Repositioning Cruise

Interest has been keen for the repositioning cruise and we have 12 persons who have expressed interest on this first day. As of now there are 12 persons who have sent their names to the agent, but we have one woman and one man without same-gender berth-mates. If one more male and one more female contact me I’ll see if I can get a seventh berth reserved and we can make it a 14 person trip. Please contact me if you are interested in filling up the last two beds.

Current list of interested persons

Ed Pullen
Ken Brown
Art Wang
Bruce Labar
Donna LaCasse
Kay Schimke
Vera Cragin
Kathy (Vera Cragin’s daughter)
Joe Tieger
Margaret Tieger
Jody Hess
Brian Patterson

Thanks, Ed

ABC Trip on Repositioning Cruise LA to Vancouver

Repositioning Cruise LA to Vancouver. May 3-7, 2016. Limit 12 persons. 8 spots left. Sign up by Friday Jan 22 to assure a spot.

I have set up a trip for ABC on a Princess Cruise ship for the purpose of looking for pelagic birds. Size limit for the group will be 12. The ship leaves Los Angeles on May 3 at 4 PM and arrives at Vancouver BC at 7:30 AM at May 7th. There is a single port-of-call at Victoria BC from noon until 11:30 PM on May 6th. There should be a good part of May 6th in WA waters.
I have used an agent to reserve 6 double person inside berths at what seems to me to be an excellent cost of $634/ room, or $317./ person double occupancy. This includes everything except tips and alcohol. These reservations will be held just until noon EST on this Friday Jan 22nd. To reserve a spot on the trip send an email to Gail Agamie. I expect the spaces to fill quickly, so sign up right away.

I have arranged for Bruce Labar, a spotter on Westport Seabirds, to come with us so we have expertise to recognize the birds As an inducement to Bruce to come I agreed that ABC members would pay $30. each which if 11 of us come will cover his cruise fee. A bargain given that to do the same trip with wings is $275. per person plus cost of the cruise.

This is a different type of pelagic cruising. No stopping for birds, viewing mostly through a spotting scope, and several days long. A big plus is much less motion, so seasickness should be less of a concern.

So far Ken Brown, Bruce Labar, Art Wang and myself (Ed Pullen) are signed up. 8 spaces left. I expect them to fill fast. There is no financial commitment to sign up. Just send you full name and date of birth to:

Gail Allen Agamie
Cruise Consultant
Cruise Vacation Outlet
5575 S. Semoran Blvd Ste. # 4
Orlando, FL 32822
Toll Free: 1-800-797-4635 Ext 137 #
Local: 407-275-2244 Ext 137 #
Fax: 775-206-1012
Gail@CruiseVacationOutlet.com
www.CruiseVacationOutlet.com

Please also send me an email at edwardpullen — at — gmail dot com.

E-Bird End of Year Details

I find it handy on Dec 31 each year to use the CSV Download feature of lists on eBird to save to my own database the lists I want to be able to see easily on e-bird. For things like my 20145 state & county lists I just open the list on my eBird and click on the csv download button at the top right corner. Then open and save the file. It’s handy to add the year to the file name, as eBird just calls it a year list without the year prominently showing.

Just a friendly reminder for you listers out there.

Ed

ABCbirding Site Back Up

I had a new experience in being a webmaster this last week +. ABCbirding was hacked by someone who inserted code to use the site to send malicious emails to lots of people leading to the site being taken down. It took some time but I’ve managed to get the site back up and have taken some precautions to try to prevent this from happening again. The “attacks” were not aimed at users of the ABCbirding site and IU have not heard that any of you got the emails.

For now the feature allowing members to post to the site via email is halted as an added security measure. Sorry about that.

Anyway let’s hope this tool continues to work for us and has no further problems.

Sorry for the inconvenience.

Ed

ABC Event Dec 2 – Dr. Sievert Rohwer on molt

Sievert Rohwer, retired from the U and the Burke, had us eating out of his hand on December 2nd with his inside view of molt and what we don’t know about it! Now, thanks to his work, we know that feather regrowth can’t be hurried, that all feathers grow at the same rate in most species, and that main differences between molt strategies have to do with how many feathers are molted at the same time: Simple (one at a time), Complex (various strategies including stepwise), and Simultaneous, with most feathers molted together. But each feather takes the same amount of time, whether all at once or one at a time. An extreme example of this is that it would take Argentavis, the giant prehistoric bird, almost 2 years to molt each primary one at a time, but it would take 7 months to molt 3 at a time, which could have been doable in a beast that size (like the giant prehistoric penguins).

We also know that breeding and molting in larger birds might not happen in the same year due to the cost to the bird. Studies on the breeding grounds of Laysan Albatrosses have determined that 20% of the population fails to appear each year to breed, but that they come back to breed the next year, so they spend some away time recovering and molting. However, Laysan males might attempt to breed even before they’re fit in order to maintain their pair bond in a female-centric society. Their pattern appears to be alternate years of major molts and then smaller molts, with P6-P7 being the key.

