Speedwell Avenue from Speedwell Lake (which is actually a dammed portion of the Whippany River), has a fenced in pond which stays open longer than other bodies of water in the area. As the picture shows, it is clogged with Gadwalls in one corner. The small pond contained 8 Canada Geese, 27 Gadwall, 18 Mallards, 3 Ring-necked Ducks and 4 Hooded Mergansers.

Indian Lake in Denville has 2 small portions of water without ice. One small section was dominated by two Mute Swans and 5 Ring-billed Gulls. The other larger hole had 98 Canada Geese, 4 Mallards, 17 Ring-necked Ducks, 5 Lesser Scaup, 1 Common Merganser and… a Trumpeter Swan, originally found yesterday by Tom Gorman . No excitement needed. Due to the famed and fertile captive pair of Trumpeter Swans in Bernardsville, NO Trumpeter Swans in Morris and Somerset Counties are considered to be of natural wild origin. There will be more on this in tomorrow’s post.

Trumpeter Swan, Indian Lake, Denville, NJ,  Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

Trumpeter Swan, Indian Lake, Denville, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

Clyde Potts Reservoir in Mendham Township, not an easy body of water to view, has a fair sized opening in its mostly frozen surface. A Cackling Goose was found here by Mike Hiotis on January 19. There were 350 Canada Geese here this afternoon. All were mostly at rest on the ice at the edge of the open water. 1 Ring-necked Duck, 6 Common Mergansers and 2 Ruddy Ducks were also present.

Boonton Reservoir is completely frozen, as is nearby Lake Parsippany, but the water treatment tanks on Greenbank Rd. have the largest concentration of ducks found today in Morris County. Approximately 200 Mallards were floating in bliss as well as 3 Wood Ducks, 6 Gadwall and 2 American Black Ducks. Incidentally, it is not recommended to stop on Greenbank Road to observe the tanks, as there is a surprising amount of traffic on Sunday afternoons.

Water Treatment Plant, Boonton, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

Water Treatment Plant, Boonton, NJ, Jan. 26, 2014 (photo by J. Klizas)

The eBird Trail Tracker machine at the Great Swamp NWR records a Rough-legged Hawk for today. It is the policy of mocosocoBirds to disregard reports from inanimate objects. So, unless a Homo sapiens knows otherwise, Rough-legged Hawks were not seen in the Great Swamp today. The highlight is a Gray Catbird found by Chris Thomas at the end of Whitebridge Road. Chris’s photo is below.

Gray Catbird

In Somerset County, Zach Batren’s Chipping Sparrow continues to show up at his feeder in Franklin Township.

As stated earlier, an article about Trumpeter Swans in the land of mocosocoBirds will post tomorrow.

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