Cicada Flagging and Chat Upates, July 2, 2013

Cicada Flagging

Example of Cicada Flagging, Morris Twp., NJ, July 2, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

Example of Cicada Flagging, Morris Twp., NJ, July 2, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

(Click on the photo for a larger image).

As in the above picture, you may have noticed the browning, or flagging, of leaves on trees while travelling through Morris, Mendham, Bernards, and Warren Townships or anywhere the Brood II Cicadas have emerged en masse. The following explanation of  flagging is courtesy of cicadamania.com:

“Cicadas begin life as a rice-shaped egg, which the female deposits in a groove she makes in a tree limb, using her ovipositor. The groove provides shelter and exposes the tree fluids, which the young cicadas feed on. These grooves can kill small branches. When the branches die and leaves turn brown, it is called flagging.
Once the egg hatches the cicada begins to feed on the tree fluids. At this point it looks like a termite or small white ant. Once the young cicada is ready, it crawls from the groove and falls to the ground where it will dig until it finds roots to feed on. Once roots are found the cicada will stay underground from 2 to 17 years depending on the species.”

Also, from cicadamania.com/faq.html:
Question: Will the cicadas kill my trees, shrubs and flowers?
Answer: Possibly. Especially if your plant is pathetic and weak. Cicadas don’t kill flowers and shouldn’t damage shrubs, but they can do damage to young, wimpy trees like ornamentals.

Cicadas don’t cause damage to trees by chewing leaves like other insects to. Instead the damage is caused because they lay their eggs in grooves in the branches of trees. Cicadas are technically parasites of the trees, and they need the trees to survive throughout their entire life cycle, so killing trees is not in the cicadas best interest.

The weakest limbs of a tree are often temporarily damaged or killed off, the result of which is called flagging, as the leaves of the branch will turn brown and look like a flag. They are doing the trees a favor by pruning their weakest branches.

Young trees, ornamental trees and fruit trees will be more prone to damage as they are typically smaller and weaker than older native hardwood trees.”

Obviously, it is too late to protect weaker trees, so, save this information for 2030.

Chat Update

The Morris Township Yellow-breasted Chat (YBCH) was vocalizing this morning. It was loud enough to be heard from the west path, the path along Washington Valley Road, and the paved path.

The Great Swamp YBCH was heard yesterday, July 1 and continues southeast of the intersection of White Bridge Rd. and Pleasant Plains Rd.

Squawroot

The plant pictured below was a mystery to me when I found it this morning. It was under a group of White Oaks along the Rock-a-bye Railroad section of Patriots’ Path in Morris Township. Thanks to Wade Wander and Tom Halliwell for explaining it. It is Squawroot (Conopholis americana), a parasite of tree roots. These Squawroots are past flowering and are displaying their developing seed capsules.

Squawroot, Morris Twp., NJ, July 2, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

Squawroot, Morris Twp., NJ, July 2, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

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Night-Herons, July 1, 2013

Black-crowned Night-Heron, Best Lake, Watchung, NJ, July 1, 2013 (photo by Jim Mulvey).

Black-crowned Night-Heron, Best Lake, Watchung, NJ, July 1, 2013 (photo by Jim Mulvey).

It has been stated in this space before that Black-crowned Night-Herons (BCNH) are not easy to find in Morris and Somerset Counties. That changes with July upon us. Not that they are abundant, only that you may be more likely to see one in the right circumstances. A few have been at the Boonton Reservoir recently. One was seen flying by the overlook on Pleasant Plains Road, Great Swamp NWR on Sunday morning (Simon Lane). They are somewhat annual at the Great Swamp.  Stanley Park in Chatham along the Passaic River is another regular spot. Melanie Lane in Hanover Township had a crew of 2-3 last summer.  They have been observed on the Boonton Christmas Bird Count 15 out of the 77 years of the count but only once since 1999. Both Best Lake and Watchung Lake in the borough of Watchung seem to be reliable in Somerset County. Jim Mulvey found a BCNH, probably  the same one he found a month ago, at Best Lake today. Other than that, records are few and far between.

