Friday, March 28, 2014

Clapper Rail: "Thin as a rail" a big fat lie?

Clapper Rail
Clapper Rail. Tijuana Slough, California. March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson.
Rails are one of the more difficult birds to see. They generally live in wet fields or marshes, hiding in dense, soggy vegetation. Many birders know these birds by not much more than strange cries from the dawn marsh and glimpsed shadows through the grass. Secretive, they can compress their bodies to slip between adjacent water plant stems without giving away their location as Audubon noted. Thus the expression: "thin as a rail" as many a birder has no doubt heard and is repeated in many places. Or not. It is argued rather convincingly that the term refers to a fence rail, pole, or even a garden rake, thus the parallel expression: "thin as a rake." Just what the truth is, I can't say anymore.

Needless to say, as hard as two-dimensional rails are to actually see, they are harder yet to photograph. Thus my collection of rail photos until now consisted of a couple poor shots of a Sora and a blurry Virginia Rail.

So I was delighted to find the Tijuana Slough NWR visitor's center in Imperial Beach and the North McCoy Trail. Marlene and I walked out less than 1/4 mile on this trail, over a foot bridge across a tidal channel. As we stood looking over miles of marsh grass, this Clapper Rail nonchalantly walked out of the salt marsh vegetation just below us!

Tijuana Slough
Tijuana Slough

Clapper Rail
Fat Clapper Rail

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Cooper's Hawk

Cooper's Hawk
Immature Cooper's Hawk. Bird & Butterfly Garden, San Ysidro, California. March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson.
On my visit to the Bird & Butterfly Garden in the Tijuana River Valley this young Cooper's Hawk was right in the middle of the ring of Tamarisk trees. That's the exact spot where the Common Ground-Doves often hide out. Needless to say, there were no doves, nor very many other small birds, around due to this hunting bird of prey.

Monday, March 24, 2014

California Towhee: 100 years in obscurity

California Towhee
California Towhee. San Ysidro, California. March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson.
In 1827 a scientist in England named William Swainson described to science a new species of towhee from near Mexico City collected by William Bullock. It was nearly all brown so it became known as the Brown Towhee. A slightly different-looking bird from Monterrey, California, collected by a Captain Beechy of His Majesty's Ship Blossom was described in 1839 by London scientist Nicholas Vigors and called a new species, the California Towhee. Never ones to leave well-enough alone, scientists lumped all the forms back into Brown Towhees in 1886. That arrangement lasted for over 100 years. In 1989, based upon DNA evidence, Brown Towhee was split once again into California Towhee and Canyon Towhee.

Even though it was split 25 years ago I still catch myself calling this bird Brown Towhee, from time to time.

California Towhee is a common backyard bird and abundant in chaparral habitats throughout California, Baja, and extreme SW Oregon. Canyon Towhee is paler and is found from Colorado, Arizona, and to Texas, south to central Mexico. Canyon Towhee is a species I have yet to see.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

ID: Western, Cassin's, and Tropical Kingbird

Western Kingbird
Western Kingbird. Hines, Oregon. May 24, 2009. Greg Gillson.
The identification of yellow-bellied kingbirds in the western United States is fairly straight-forward. The differences, though, can be hard to remember if you are only use to seeing one of the species regularly. Here I discuss Western, Cassin's, and Tropical kingbirds. A fourth, the Couch's Kingbird is only found in Texas and is almost identical to Tropical in plumage, but has a different call, and is not considered here.

The Western Kingbird is the summertime kingbird likely most familiar to birders in the western United States and the extreme southern parts of western Canada, wintering in Middle America. It is found in open rural agricultural areas and similar grassland habitats with scattered trees.

I found a tree with 4 migrant Western Kingbirds, here in San Diego County, on the last day of September, last year. That was immediately after moving here, and that was the first and last for me (in the county), so far. I expect them to arrive in April and stay common into August.

The main identifying marks of this large flycatcher are the pale gray head, breast, and back, the pale yellow belly, and the black tail with obvious white outer tail feathers. The common calls of Western Kingbird are a series of harsh "kit" notes often running into a chatter.

Cassin's Kingbird
Cassin's Kingbird. Dairy Mart Pond, San Ysidro, California. March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson
Cassin's Kingbirds are found in summer in the Southwestern US, even to eastern Wyoming. They are also year-round residents in southern coastal California, and south mainly in Mexico. They like open woods and the wilder edges of residential areas with tall trees and open spaces.

Cassin's Kingbirds have expanded their range in southern California in recent decades. In the early 1980's I recorded them only twice in 5 years of living in Ventura County. Now, here in San Diego County, they are common everyday birds year-round in tall trees, especially eucalyptus.

Compared with Western Kingbird, Cassin's has a darker gray head and chest, and clearly defined white throat. The blackish tail often shows a pale tip, suggesting the white tail tip on the Eastern Kingbird, but not nearly as broad, white, or obvious. The call of Cassin's Kingbird is a loud, hoarse "chi-KEER."

Tropical Kingbird
Tropical Kingbird. Dairy Mart Pond, San Ysidro, California. March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson
Tropical Kingbirds have a wide range from South America to Mexico. They barely reach SE Arizona and southern Texas as breeders. However, in the fall a few birds of this species undertake an unusual post-breeding dispersal to the north. Individuals show up on the immediate California coast northward to British Columbia. By "immediate coast" I mean residential areas and golf courses within a mile of the beach. They generally arrive in Oregon in late October and rarely remain to December--it seems a long ways to travel for such a brief period and no obvious reason we humans can determine. But since they are so rare when they venture northward in the fall, they are fun to find! Some birds are found in winter in southern California and Baja, Mexico.

Such was the case 3 weeks ago with the bird above. I was taking photos of the Cassin's Kingbird (two photos above) when I noted something different. This new bird (above) had a browner tail--not black--and it was notched, not straight across the end. Looking more closely I noted a longer, heavier bill. The yellow breast comes all the way up to the white throat. There is no gray across the breast, though the yellow does darken to greenish-yellow. The back is also greenish, not gray as the other two kingbirds we discussed. I've never heard the calls of Tropical Kingbird on their northward journeys. Evidently, though, they have a high-pitched chittering, very different from the calls of the other two kingbirds.

Hurray! Another new bird for the county. This was County Bird #225 and County Year Bird #182.

Friday, March 21, 2014

White-collared ("Cinnamon-rumped") Seedeater

White-collared (Cinnamon-rumped) Seedeater
White-collared ("Cinnamon-rumped") Seadeater. Dairy Mart Ponds, Tijuana River Valley, San Ysidro, California.
March 2, 2014. Greg Gillson.
Here's a photo of that White-collared Seedeater I told you about last week in my "Treasure Hunt" post.

Again, this is the West Mexico form, more richly colored than what you'll find in the North American field guides (yes, I know that Mexico is in North America, but field guides don't!).

This is a small bird about junco-sized. I didn't get too much time to observe the bird before it flew off with the typically undulating flight of a finch. But I did snap several photos, most with the bird hidden behind the willow leaves as it ate the blossoms.

Evidently it is fairly common as a cage bird in Tijuana, Mexico, only a mile or so from where I spotted this bird. Though this individual doesn't show any signs of having been in a cage recently (or maybe ever), the species hasn't been established long enough in this area of California to be countable according to the California Birds Record Committee. The general rule for such birds to be considered "established" is that birds have to be maintaining a viable population for many years (~15) without needing extra "excapees" or released birds to keep the population going.

So, an interesting exotic, but not a countable "wild" bird that will NOT go on my list.