Showing posts with label Fish Crow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fish Crow. Show all posts

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Bunche Beach

 Sunday September 6th



Bunche Beach bird list

A typical visit to Bunche Beach at a low tide.  The best time to bird here is at low tide. Especial early in the morning on a hot day.

Fish Crows

Black-bellied Plover

Reddish Egret

Reddish Egret

Semipalmated Plover

Piping Plover

Short-billed Dowitcher

Sanderling

Marbled Godwit

Ruddy Turnstone

Wilsons Plover

Willet


Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Sarasota

 Wednesday, March 29th

Spent Tuesday birding up in Charlotte County. 


Myakka River State Park

Noticed that the levee and the adjoining structure located west of the boat ramp has been removed. Somehow it doesn't seem right.


Fish Crow

American Avocets

Blue-winged Teal

Wild Turkey

Rosetta Spoonbill

The Celery Fields Gardens

Purple Martin

Common Ground Dove

Mourning Dove

Brown-headed Cowbird

The closest I managed going a pic of the beautiful Ruby-throated Hummingbird
 was the coral bean bush it was feeding on.

Pinecraft Park


Juvenal Barred Owl still sporting its downy feathers


Coopers Hawk




Friday, February 7, 2020

What Kind of Crow is This?

Friday February 7th




House Crow x Fish Crow hybrid seen at Lovers Key in December 2018


Had posted this photo on iNaturalist.com as an example of a Fish Crow.  The photo was taken December 14, 2018 at the Lovers Key State Park parking area next to New Pass, without taking a real go look at pic.  Fish Crows are the predominate crow species at the beach. I have, as well as other birders, been reporting on hearing an American crow calling in this area on occasions.  I now believe that the calls were coming from this bird.

House Crow seen at Nokomis Beach in May 2018


Reviewers had disagreed that this picture was of a Fish Crow just by the heavy bill.  There was some initial speculation that it was an exotic species, like a Cuban Crow.  But we've now decided that it is fact a hybrid of a House Crow and a Fish Crow. Based on the calls, the bill and faint gray coloration draping the back, neck and breast.

Fish Crow seen at Nokomis Beach May 2018

A very tiny population of House Crows have been living up at Nokomis Beach.  With speculation that they have been nesting with Fish Crows So a hybrid being seen and heard is a real possibility. 



Friday, August 17, 2018

Bunche Beach

Wednesday August 15th


The First-of-the-Season, for me, Piping Plovers have returned to Bunche Beach
Spent a couple of hours at Bunche Beach Preserve this morning with a dual purpose. First was to look for returning shorebirds and was rewarded with finding nine Piping Plovers are back at Bunche.

Semipalmated Plover
 Timed my visit for a low tide today and encountered a nice variety of shorebirds. The numbers of returning shorebirds are increasing. Didn't encounter any Red Knots today, but on a visit two weeks was able to spot a few with the Short-billed Dowitchers.  Also seen today were Least Sandpipers, Spotted Sandpipers, Yellow-crowned Night-herons, Willets, Semipalmated Plovers, Marbled Godwits, Ruddy Turnstones, Black-bellied Plovers, Wilson's Plovers, lots of White Ibis, Great Blue Herons and Ospreys
Marbled Godwits

Yellow-crowned Night-Herons









There were hundreds of small dragonflies, called Seaside Dragonlets, active on the beach.  In the past I would have ignored the bugs.

 But lately I've joined with so many of by birding friends in the photography and identification of butterflies and dragonflies to fill in the gap during the summer birding doldrums.  
Fish Crow

Seaside Dragonlet
Also a Seaside Dragonlet

Sea Grape



Red Tide Advisory posted at Bunche

The other purpose for my visit today was to see how the Red Tide Event, we are experiencing in Southwest Florida, was effecting this shoreline today. Unlike my visit here  on August 2nd, very little evidence of the terrible fish kill could be seen today.  There were a few small fish - mullets, sea trout, jacks, catfish.  But a large Southern Stingray was seen. 


 But this was nothing like what I had encountered on the 2nd, when there were hundreds of dead fish stinking up the beach. 