Black-crowned Night-Heron, Best Lake, Watchung, NJ, July 1, 2013 (photo by Jim Mulvey).

Black-crowned Night-Heron, Best Lake, Watchung, NJ, July 1, 2013 (photo by Jim Mulvey).

Yellow-crowned Night-Herons are more scarce in the mocosocoBirds region as one would expect. One a year seems to be the recent average: 1 at Colonial Park, Franklin Twp. in 2013; 1 at Melanie Lane, Hanover Twp., 2012, 1 in Denville, 2011, etc.

Yellow-crowned Night-Herons made news in Morris County 84 years ago. The following excerpt is of historical interest. Lester Lewis Walsh of Ridgewood, NJ writes of a Yellow-crowned Night-Heron at Troy Meadows (or as Mr. Walsh labels it: Troy Meadow swamp). The account is from the general notes section of The Auk, Vol. XLVI, October 1929, pp. 537-538.

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Saturday Field Notes, June 29, 2013

This is what you see
Wildcat Ridge WMA, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 29, 2013

when you lay down on the rocky ground directly beneath one of these
Wildcat Ridge WMA, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 29, 2013
which are the behemoths marching across Jefferson and Rockaway Townships begat by PSE&G’s Susquehanna-Roseland Project.
Wildcat Ridge WMA, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 29, 2013

Organizations, including New Jersey Audubon, are researching and evaluating the habitat underneath these giants. Prairie Warblers, Indigo Buntings, interesting Vermivora warblers and many other species are still using these areas. However, the clearings made to accommodate the construction of these towers are devastating to the immediate habitats. See sections of the Farny Highlands and Mahlon Dickerson Reservation for examples in real life. All we can do is monitor how these affected areas recover.

Weekend wrap-up

The Winter Wren of Snake Hill Rd. in Rockaway Twp. was heard again Friday, June 28 (Jamie Glydon).
A Yellow-breasted Chat is reported from Duke Farms near Beekman’s Lane, Hillsborough Twp. It appears as though the other Morris County Chats are either silent or gone, although the White Bridge x Pleasant Plains Rd. Chat may still be audible.

Otherwise, it is breeding birds as usual, albeit a good year for Cuckoos.

Butterfly Counts

July is nigh and butterfly count season is here. The Great Swamp Butterfly count is July 6. The NABA Butterfly count calendar for New Jersey is listed on this page: www.naba.org/chapters/nabanj/calendar.html
Scroll down for the count dates and contacts.

Common Milkweed is popping at the right time.

Common Milkweed, Wildcat Ridge WMA, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 29, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

Common Milkweed, Wildcat Ridge WMA, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 29, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas)

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Acadian Flycatcher, other field notes, June 25, 2013

Acadian Flycatcher, Pottersville, NJ, June 25, 2013 (photo by Frank Sencher, Jr.).

Acadian Flycatcher, Pottersville, NJ, June 25, 2013 (photo by Frank Sencher, Jr.).

A pair of Acadian Flycatchers are on the Somerset County side of Black River Road near Pottersville (Frank Sencher, Jr.). They are north of the intersection of McCann Mill Road. This area is the convergence of the borders of Somerset, Hunterdon and Morris Counties.

Acadian Flycatcher, Pottersville, NJ, June 25, 2013 (photo by Frank Sencher, Jr.).

Acadian Flycatcher, Pottersville, NJ, June 25, 2013 (photo by Frank Sencher, Jr.).

A Least Bittern was heard this morning in the vicinity of the overlook on Pleasant Plains Road, Great Swamp NWR (Marc Chelemer).

