This is one of our recently banded birds, Who is it?
Click here for more Tuesday Teasers.
Click "Continue reading …" for the answer and more information about this bird.
This is one of our recently banded birds, Who is it?
Click here for more Tuesday Teasers.
Click "Continue reading …" for the answer and more information about this bird.
Birder Ray Duffy reports: " I visited Laurel Hill Thursday evening around 5 p.m. I walked the waterfront path behind the Xchange Place complex. With a spotting scope, I saw a Pied-billed Grebe and a Clapper Rail across the Hackensack River in the Saw Mill Creek Area a.
"Other notables included Savannah Sparrows, 3 White-throated Sparrows, Palm Warblers, Yellow-rumped Warblers, a Common Yellowthroat and 8 Killdeer.
Water levels are still historically low in the main impoundment at DeKorte, but the maintenance work is almost over and there is a need to bring water back in to rehydrate the mud, flush the impoundment, replenish the fish population, and (soon) bring water levels up for the wintering ducks.
Water levels should be low throughout the weekend, though, and we still have plenty of shorebirds around — including this Black-bellied Plover and six of his buddies.
We saw him toward the end of the Transco Trail, near the Turnpike. Smaller photo shows his "black armpit," a good diagnostic. We took these photos Thursday.
We also have plenty of Semipalmated Plovers, a Semipalmated Sandpiper or two, and a Pectoral Sandpiper or two — in addition the dozens of egrets and gulls and yellowlegs. Also seen: Green-winged Teal, Ruddies, Black-crowned Night Herons.
If breeze is strong , the birds tend to be hunkered down in the back. Best viewing is from blind on the Marsh Discovery Trail, second-closest to the Transco Trail.
The last reported Sora was last Sunday but they could still be around. Ditto the Least Bittern.
This guy is hanging out with a bunch of Semipalmated Plovers and a Pectoral Sandpiper on the rocky beach along the Transco Trail.
If anyone can help ID this guy, please e-mail Jim Wright.
NJMC naturalist Mike Newhouse and a small bunch of great volunteers have been busy banding birds on or near the closed Erie Landfill as part of a larger research project aimed at creating more habitat for threatened and endangered avian species.
One of the stars of September: the threatened Savannah Sparrow (above). More than 150 were banded last month. We also banded 50 Indigo Buntings.
Many of our Tuesday Teaser close-up photos were taken of these banded birds.
Click here for previous blog posts on bird banding.
Click "Continue reading…" for the entire list.
We have had nearly a dozen Semipalmated Plovers along the rocky beach on the Transco Trail in DeKorte Park in recent days.
Not only are they beautiful little birds, but they don't seem to mind
humans much.
When we were looking at some shots we took of the little guys this week, we realized that some of the shots actually showed the "semipalmated" part of the plover.
More on Semipalmated Plovers here.
More on the term "semipalmated" here.
More on pronouncing "Plover" here and here. (Glad we got that settled.)
NJMC naturalist Brett Bragin netted this finny fellow over the summer.
What is it?
Click here for more Tuesday Teasers.
Click "Continue reading…" for the answer and more information about this amazing fish.