During molt, Western Kingbirds, Black-crowned Night Herons, and Double-crested Cormorants have been studied, but few other species. Much research remains to be done and could keep graduate students busy for many years. In the case of Laysan and Black-footed Albatrosses, some years ago, researchers were aboard trawlers that used drift nets in a study to determine how dangerous these nets were to these threatened species, which is why these two species have been studied, but no other albatross species (and yes, drift nets were determined to be a menace). The recovered albatross specimens from this once-in-a-lifetime study have been keeping researchers busy ever since.

Some interesting birds demonstrate seemingly “chaotic” molt, including herons, cuckoos, and kingfishers. In a study done at the U on specimens of cuckoos shipped in from many museums and schools, “transilient” molt was found, where blocks of feathers will molt, each block separated by a node, but each individual feather surrounded by non-molting feathers on each side. This is not well understood or well observed yet except in Cuckoos, especially the Common Cuckoo, and of course they don’t molt on our continent.

An interesting factoid is that if a feather is cut or traumatized, even though the keratin is “dead,” some sensor, perhaps in the filoplume, responds and starts an immediate molt and regrowth of that feather. Another interesting item was growth bands on feathers!! Yes, like trees!! Light days and dark nights show up in daily bands on young feathers. And many more fascinating tidbits, like those Limpkins and their supposed proximal molt pattern.

Two main points: (1) all of this applies just to primaries, which are the easiest to study; and (2) we’re still learning the “rules” of molt.

Thanks, Dr. Rohwer! We will be looking forward to having you back and hearing your work on migration!

Photos below – Click to enlarge:

Rare e-Bird Sightings

Some time ago I added pages to this site where we could look at the e-Bird reports of rare bird sightings using a tool called BirdTrax. The developer of BirdTrax has stopped supporting its use and so I decided to develop a web site where birders from all over the U.S. and Canada can easily see the last 15 days of rare e-Bird reports in their home county or any other county.

I hope you’ll check out CountyRareBirds and register as a user with your preferred country, state and county. Then if you ask your computer to remember the site you can save it as a favorite and anytime you visit the site it will bring up your counties recent rare bird sightings as the default view. You can easily change the view to a different area if you are or plan to travel.

You can access CountyRareBirds.com easily anytime using the ABCbirding site menu bar link labeled “Rare Bird Sightings.”

Let me know what you think.

Thanks.

Ed

Pierce County TAS Field Trip

Today 12 TAS birders set out to see what we could find in Pierce County on a drop-dead beautiful sunny day. I had scouted the saltwater spots over the last few days and except for the King Eider not much was terribly interesting so we decided to try some other areas. After meeting at the Hwy 512-I5 park and ride we headed for the Mountain View Cemetery marsh and oak woodlands. Raptor’s ruled the early morning, with two Peregrine Falcons spotted right off by Richard Smethurst and later Red-tailed hawk, Cooper’s hawk were seen as well. The second Cooper’s cooperatively sat on a small tree on the edge of the oaks area and kept the sparrows hunkered down while we enjoyed great views.
Next stop was at American Lake. First we went to the Camp Murray Boat Launch site and relocated the Canvasbacks that I had seen yesterday, and soaked up the sunshine as it started to warm up. Over at Harry Todd Park we got nice comparison looks at Mew, California and Ring-billed gulls. Love it when nearly all the gulls are adults. No hoped for Boneparte’s flock to search through for Little gull, but more sunshine, waterfowl and gulls made it a nice quick stop.
Next we headed for Mount’s Road where a Greater Yellowlegs was the best find. My favorite stop of the day was the last one, as the sun really warmed everyone up and we sorted through a nice flock of Golden-crowned sparrows and located a White-throated sparrow. It was seen really well by everyone, and several photos were obtained. This one is by Kathleen Miller.
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We also had great looks at Fox Sparrow, some of these were even singing.
We ended the day about 1:20 PM. It was really fun to get out with a group of experienced birders on a day when the weather could not have been nicer.

EVENT! Sievert Rohwer at ABC on Dec 2, 2015!

Join ABC on Wednesday, December 2, 6:45 pm, featuring Sievert Rohwer, Curator and Professor Emeritus of the University of Washington Burke Museum present: “Molt and Avian Life Histories”

Lecture Location:Pierce County Administration Center & Library. 3005 112th St E, Tacoma, WA 98446, Just E of Waller Rd and S of H512.

Price: $10, payable at the door.

Another blockbuster guest speaker for ABC! Dr. Rohwer has won numerous awards for his studies and theories, and he is willing to share what he’s learned with us!