It was interesting to identify so many of species seen then The Red Tide fish kill had included mullets, marine catfish, several species of eel, cowfish, flounder, porcupine fish, a nurse shark, groupers including a goliath grouper, speckled sea trout, batfish, pompano and other jacks, spadefish, stingrays, parrotfish, tarpon and other stuff I couldn't identify. 
http://www.myfwc.com/research/redtide/

Tons of these fish have been removed from beaches. Sadly very large numbers of sea turtles, including rare Ripley's Turtles have washed ashore. Many couldn't be saved. Other sea life are suffering as well including dolphins and manatees

So what is the cause for these terrible algae blooms in the Gulf,  Lake Okeechobee and the Caloosahatchee River. People!!!

The Channelizing of the rivers, the diversion of water away from the Everglades, the Lake O dikes and the nutrient loading of our water sheds by agriculture. But the fertilizers we use to keep our lawns and golf courses so green and lush. And don't forget the contributions from thousands of septic systems. 


So what can be done? Well the people aren't going to be going away. But we'll have to pay Billions to undo all the damage to the environment created by former generations in their efforts to 'drain the swamp'.

Turns out we need the swamps. The water that is currently flushed from Lake O through the Caloosahatchee River and the  St Lucie Canal must be seriously reduced.  And the tainted waters of Lake O must be sent south instead. These waters need to pass through a much larger array of storm water treatment areas, that what already exists today, where the heavy nutrient loads can be filtered out and then sent further south through spreader canals,  instead of the straight channels used now. The tainted water entering Lake O, through the Kissimmee River will also need some type of treatment process to reduce its nutrient load contribution.  This is all very complex.  Restriction on land use, water drainage and fertilization may end up be required. But if the Ice Caps were to melt, all these problems go away. 


Tuesday, July 11, 2017

So Quiet

Monday July 10th


Fish Crow seen at Bowditch Point Park
It'll be a few weeks yet till the birding picks up around here. There are a few interesting birds to chase around the state like in Ft Lauderdale (Tropical Mockingbird), Sarasota (Tropical Kingbirds), Clewiston ( Shiny Cowbird) or Lake Apopka (Fork-tailed Flycatcher, Mississippi Kites, Bronze Cowbird). 

But for now we'll have to wait till the end of the month for the early arrives.

Snowy Plover seen at Bowditch Point
Currently the Least Tern and Black Skimmers colonies on Ft Myers Beach are continuing their nesting. Earlier today I had ran into Meg Rausher, who is employed to monitor these colonies. Meg shared that the breeding colonies of Least Terns, Black Skimmers, Snowy Plovers and Wilson's Plovers took a hit last month from the heavy rains and flooding surfs. Eggs and hatchlings were lost. Some of the Least Terns gave up and left the site, many others are re-nesting. Lets hope for the best.

According to the Turtle Time web site, no sea turtle nest were lost.

Least Tern seen at Carlos Point

Nanday Parakeet seen in Ft Myers

Marbled Godwit seen at Bunche Beach Preserve

Burrowing Owl seen at the ball fields at Cape Coral

A small gator seen at
Six Mile Cypress Slough Preserve

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Spring Time in Cape Coral

Tuesday March 28th

This morning  I spent time birding various location in Cape Coral, starting at the Ball Fields on Pelican Boulevard. From here, began a series of observations of spring time romance amongst the birds.  Basically noted the Monk Parakeets and Fish Crows present collecting nesting materials. At other location noticed the same behavior with Starlings and Blue Jays, plus Downy Woodpeckers and Flickers prepping nest holes.

Pelican Blvd Ball Fields

This Fish Crow spent time adjusting this twig just so.


Monk Parakeets were busy collecting twigs for their huge nests

Working the nest


Burrowing Owl


Rotary Park



A Few Palm Warblers were present

Visited Rotary Park next and found it rather quite. A few waders, Mockingbirds, Palm, Yellow-rumped and Prairie Warblers and Red-bellied Woodpeckers.

Greater Yellowlegs


Charlotte Harbor Buffer Preserve



Northern Flicker prepping her nest hole
On my first visit to Charlotte Harbor Buffer Preserve, encountered Northern Flickers and Downy Woodpeckers actively prepping nest hole, plus Red-bellied Woodpeckers and Blue Jays carrying nesting material. Lots of Eastern Towhees could be heard and with a high tide not much was happening along the shore line.




Downy female checking her nest hole


Red-bellied Woodpecker in breeding colors




Downy Woodpecker inspection nest hole
    

Banded American Kestrel
This American Kestrel was seen down the road from the entrance. I hadn't ever notice one with a leg band before.