From Jennifer Books, June 23:
This morning Leslie and I went birding at the Negri-Nepote Grassland Preserve. Highlights of our 3-hour walk (which got pretty hot towards the end) included seeing the male Dickcissel in a bush on the left-hand side of the yellow trail that leads off towards the woods, (apparently this is NOT exactly the same location where it has been previously spotted but also not that far away) hearing and seeing several Indigo Buntings, watching a Grasshopper Sparrow parent feeding a fledgling right on the trail, seeing a Purple Martin, and spotting 2 Orchard Orioles including one immature. Other birds we noted were a Great Egret fly-over, a Kingbird, a fairly numerous number of Eastern Bluebirds including some immature individuals, Song, Field and Chipping sparrows, and Cedar Waxwings.

From Leslie Webster, June 22:
Report from Loantaka Brook Reservation: at Kitchell Pond, there are almost as many Cedar Waxwings as there are swifts and swallows. The waxwings are fly catching and easy to spot. On June 20, I heard and saw two Barred Owl juveniles whining to a parent who, I’m sure, would rather have been asleep. Wood Duck females with young are showing up at the pond. One female was in charge of 14 ducklings!

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Birds of Timberbrook, June 23, 2013

Timberbrook Pond, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

Timberbrook Pond, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Klizas).

(Click on the picture for a larger image).

Timberbrook is a road, a pond, and a brook (when splitting the word in two as in Timber Brook). The area is in the Farny Highlands of Rockaway Township. Farny State Park, probably one of the least known of New Jersey State Parks, encompasses the trails around Split Rock Reservoir, goes west to Upper Hibernia Road and Timberbrook Road and north to Charlotteburg Reservoir. Some of the area covered in this report is in the Newark Pequannock Watershed where a hiking permit is required. Winnebago Scout Reservation (WSR), a Boy Scout Camp of the Patriots’ Path Council, takes up a sizable portion of Farny and is off limits to the public. Parking for the route this report covers is in a small lot opposite the entrance to WSR.

Timberbrook Road appears to be a drivable road on maps and it is up to the entrance for WSR. The picture below may dissuade you from attempting to drive the road beyond that.

Timberbrook Road,  Rockaway Twp., NJ June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas)

Timberbrook Road, Rockaway Twp., NJ June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas)

At best, it is a dirt road covered with wood chips and mulch with many pools of water, an occasional boulder sticking through the dirt, etc. It is easier to walk it.

The forest is deciduous. Bird species are typical of the area. The birding highlight of the morning was a singing Canada Warbler in the vegetation at the water’s edge and woods below the southern end of Charlotteburg Reservoir. Historically, this species has nested in northern Morris County as data from the NJ Breeding Bird Atlas bears out.

The return trip was along the Four Birds Trail section that skirts the eastern edge of Timberbrook Pond (Google Maps refers to it as a lake). Some of this trail is as rugged as you will find. It is refreshing to walk through a dense understory along parts of the trail. As photogenic as the pond is, be aware that two microwave towers at the north end are purposely left out of the photo at the top of this post. This is New Jersey after all.

Nymphaea odorata, Timberbrook Pond, NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas)

Nymphaea odorata, Timberbrook Pond, NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas)

On exiting, the following Snapping Turtle was sitting on Timberbrook Road waiting to be flattened by a car tire.

Snapping Turtle, Rockaway NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

Snapping Turtle, Rockaway NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

This is the only situation where you will see a Snapping Turtle in my hand.

Snapping Turtle, Rockaway NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

Snapping Turtle, Rockaway NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

Here is the species list from this morning:
Canada Goose – 3
Wood Duck – 6
Turkey Vulture – 2
Mourning Dove
Yellow-billed Cuckoo
Red-bellied Woodpecker – 2
Downy Woodpecker
Hairy Woodpecker
Eastern Wood-Pewee – 5
Great Crested Flycatcher
Yellow-throated Vireo
Warbling Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo – 14
Blue Jay – 5
Tree Swallow – 3
Black-capped Chickadee – 6
Tufted Titmouse – 12
White-breasted – 3
House Wren
Veery – 2
Wood Thrush – 2
American Robin – 2
Ovenbird – 11
Louisiana Waterthrush
Black-and-white Warbler
Common Yellowthroat -2
American Redstart
Yellow Warbler – 2
Canada Warbler
Chipping Sparrow – 2
Scarlet Tanager – 4
Rose-breasted Grosbeak – 2
Red-winged Blackbird – 8
Common Grackle – 4
American Goldfinch – 2

Mountain Laurel, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

Mountain Laurel, Rockaway Twp., NJ, June 23, 2013 (photo by J. Klizas).

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Saturday Field Notes: Prothonotary Warbler, Winter Wren, Least Bittern, June 22, 2013

Prothonotary Warbler, Lord Stirling Park, NJ, JUne 22, 2013 (photo by Harvey Tomlinson).

Prothonotary Warbler, Lord Stirling Park, NJ, JUne 22, 2013 (photo by Harvey Tomlinson).

You can read Harvey Tomlinson’s account on JerseyBirds of the Lord Stirling Park’s Prothonotary family here.

A Winter Wren continues to sing on Snake Hill Road, Rockaway Township. Originally found by Simon Lane on June 9, the Wren was still singing occasionally this morning.

A Least Bittern was observed from the overlook on Pleasant Plains Rd, Great Swamp NWR on the evening of June 20 (Simon Lane). This is the only report of this species in either Morris or Somerset Counties in 2013.

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Deerhaven Lake, Morris Co.: Heronry, Common Gallinule, June 22, 2013

Deerhaven Lake facing west, the Green Pond Mountain escarpment in the background, Morris County, NJ, June 22, 2013 (photographed by Jonathan Klizas)

Deerhaven Lake facing west, the Green Pond Mountain escarpment in the background, Morris County, NJ, June 22, 2013 (photographed by Jonathan Klizas)

(Click on the picture to view a larger image).

Deerhaven Lake is a personal favorite Morris County location. It is on Newark Watershed property meaning that a hiking permit is required. Some of the nesting trees were fallen by Superstorm Sandy in 2012 but the heronry is going strong. 44 Great Blue Herons were viewed at one time this morning. Others had already flown from the heronry to points unknown putting the actual number of Herons using the site at approximately 50+ minimum. This is probably the largest heronry in Morris County.

(Click on the pictures below to view a larger image).

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Heronry, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

This is a rich birding area. A Brown Creeper was singing, a Red-breasted Nuthatch “hanking” and a Pine Warbler trilling from the west side of the lake near Green Pond Road. A Common Gallinule was out in the open for all of the 20 minutes I was viewing it. Wood Ducks are in eclipse. All of the photographs in this post are taken from the east side of the lake. This requires a one-plus mile hike on a marked trail (the Four Birds Trail), an unmarked trail and no trail (i.e. bushwhack) to reach the eastern lake shore.

Common Gallinule, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Common Gallinule, Deerhaven Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas)

Here is the list from this morning:
Canada Goose – 5
Wood Duck – 27
Mallard – 11
Wild Turkey
Double-crested Cormorant – 2
Great Blue Heron – 44
Green Heron – 3
Common Gallinule – 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Northern Flicker
Pileated Wooodpecker
Eastern Wood-Pewee – 2
Eastern Phoebe
Great Crested Flycatcher
Yellow-throated Vireo
Red-eyed Vireo – 8
Warbling Vireo – 3
Blue Jay
American Crow
Tree Swallow – 10
Black-capped Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
Red-breasted Nuthatch
White-breasted Nuthatch
Brown Creeper – singing
Eastern Bluebird – 2
Wood Thrush – 5
American Robin
Ovenbird – 10
Worm-eating Warbler
Louisiana Waterthrush
Common Yellowthroat – 4
Yellow-Warbler
Pine Warbler
Song Sparrow – 3
Scarlet Tanager – 3
Rose-breasted Grosbeak – 2
Indigo Bunting – 1
Red-winged Blackbird – 25
Common Grackle – 16
Baltimore Oriole
American Goldfinch -3

Indian Pipe emerging from Sphagnum Moss, Deerhave Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Kizas)

Indian Pipe emerging from Sphagnum Moss, Deerhave Lake, NJ, June 22, 2013 (photo by Jonathan Kizas)

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Summer Solstice, (Perigree Full Moon on Sunday), June 20, 2013

The Summer Solstice ocurrs Friday, June 21, at 1:04 a.m. Eastern Time (5:04 UTC). Sunday presents the Perigree Full Moon, or Supermoon. In the early hours of Sunday, June 23, the moon will officially reach its full phase and will be the closest to Earth that it will be in 2013 and until August 2014. EarthSky.org explains it here.

There is nothing especially newsy in the mocosocoBirds region. The Yellow-breasted Chat of Morris Twp. was especially raucous this morning. A Prairie Warbler singing along Whitehead Rd. was a surprise. The White-eyed Vireo of Whitehead Rd. called briefly.

Speaking of White-eyed Vireos, Terry Carruthers reported this yesterday, June 19:
A White-eyed Vireo was singing vigorously alongside the road opposite the old cement plant on Whitebridge Rd in the Great Swamp. A Black-billed Cuckoo flew in while I was watching the Vireo.

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Cliff Swallows in Franklin Twp., other field notes, June 19, 2013

Cliff Swallow Colony, I-287 Bridge, Franklin Twp., NJ, June 19, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas).

Cliff Swallow Colony, I-287 Bridge, Franklin Twp., NJ, June 19, 2013 (digiscoped by Jonathan Klizas).

Seven active Cliff Swallow nests are on the I-287 bridge over the Raritan River accessed by the Delaware and Raritan Canal State Park towpath near Easton Avenue, Franklin Twp. This is approximately the same number as in 2012. One nest is on the south side of the bridge. The Weston Canal area was not checked today. It had eight nests last year.

Mike Britt reports 15 Red-tailed Hawks this morning in the air space around Burnt Mills Road in Bedminster Twp. Some were hawking Cicadas.  Many species of birds are feasting on Magicicada spp. this season.

Yesterday, June 18, an Alder Flycatcher and Yellow-breasted Chat were found again in the section of habitat southeast of the intersection of Pleasant Plains and White Bridge Roads in the Great Swamp NWR (Jamie Glydon). The Yellow-breasted Chat was evident again this morning.

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Cerulean Warblers, Black-billed Cuckoo, etc., June 17, 2013

Two Male Cerulean Warblers were observed today along Waterloo Valley Road in Mt. Olive Township (Mike Wolfe). These are the continuing Ceruleans present since May.

The Common Loon at nearby Tilcon Lake, present since May, was photographed by Alan Boyd today.

Common Loon, Tilcon Lake, Mt. Olive Twp., NJ, June 17, 2013 (photo by Alan Boyd).

Common Loon, Tilcon Lake, Mt. Olive Twp., NJ, June 17, 2013 (photo by Alan Boyd).

A Black-billed Cuckoo was seen and photographed opposite the Headquarters entrance on Pleasant Plains Rd., Great Swamp NWR (Jamie Glydon).

Black-billed Cuckoo, Great Swamp NWR, June 17, 2013 (photo by Jamie Glydon).

Black-billed Cuckoo, Great Swamp NWR, June 17, 2013 (photo by Jamie Glydon).

From Susan Treesh:
I have Brood II magicicadas to thank for recommendations for several local spots I had never visited before. I decided that Rt. 525 from Bridgewater to Bedminster was my best bet for a cicada hunt, and I found a hotspot at Watchung Mountain Park in Martinsville. I had never been there before, and enjoyed, besides the chorus, a nice meadow that paralleled the jogging track. I heard Blue-winged Warbler and Red-eyed Vireo. This is completely separate from Watchung Reservation, I think.

Then I went on to Leonard J. Buck garden, again a spot I had never visited, a wonderful specialty garden, the kind of place a birder can bring both non-birding out-of-town relatives AND her binoculars. Wood Thrush was still singing, and many fledglings were being fed, some from cicadas.

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