For Dr. Sievert Rohwer, birds have played a central role in developing and testing theories of life history evolution, particularly those involving tradeoffs between reproduction and survival. Yet studies of avian life histories have seldom considered the importance of molt and feather quality as drivers of avian life history evolution. Instead, the period of molt in the annual cycle is generally ignored or unstudied with respect to molt constraining avian reproduction and evolution. Consider the survival cost of feather replacement. Flight performance is impaired during molt, yet no one has ever measured the effect of molting on survival, even though a complete molt takes 1-2 months in a small warbler, and most large birds cannot replace all their flight feathers annually. His talk will focus on how we determine the rules of flight feather replacement and on how large birds can and cannot accommodate their need regularly to renew their flight feathers.

Another important take-home message of this talk is the value of modern collections of extended wings for exploring these ideas. Beginning in the mid 1980s, the Burke Museum pioneered the development of saving an extended wing from every new bird specimen added to its collections. For large birds that cannot be collected in numbers, extensive salvage programs have developed a uniquely valuable wing collection that has supported many discoveries about the rules of flight feather replacement and how these rules affect avian reproduction and life history evolution.

Brief Bio:

Ph.D. University of Kansas. 1971.

Curator of Birds and Professor of Biology, University of Washington 1972.

Dr. Rohwer studies evolutionary ecology and behavior, mostly of birds, with interests in avian coloration, adoption of unrelated offspring by replacement mates, avian hybrid zones, brood parasitism, phylogeography, and life history implications of feather renewal. “Under my curatorship the ornithology collections at the Burke Museum became internationally distinguished, with the largest collection of extended wings in the world and the second largest collection of avian tissues in the world.”

Honors:

2006. AOU Elliott Coues award recognizing “extraordinary contributions to ornithological research.”

2011. Cooper Society Katma Award for “formulation of new ideas that could change the course of thinking about avian biology.”

Please join us and invite other interested individuals. For questions, contact Kay Pullen at kaypullen@me.com.

BRUCE BEEHLER EVENT REPORT

Report on BRUCE BEEHLER event, Nov 5, 2015:

ABC was very fortunate to snag Bruce Beehler to address the group and interested members of the public on November 5, 2015. Dr. Beehler is the Research Associate/Division of Birds, National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian Institution, and the world’s expert on birds and wildlife of New Guinea, having made numerous trips there over the years and co-editing the essential birding guide to this remotest of islands.

The University of Puget Sound hosted this event, thanks to Tahoma Audubon past board member and director of the Slater Museum, Peter Wimberger. Jerry Broadus of ABC, a board member of Tahoma Audubon, introduced Bruce, and then the fun began!

Bruce started out with descriptions of the terrain (no roads possible!) and the people and customs. Having met Bruce now, we can see how his friendliness and interest made him friends everywhere he went, which was certainly necessary in some of the more remote areas such as the mountains of western New Guinea. Landing strips and helicopter pads are the only points of contact for much of this area. Aerial photos brought this home to us. Out of the trees, it could be very hot, but quite bearable in the shade, if a little damp.

The slide show then switched to flora and fauna. Even the flowers (world’s largest Rhody flower!) and rats (the largest in the world, reminiscent of Conan Doyle’s “giant rat of Sumatra!”). But the birds — Wow! From huge (Cassowary) to a miniature parrot! And two POISONOUS showy birds, which were personally tested by one of Bruce’s colleagues. Wouldn’t want that job! Although the exact poison is known, the mechanism of how it made it from plant to bird is still unknown.

Amazing bower birds and birds of paradise just amazed us! One bird of paradise was “discovered” several decades ago by identifying feathers in a native’s headdress! The Raggiana Bird of Paradise is New Guinea’s national bird — sure puts the Bald Eagle to shame!

Bruce told us the amazing story of having 60 Minutes do their famous piece on him and his work in New Guinea, sending the late Bob Simon out there with him plus a full camera crew shipped in from Africa. Bruce was amazed at the professionalism and the silent acceptance they all had of the obvious hardships and how they got the job done. Bruce’s contacts saved the day for the TV crew when their helicopter failed to materialize, though, as Bruce was able to get one right away from his contacts. This TV experience turned out to be a pivotal experience in Bruce’s career, rocketing him to stardom, so to speak. And well deserved! Bruce used some of their film footage in his presentation, and it was great!

Bruce brought along a few copies of his books for sale. THE BIRDS OF NEW GUINEA: SECOND EDITION sold out to our group within 5 minutes. Luckily he brought more copies of his newer book, LOST WORLDS, ADVENTURES IN THE TROPICAL RAINFOREST, which includes New Guinea and lots of Bruce’s other expeditions.

The full house gave Bruce a round of applause and a bunch of interesting questions.

Click on the image below to enlarge: