Michigan Birding 101 Session 4 - Magnificent Migration
March 14, 2021
Welcome to our Michigan Birding 101 series.
This is Session 4 of a four-part series provided by Michigan Sea Grant and MSU Extension featuring tips and tricks and lots of great information from Extension educator Elliot Nelson. In this video, we'll learn about the many species who make their way to and through Michigan during migration.
We hope you’ll enjoy all four of the sessions and be inspired to head outside to do some birding!
Session 1 video – Basic Birding Skills: https://youtu.be/brQj2YNQj_w
Session 2 video – Backyard Birds: https://youtu.be/0-9a-5Pt258
Session 3 video – Winter Birding: https://youtu.be/3J6DKgz5NGM
Session 4 video – Magnificent Migration: https://youtu.be/Pfhgeqa0PhU
A special thanks to Darrell Lawson for sharing his Birding 101 tips as well as Skye Hass (https://borealisbirding.net/), Duane Utech and John Diephouse for use of their photos.
Video Transcript
Series of introductory slides, no audio
- Hello, hello, hello, hello.
Welcome again, everyone.
It's so good to have you back
for another edition of
Michigan Birding 101.
We are super excited
to share with you today
our last in our series of four classes.
And today we are talking about
spring, spring migration.
Thank goodness, winter
is coming to an end.
It has been a long winter for me.
I don't know about you,
but I am super excited to start hearing
songbirds again calling and
to start seeing the snow melt.
And that's what we're diving into today.
So if this is your first
time joining us before,
this program is brought to
you by Michigan Sea Grant
program of MSU extension.
we are federally funded through NIFA.
And we are committed to
diversity and civil rights.
And we also have a land
acknowledgement to recognize
that we are on tribal lands
and that we seek to promote
and work with our tribal
partners across the state.
If this is your first time again
or if you just need a reminder,
we have a chat box at the
bottom of your screen.
So if you scroll down to the bottom
you'll see a little chat box
and I've already seen some
cool comments coming in.
Some people sharing some great resources
and that's what that's for.
Get chatty on there.
Share cool stuff that's going on.
You can talk to each other.
I might ask you questions.
You can put them in the chat there.
But we also will have a Q and
A tonight with not just me
but also a special guests who will come in
on later in a little bit.
And you can put questions for us
for the end in the Q and A box.
Make sure they go in there
or we might miss them.
Another reminder as well that
tonight is being recorded
as our other three classes were.
And we do have plans to
get those closed captioned
and they actually should be up
on our Michigan Sea Grant YouTube
hopefully within the next few weeks.
All right, so let's dive into today.
I've got another poll for you.
If you're around last week,
I had to learn a little bit about these.
But I wanted to know just as a quick poll
and this is launching now
in front of your screens,
and you can just click yes or no.
Have you ever been to a birding festival
or on a guided birding trip?
And part of why I asked that
is because it's spring time
and that's normally when a
lot of these are offered.
Now, of course this year,
there's not nearly as many
in-person offerings as normal.
But in a normal year, as we
move forward, fingers crossed
there will be a lot of
opportunities to get out
and go birding with other people.
And I'm seeing that the lot
of people about 75% or so
as the answers are coming
in here, have not done this.
And I would encourage you
once it's safe to do so
to definitely get out and
bird with other people.
We covered in our first
two weeks a lot about
how to be a birder, how
to use your binoculars,
how to use a field guide
and how to kind of identify
what's in your own backyard.
But I will say the best way to learn
is really to get out there.
Whether you use a paid
guide or a paid festival,
or find some free walks
in your own neighborhoods,
go out with other birders
'cause that is one of
the best ways to learn.
And so I'm going to end the poll now
but really thank you for answering.
That's really enlightening.
It's about a quarter of
you have been birding
with other folks before on
a guide or on a festival.
And about three quarters have not.
So lots of opportunity out there.
I also have another question for you.
I'm really excited to hear this.
What is a species that
you would like to see
in Michigan that you have not seen before?
What is one bird species
you'd love to see?
Can you put that in the chat for me,
that would just make my
day, because I love hearing
about the different birds
that people are excited to see
because it gets me excited
to see those birds again,
even if I've seen them
hundreds of times before.
So snowy owl,
Ooh, time's running out
for that one for this year.
Although there are still some around.
Spruce grouse, that's a tough one,
but that is an awesome bird.
Indigo buntings just beautiful birds.
Kirtland's warbler, a Michigan specialty.
So, wow, lots of birds coming in.
And I'm noticing that a lot of these birds
you're going to start having
an opportunity to see them
in the next coming months
because spring migration is here
and a lot of birds are
going to start showing up.
So you can keep telling
me in the chat there
what kind of birds you're excited to see
and maybe you'll get to
see at least some pictures
of some of those as we
dive into spring migration.
All right.
Oh, and by the way, if
you didn't know what bird
this is on the picture here,
here's a little quiz for you.
And that may be, you might be
able to figure out what it is.
If you looked at that bird,
it did have a black head
and white wing bars,
which helps get you down
to just a few birds here, the
Baltimore and orchard oriole,
which are two that we have in Michigan.
But as you saw in that other picture
it's that bright orange.
So just again, a quick recap
of how do we do our ID skills
looking at that bill like that.
This is actually an
oriole, Baltimore oriole
and they're actually related
in the same family with blackbirds.
Alrighty, so I still see some stuff
coming through in the chat.
Glad to have you keep sharing.
And let's dive into our
spring migration now.
So today's goals, number one, have fun.
Get your questions answered.
See cool bird pictures.
That's our ultimate goal each week here
with the Michigan Birding 101 class.
But we also have two other goals,
two, learn how when and why birds migrate.
Bird migration is a fascinating subject.
And we're going to dive into how,
when and why birds migrate.
And then third, I really hope
that you can leave at the end here
with some ways to plan your
next spring birding trip.
And I really should add
to this as a fourth one,
is also, how can we
protect the spring migrants
that are coming through?
So we'll share a few resources
on how you can plan out your
own spring birding trip.
So how, when and why do birds migrate?
And these are three different species
of tree swallows that migrate up
pretty early in the spring time.
And so the first question
is why do they migrate?
Why go through the trouble
of soaring all across?
And you can see this a migration map
of Wilson's warbler on the right here.
And one of the big resource,
the main reason they
migrate is for resources.
And one of the major
resources is a driving factor
for why birds move and the most part,
and that is food, food.
Oh, that looks good, I
haven't had dinner yet.
So the Wilson's warbler
is one of the species
that migrates for food
and they head up North to go breed
in the far North regions of North America.
But as you notice, they're passing through
a bunch of other areas.
And part of that passing
through is actually
in some cases to get food
resources along the way.
So this is what they like to eat.
Little insects, flying insects primarily.
And one of those in
particular is the midge.
Now I can't pause this animation
but when you see the more these colors
represent the density of
Wilson's warbler sightings.
So basically it's a map of where they are,
and you can see the months ticking by
and weeks down there on the bottom.
So that tells you the
different time of year.
And you can see in the spring
they soar through all of
North America, rather fast
for a little tiny bird that
weighs less than an ounce.
But when they pass
through the Great Lakes,
they time this migration
so that they can access food
resources while they go.
So when they get to their breeding grounds
they're healthy and ready
to start making young.
And so when they get to the Great Lakes
one of the most things
that boggles my mind
there's tons of warbler
species that pass through
the Great Lakes in the
month of May mostly.
And when they're passing
through in that month of May
it just happens to be the
exact same time of year
Where a tiny little aquatic
insect called a midge
hatches out of the water and
lands on the closest surface
it can see it.
So it lands right on the trees and shrubs,
right on the shoreline.
And wouldn't you know it
that these warblers are
flying over the Great Lakes.
They actually soar over big
chunks of the Great Lakes.
And when they get across the
Great Lake, that's a big flight
and they're tired, and
they land on the shoreline
and right there on the edge of the shore,
when they land is a bounty
of feast of these midges.
If you've ever walked on a Rocky shoreline
on the Great Lakes in
May you will hit a tree
and all of a sudden, a
cloud of midge will land up.
Well, this is basically like
an all you can eat buffet
just waiting there for these warblers
that time their migration,
just in sync with these hatches
this phonology is just
absolutely incredible.
And that is why a lot of birds migrate
to get to different food resources.
And some of those
timings are just amazing.
Another reason birds migrate
is to get to nesting habitats
and to have space to stretch
out, to either avoid predators
or to have the proper nesting structures.
So this is barn swallows,
actually a global species
but this is the South American,
North American map here.
And it you're seeing that
the barn swallows spread out
all across a huge chunk of North America,
and their main nesting
structure is actually
a lot of barns, believe it or not.
Or other human built structures,
cliffs will work for them sometimes.
But what they really like to
do is create a mud structure
where they actually use their own saliva.
And they migrate North
where they have a plethora
of this space to spread out
so they're not too dense
and crowding each other out.
So nesting habitat is another
reason that birds migrate,
and to avoid predators
that may, for example,
if you are a ground nester,
you may go up to the Tundra
where there's very few predators
other than maybe just a few Arctic foxes
and you don't have to
deal with all the weasels
and all the squirrels that
may be eating your eggs
if you're a ground nester farther South.
So those are some of the
reasons that birds migrate.
It's really all connected to getting
to the resources that
they need to make young
and to further their population.
Now, how do they do it?
How do they know where to migrate?
You saw that the Wilson's
warbler was pretty far North
but some species have
very specific locations
they have to go to.
Tiny little islands way out in the ocean
where maybe some seabird
colonies might nest
or cliff sides
way up in Greenland where
maybe a gyrfalcon might nest.
And these are really specific places.
How the heck do they find
it when they start out
maybe all the way down in
South America and Brazil,
spending the winters in
the nice balmy rainforest,
the Amazon rainforest,
how do they get all the way up
and exactly to where they need to go?
Well, there are three
primary thoughts on this,
but really it's a mystery.
There's a lot of unknowns with migrations,
especially when it comes to the mechanisms
that trigger this for birds.
But ornithologists have
figured out quite a few things
and they're really mindblowing.
First off, visually.
So these birds are born, for example,
like a Connecticut warbler is
born up to the boreal forest,
and that tiny baby bird will grow
to an adult in a matter of a month.
Sometimes even less than
a month, three weeks.
And those birds it's
thought can actually imprint
onto the stars and actually memorize stars
as navigational maps.
They may also use the sun
and where it actually sets.
They may also use the landscapes.
Things like rivers or ridges
are known to be places
where birds often are concentrated
and flowing through in
migration, in high numbers.
And so visually a lot of
birds can use these features
like star, sun, and landscape
to help them navigate.
But what's even more
interesting is magnetically,
they can actually sense magnetic,
the electrical magnetic
wavelengths of the earth
and detect basically like a
compass using their inner ear.
Their inner ear has amounts
of iron in it, some species
and they are actually able
to detect the magnetic field
of the earth to navigate
just like a compass does.
And then finally, there's some research
and that may not necessarily
be for Kirtland's warbler
and all these aren't for
these three specific species.
I just wanted to put up some cool species.
These are for all birds in general,
some have a variety of these things,
but anyway, there's some studies that show
that some birds even
have a map of the world
through their nose.
And so they actually memorize the smells
of particular places.
Homing pigeons are one
example that's been studied
to show that they actually
smell their way home,
which is just truly incredible.
So the senses of birds
are just something that
are way beyond what we have in some ways.
And that is a bit about how they know
how to get to where they're going.
Now how far do they go?
Well, that really depends on the species
but here's just some cool examples.
This is the Arctic tern.
You may have heard of this example
but it still just blows my mind.
70,000 kilometers per year
is how far they migrate.
This was some backpack studies
where they put little geo
locators on these birds
just like they did with the snowy owls,
and they measured some
anywhere from 50 to 70
even somewheres up to almost
a hundred thousand kilometers in one year.
So 70,000 kilometers or 43,000 miles
is a really long way to go.
And they basically go from the Antarctic
all the way to the North
pole in a single year.
And this bird weighs like a
quarter of a pound, right?
That's like a banana or
like a banana and a half.
And that tiny little banana weight bird
can fly from the Antarctic
to the North pole.
That is just insane.
I can't even get to the North pole
if I tried with all of the
modern technology that I have.
And so it's just absolutely amazing
that just on their wings these birds fly
all that distance and
they do it every year.
For some of these birds
they can live up to 25, actually 35 years
is the oldest Arctic tern.
And by the time that they get to that age
they've basically flown to the moon
and starting to head back
that's how far they've
gone in their lives.
Just truly incredible.
And what they're doing as they keep flying
is basically just finding
those food resources.
They like little minnows, little fish,
and they're just stopping everywhere
there's a little bait pile,
and they've got it time perfectly
to sync with that phonology.
So just really, truly incredible.
But not all birds migrate far.
And in fact not even all
birds migrate North and South.
Some birds like the red crossbill
are really irregular movers.
And these movers, as you can see here
don't necessarily go really far North
but some years they'll go North
some years they'll go South
but I want to pause it right there.
And if you look in the
middle between the Eastern
and the Western population,
there's actually a bit
of orange in the middle.
And that's because in some years
these birds actually move East and West.
All the red crossbills do,
they're basically the
nomads of the bird world.
They just go fly around until
they find a bunch of cones
that they can get the
seeds out of the cone crop.
And in fact, these birds pair
up and they mate for life
and they will go around until
they find a big cone crop
and nest wherever they
find a big cone crop
regardless of the time of year.
So these birds can nest
in the dead of winter.
They can nest in August.
They just basically fly around
until they find enough food to say, okay
time to make babies.
And then they have their nest.
So just really a different
end of the spectrum
not really a true migrant
but these birds do move
to find the resources.
So that is a little bit
about how, when and why,
or how, where and why birds migrate.
And now let's hone in a little bit
on Michigan spring in particular.
So it's said that we're currently
in our second or third phase of spring.
I think this may be fool spring
or the spring of deception,
if you've seen that little infographic
that shows the 12 seasons of Michigan.
We definitely have
several phases of spring.
But for most birds, March
is the start of spring
and when many of them start moving around.
So before we get into that,
I want to do a little bit of review
from our earlier classes
and let you hear some
of the sounds of spring
that are coming our way.
And we're going to do a
little bird quiz right now
and I'm going to pop up a poll question,
and I'm going to play a
bird call for you and see
if you can guess which bird
species is making that call.
And again, a lot of these birds calls
and I'm going to play are
some of the first migrants
that you might actually be hearing now
in the month of March.
So let's launch this first poll here.
So this poll is asking,
which bird species is this call here?
(bird squeaking)
Thank you, Cindy.
Don't answer in the chat.
Just answer in the poll.
(bird squeaking)
okay, you hear that long trill.
It's either A, Red-winged blackbird
B, a blue jay, C, Rose breasted grosbeak
or D dark-eyed junco.
All right, last chance to get
your answers in, last call.
Last bird call.
And a lot of you got that right.
It is the Red-winged blackbird, A.
That wonderful sound is the
male Red-winged blackbird
who was one of the first spring passerine
or songbird migrants
to head back this way.
And they are starting to
show up across Michigan
even all the way up here in the UP,
I saw some reports of one
over on actually in Canada
on St. Joseph Islands today.
And so they are certainly common.
The males come first
to stake out territory,
and get ready for the females to come,
saying, look, I got a nice house for you
and this is where we're
going to have our family.
All right, let's go on to poll number two.
And this is going to be our
second bird quilt call quiz.
So let's give it a little listen.
(bird whistling)
Now, this is call You
start to hear around March.
And you'll hear it all through the summer.
And you may even have heard
it occasionally in the winter,
'cause this bird actually,
isn't a very long rage migrant
although they do have small,
shorter migration patterns.
But this bird makes a different call
that you're probably very familiar with,
but this call
(bird whistling)
is a little different.
(bird whistling)
This is (bird whistling)
the black cap chickadee.
So the Black cap chickadee
actually has a call
that it makes more as a territorial
or a mating attracting call
as opposed to the chickadee call
which we are more used to hearing.
So yeah, black cap chickadee.
Alright, good job, everyone.
Lots of good results there.
So, and if you do not get
it right, don't worry.
We're just here to learn.
This is our third quiz.
So I got to key up the
music here, here we go.
(bird squeaking)
All right, so I see lots
of results coming in
for this one that are very accurate.
And again, this is another
early spring migrant.
They are coming in in flocks now
starting to show up across
most of the lower peninsula
and will continue to increase number
over the next few weeks.
And that bird is the Sandhill crane.
That wonderful majestic
call of one of the largest
and most impressive and
beautiful birds we have,
in my opinion in Michigan.
All right, last quiz here for everyone.
This one is either a
bald eagle, a Canada goose
or a crane or a blue jay.
(bird squeaking)
I'll play it one more time for you.
(bird squeaking)
it's kind of a trick one.
(bird squeaking)
All right, I see more
answers coming in now.
All right, get your last answers in,
I'm going to end the
poll in three, two, one.
Okay, so a lot of people did get it right?
That is the sound of a bald eagle.
And you may be like, what?
I thought it'd be bald eagle
makes a different sound
like that loud screeching sound.
And that is because most
TV shows play this call,
(bird squeaking)
when they show you an eagle.
And that is not an eagle call.
That's a red tailed Hawk call.
An eagle makes a silly giggle
sound that a lot of people
just can't believe is our national symbol.
But yeah, that's what the eagle makes.
So we're going to skip
past this last one here
'cause I want to make sure we
get to our fun interview here
in just a minute, but
that was a little taste
for some of the March birds
that you might start to hear
over the next few days and weeks
as we get into fool's spring here, March.
You'll also notice that
at this time of year
we have our winter birds head off.
So right now the snowy owls
are congregating in the UP.
A friend of mine saw 13 snowy owls
in six miles of driving yesterday.
And that's because they're headed North
and they're starting to kind of move up
in small kind of loosely
associated groups.
R finches are heading North.
But in come some of our
new or early winter raptors
or early spring raptors rather,
rough legged hawks and American
kestrels are starting show up
in places in the North.
Kestrels may have been
down South all winter
for some of you lower peninsula folks,
but for us in the UP we don't
have them in the winter.
And they're starting to show back up.
Bald eagles and golden eagles
are also migrating now.
Those that spent the winter farther South
and are heading North.
We also have a lot of waterfowl.
So if you're driving around ag fields
in the lower peninsula right now
you may come across massive
flocks of Tundra swans
in the Saginaw Bay region or
another agricultural regions.
Canada geese, and maybe if you're lucky,
a snowy goose or even a Ross's
goose might be in there.
And big flocks of
dabblers start to show up
as the ice melts.
Some of these are around in the winter
especially in the lower peninsula,
but we don't have a lot of these waterfowl
in particularly in the
UP since it ices up.
And so these things are
starting to head North
and those that were
farther South are heading,
so the numbers really increase.
Of course also the Sandhill cranes
and the blackbirds are coming in.
Again, I'm just going to go
through this really fast.
I guess give you a bit of
flavor of spring migration
but I'll share some resources
to where you can really
dive deep into each species
looking at the bar charts, using eBird.
So don't worry about memorizing
this, it's just for fun.
All right, so April or pre
May as I like to call it
is when you start to get a slow trickle
of the early songbirds
that you'll actually
have quite a few more of in May.
But the swallows, like tree swallows,
rough winged swallows
barn, swallows come in.
Meadowlarks are beautiful
and very loud bird
is out and about this time of year.
Hermit thrushes are early thrush
that start to come in mid April or so.
And Ruby crowned kinglets
are one of my favorite
early spring songbirds.
And of course too, the sparrows
come in this time of year.
The Fox Sparrow is a big
chunky Sparrow, our largest
one of our largest
North American sparrows.
They are just a treat and
you can only really get them
in early April, mid April.
By May, they're kind of moving through.
So sparrows are another
really good species group
to focus in on in the month of April.
We also get the first to
arrive of some Tern species
as well as large flocks
of Bonaparte's gulls.
I've seen one of my favorite experiences
birding in Kent County
outside of Grand Rapids
was a flock of about 500
Bonaparte's gulls in a grassy field
just as the snow was
melting in early April,
they're a really cool sight.
And Gull species we
only have in migration.
They tend to move on farther
North for the summer.
All right, and then at
the very end of April
and this is really actually
not April more into May
we start to get the floodgates open.
One species group that people love,
and sometimes some people are just
they don't care about any other bird.
They just care about the hummingbirds.
And there's a place for you if that's you
or if you just want to learn
more about hummingbirds
Hummingbird Central tracks,
the migration of hummingbirds.
This is the current map right now.
They're down in the South.
But they're starting
to creep forward North
a little bit in the Eastern North America.
So expect to see them at
the last week of April
or first week of May starting to come in.
All right, then it's May.
So we get this trickle of, we get raptors
and we get waterfowl in
March in good numbers.
We get this trickle of
songbirds starting to come in
in April, along with more
raptors and more waterfowl.
And then we have may where
you still have raptors
coming through like massive
kettles of broad-winged hawks.
There's actually a count that takes place
in the Detroit river where upwards
of a hundred thousand Broad-winged hawks
have encountered in a single day.
It's amazing how fast
and fierce these Broad-winged
hawks move through
and sometimes in massive numbers.
And then you of course get
these backyard visitors
that are super colorful,
starting to show up like
Baltimore orioles, Rose-breasted grosbeak,
Scarlet tanagers and Indigo buntings,
but that's just the tip
of the iceberg, folks.
May is insanity for warblers.
We have 36 species of these
tiny little color bombs
that come up from central
America and South America.
Things like the morning warbler
and the Kirtland's warbler
and the Chestnutsided warbler.
These are all pictures
from my friend, Skye Haas.
just amazing how many species
of these tiny little half ounce birds
that are flying up from
super far away, just amazing.
And some of them just keep
going even farther North
and some will breed in the
Northern parts of Michigan
or the Southern parts,
spend the summer here
but a lot keep heading North.
And it's not done with that, people.
There's vireos, there's half
a dozen species of vireos.
There's flycatchers, like
the olive-sided fly catcher.
One of my favorite birds
and another half dozen
species of fly catchers.
You got your wrens coming
in, like the winter wren.
You got the thrush,
you got gray-cheeked thrush
and Swainson's thrush.
You got shorebirds.
Over 20 different species of shorebirds
starting to come through.
And more waterfowl, and more raptors.
May is a month of insanity.
It is the best time to be birding.
It might be a little overwhelming sounding
but I guarantee you,
it is just so much fun.
So definitely go bird in March,
definitely go bird in April
but definitely get out and bird.
If you're in the lower peninsula,
the first two weeks of May.
If you're in the upper peninsula,
the last two weeks of May.
Those are just the highlight times
where you have the most species,
the most diversity,
the most of everything.
All right, so hopefully that
got you a little bit excited
for spring migration, which
is just now kicking off.
But I want to switch gears a little bit
and talk about how do we know this stuff.
You saw those amazing maps of migration.
And if you check out eBird
there's also a really cool bar charts.
But that baseline data
about how do we know
that birds migrate?
Well, the big part of that
is because we have migration counters
like our guests today, Skye Haas.
So Skye feel free to turn on your camera.
That's it, I was trying
to multitask there.
And I'm going to introduce Skye,
and then we'll go through
a little bit of questions.
So Skye is an avid birder
tour guide and biologists
living in Marquette in the
upper peninsula of Michigan.
Skye grew up as a nature,
loving birder kid, me too.
The lure of the wild
was too great to ignore.
And he moved to the North
woods of the UP, the UP
to work at legendary Whitefish
Point Bird Observatory
one of the best migrations,
spring migration places
in all the country, maybe all the world.
And later attended Northern
Michigan University,
receiving a BS in conservation biology
with an emphasis on evolution and ecology.
As a field researcher,
Skye specialized foremost
as a migration counter
conducting raptor, songbird
and particular waterbird counts.
His most recent field
biology work has been on NOAA
doing seabird surveys and
mammal surveys off shore
with a focus on True's beaked whales.
He's got the Cape May
observatory record of 1,026,000
migrating waterbirds
counted in the season,
that one of his seasons counting there.
In addition to his years
as a field (indistinct)
Skye has ran his own guiding
business Borealis Birding
which we've showed the link to there,
where he's a personal guide
for folks who are looking for birds.
And he also works with
Eagle-Eye Tours, Wildside Tours
Nature Trek biggest week and
wings tours doing bird guides.
Skye's passionate enthusiasm for being
on a grand birding
adventure is infectious.
And in addition to helping
to connect people and nature
and getting opportunities to observe birds
and other wildlife, he
truly enjoys the ability
to help educate to our
participants on species,
ecology and evolutionary history.
Thank you for joining us today, Skye.
And I'm super excited to
be able to chat with you.
Skye is a person I
absolutely love birding with.
He is a wealth of knowledge,
so good to have you here at Skye.
- Hello everybody.
Thanks for having me, Elliot.
- Yeah, we're excited to have you here.
And I do want to remind you
if you have questions for Skye
as we talk, feel free to
put them in the Q and A
he's going to stick around for the Q and A
at the end of our session.
But I'm going to ask him
a few questions first.
So Skye, you said that migration counting
is sort of your specialty.
Can explain the job of
a migration counter?
And what are some of the highs and lows
of that type of position?
- Sure, well,
a migration counter is,
one way to describe it is
you're running an
endurance test of yourself.
Basically what we're
doing is we're out there
collecting data for migrating birds.
It's usually a season's worth,
anywhere from a month to
three months of monitoring.
We usually do it from just one location.
We have a set spot for waterbirds.
We try to put a count sticking out
on a little point of land into
the ocean or a Great Lake.
A Ridge top for a watching hawks.
You're definitely trying to use geography
to create the best sort
of a sampling method
for observing the passage of migration.
So typically the...
so for waterbirds, what time you start
what time of year you're running,
it depends on the protocol.
But typically for like at
Whitefish Point Bird Observatory
the hawk count starts in early March
and then the waterbird count
starts about a month later
and runs through to the end of May.
And for waterbirds, they
move early in the morning.
So we're out there at first light.
We count depending on the
count for either at the morning
or sometimes for an entire day.
And then hawks, they tend to
migrate later in the morning.
They want to have the warm air thermals
to pick up and migrate on.
I liked counting hawks,
you don't have to be up
at the crack of dawn.
so, but yeah, so you were just
collecting data for,
to try to see what's going on.
The weather is always a
challenge, 'cause it's
you can't just pack up and
leave if it's a nasty day,
because as they say,
negative data is data still.
So we want to know what
day birds are flying
and what conditions they don't like flying
which often involves a
poor migration counter
being all bundled up and just sort of
questioning one's life
decisions for a few hours
before you can escape
the wind in the cold.
But the good parts are amazing too.
just getting to witness the
spectacle that is migration.
I don't know, it's something that's always
been very exciting for me.
And it came easy to me
to just hone in on waterbird migration
and it's just is thrilling to be able to
participate in this scientific method
of collecting data of these birds
and what is just such a interesting
facet of their biology.
I mean, everybody knows bird sing.
Everybody knows that birds raise
young out of eggs and nest,
but what we, 'cause we can
see this, we can see a robin
doing that in our backyard,
but what a lot of people don't
see is the massive passages
that these birds are making
in their life cycles.
And the migration counts kind of
shine a little bit of light on that.
- It's really, truly impressive
the work that you migration counters do.
I just wanted to share really quick.
This is the waterbird
shack at Whitefish Point.
And so you can see it's a pretty,
that's where Skye, you've
done quite a few counts.
And like you were saying,
you have to stand out there
all morning long up til...
How long are you guys out there till?
You started Dawn?
- Yeah, it's an eight hour
shift at Whitefish Point
and that's the short one,
out at Cape May or Point Pinos,
we're doing Dawn to dusk.
- And you can see that
that's pretty far away from the water.
So Skye, is I think under
emphasizing how skilled
they have to be these migration counters.
Cause they're identifying flocks of ducks,
sometimes miles away
using spotting scopes.
And it's really a highly
technical skillset
that you migration
counters have to be able
to do that kind of
identification on the fly,
really impressive.
Skye, can you share, what are some of the
some of your favorite
Whitefish Point memories?
I just shared that and I
know that's where you've done
a lot of your migration counts.
What is your fondest
memories of Whitefish Point?
- Yeah, Well, I mean
Whitefish Point is certainly
it's my favorite place.
I first I grew up in Metro, Detroit
so I've always been a Michigander.
And my parents first took me up there
when I was a little kid
and I was already just enamored
with the wildness of the area.
And so I first started
working for Whitefish Point,
gosh, 20 years ago now.
I was a pretty green birdwatcher
I feel in those days still
and... (screen freezes)
their information and knowledge.
And that really allowed me
to just get to immerse myself
and learn so much.
And so just, the paradigm
shift that happened
in my first season of
counting at Whitefish Point
was certainly a life-changing
one for me and it,
I like to say it's the
moment I went from being
a bird watcher to a birdER
There's ... which favorite memory?
I mean, every spring, every fall there
it's always a special season there.
I think one of my most favorite
Whitefish Point memories
actually, it's just
from a couple years ago
we had just, it was a
cold start to the season.
And it was it just went on and on and on,
just weeks and weeks
of snow and North winds
and nothing was migrating.
And it was really kind
of got old after a while.
But you just like you get patient,
like I said, it's an endurance contest
because we knew when it all
when that weather would finally
break and...(screen freeze)
three weeks of virtually
no migration we just had,
Oh, I think it was like
18,000 Sandhill cranes.
And in just a couple of
days, we had an afternoon
with over a hundred kestrels
and harriers going by.
I mean, just like everywhere you looked
there were birds for
like four days straight.
It was a month's worth of migration
in just a couple of days.
And that's still, I think
is my favorite moment there
was just, it was better than Christmas.
- Yeah, that analogy of
opening the flood gates.
Open the flood gates, they
really do, they get bottled up
And then all of a sudden the migration
is just unworldly there.
And some amazing rarities
that Whitefish Point too.
I know I've seen some really cool stuff,
but if you they're like a shiny cowbird,
that central American or
South American cowbird species
that showed up just in the UP
- Right, now Whitefish Point
is absolutely legendary.
It's these points sticking out
into large bodies of water,
they concentrate birds.
And in particular I think
the upper peninsula,
Michigan is just, it's
kind of really getting
a name for itself on the national scale
for being just such an
interesting vagrant trap.
So you have birds that are migrating and
we know they're species
species have a pretty set range
that they tend to use and travel through
but birds also have wings.
So they end up in some weird places.
And we tend to call those vagrants
and Whitefish Point excels at
both with just huge volumes
of migrating birds that
are supposed to be there
as well as just it's a notable spot
for all these rarities, these vagrants
that have been traveling
in the wrong direction.
And because we're the upper peninsula
is just such a coast,
heavy geological feature
that a lot of birds there,
they just end up traveling
the entire length of the UP
till they end up at Whitefish Point
which is in so many
ways, the end of the road
for land.
Although I sometimes
who knows what happens
to these birds, but yeah
we're in a lot of great things there.
- Yeah, that's really cool. So you
mentioned these kind of
migration concentration points.
So the idea that raptors
they don't really like to cross water,
and so they'll kind of get
funneled to these points and then
where they can finally
get up the nerve to cross
over the water and then the
waterfowl follow the shorelines
the songbirds follow the shoreline,
and they get concentrated.
Can you tell us about some
of your other favorite
kind of migration hotspots
across Michigan, specifically.
Maybe some of the lower peninsula
and upper peninsula ones
that are similar to Whitefish
Point that you like?
- Sure, well my I often say like,
Waterbirds are my day job
but what I love to do
is just wander around
in the bushes and have
warblers in my face.
I mean, I love what you
said earlier, color bombs.
I'm stealing that.
My favorite way to do spring migration
is definitely to a
wander some little patch
of habitat along the coast,
looking for songbirds.
One spot in particular I love
is Peninsula Point near Escanaba.
It's like this little
miniature version of Point Pele
which I'm sure a lot of
people have heard before.
It just fills up with scarlet tanagers
and warblers and vireos.
A lot of those photos
you were showing earlier,
the warblers, a good majority of them
were taken at Peninsula Point,
but we're lucky here in Michigan
where we're full of places
like Peninsula Point.
So I grew up in Metro Detroit
and my grandmother was a board
member for Detroit Audubon.
So I went on a lot of the spring campouts
with Detroit Audubon growing up.
And they would often go
up to the Camp Mengatasi,
which is just near Tawas Point.
And Tawas is the place
Tawas is it's great
cause it's close to
Lansing, Ann Arbor, Detroit.
So the vast majority of
citizens in Michigan,
they can just get out to a Tawas Point
for a day or a weekend.
And the amount of birds that use that area
is definitely worth the trip.
Point Mouillee down in Metro,
Detroit is another spot
that I used to go to a lot growing up.
And it's great 'cause it
has another suite of birds
that we have not talked about so much
and those are the shorebirds.
The sandpipers, the plovers,
these really awesome wild
looking birds called whimbrels,
they are a type of curlew.
These are all found in a
Point Mouillee in the spring.
And sometimes just
hundreds if not thousands
of them will be present
down there, Mouillee.
And then I guess the another place
I have to mention is Brockway
mountain up in Copper Harbor
at the very Northern end of Michigan
is a fantastic spot to watch hawks.
there's several hawk watching locations
and throughout Michigan, the
Detroit River, Whitefish Point.
But at Brockway up there
in a Copper Harbor,
you just you get some
great, great looks at hawks.
The ridge is so high up that
often we're looking down
at golden eagles as they're passing by.
Oh, I'm seeing a question here.
Someone wants to know
about Western Michigan.
For Western Michigan
people, Berrien County.
Berrien County, like the Warren Dunes area
the Sarett Nature Center and
the score near waterfront park.
These are all places that
if I was going to go bird
in spring migration, I
would be going there.
- Yeah, I normally like
to do an annual pilgrimage
to Berrien County the first week of May
to get these kind of Southern warblers
that we don't get up here in the UP.
Like hooded warbler and the
yellow-throated warbler.
And Michigan's really cool
because we do have such
an extent of habitat.
The Southern part, you
get these special warblers
and then up here in the Northern part
we get things like Canada warbler.
And if you're lucky, Connecticut warbler
and some of these others.
So we really do have a lot of
amazing places to go birding.
So thanks for sharing some of those.
So I know that you've
also done migration counts
at a lot of other places.
Can you just in like a minute
and a half or something
give us a couple of highlights
of just like a few like another place
and like a cool thing you
saw there or a cool event.
- Well, I've counted.
So I've counted the North
coast here in Lake Superior.
I've counted the East coast at Avalon
which was an amazing amount of birds.
We had my very first season there,
we had over a million
waterbirds migrate by
which was pretty amazing.
I tend to use a call to Whitefish Point
was where I did my undergrad work.
Cape May was where I
got my master's degree.
And then my final waterbird
count project I did
which I just called
getting my doctorate was
the Point Pinos waterbird count project
out in Monterey, California.
And that was an incredible
that was the best, coolest
job I've ever been on.
And it gets all summed up like this.
there's the hundreds of thousands
of shearwaters and loons
and phaleropes that are migrating by
but in my first three hours on the job
I saw a pair of blue whales go by.
So that just everything else was gravy.
- Yeah, really incredible.
So could you maybe
summarize what you think is,
why is it important for
migrations counts to take place?
And and what can we learn from them?
Or what have we learned from them?
- Okay, great question.
It's a lot of reasons, a lot of reasons.
Migration counts they give
us this bottleneck location
that we can observe a
lot of birds moving by,
and a good example of why we
just want to stay at one spot
and count these birds is
it's an effective way to monitor
populations in some cases.
That Monterey job I
was just talking about,
in a six week period, I ended up counting,
I was like 29% of the
world's Pacific loons.
It is in that six week period.
And so like if one was going to be trying
to survey Pacific loons
I mean, they nest all
across the Arctic Tundra.
So that'd be a really
hard way to survey them.
And then they're just also overwintering
out on the open ocean,
pretty much impossible
to survey a population.
But because like I said almost
30% of the world's population
migrate past Monterey, California.
It's an effective way
to be able to keep tabs
on a species overall population numbers
and look for trend lines is 'cause like
just because you might
have like a poor season
that it's not necessarily says,
oh we don't want to say, oh,
this bird is in trouble now,
it's getting threatened.
But in a long-term over you
look at a 20 year data set,
and like Whitefish Point we have seen,
we've been collecting
data at Whitefish Point
for 40 years now.
And we continually see common
loon numbers are going down.
Some species are going up,
but like common loon is definitely a bird
that is not so common anymore.
And another really valuable
lesson ah not lesson, reason
for counting doing these
migration counts is
it's to see changes in their
status and distribution
in their occurrence levels.
And also it becomes a good
monitor for climate change.
There is already several studies
from using long-term
migration kind of data
that is showing that for spring birds
that their return date is happening
on average earlier and earlier now,
especially in the last 10 years.
And within fall migration,
birds are definitely
showing up much, much later.
For example, like Cape
May, the waterbird count.
There has been running for 30 years
and they used to have
a peak of their scoters
which is one of the main
birds that pass there,
kind of our bread and butter bird there.
They used to peak around Halloween.
Now they're peaking almost about
getting close to Thanksgiving.
So that's almost three weeks a month
of a population shifting the
majority of its migration.
So without these migration counts
we would not have that yardstick
to measure these things by.
- Okay, thank you so much for sharing.
It was really cool to hear
about your different experiences
and really interesting to
hear about the importance
of monitoring bird populations,
so that we can have a pulse
on the health of our
ecosystems and climate.
So we're going to come back
to you in just a minute
but I'm going to share
a couple of resources
and then we'll get into our Q and A.
So if you want to plan your spring trips
the nice thing about Michigan
is you don't have to go far.
So birding trails are a great resource
we have across Michigan.
And these have highlights
of where you can see
birds in these locations.
And you can go to the
Michigan Audubon website
and check out birding trails.
And that can be a great way
to help plan your trips.
Oops, one more, I forgot about that one.
There's also a lot of festivals.
I'm not going to spend
too much time with this
'cause most of these
are canceled this year.
But basically April, May and
the first weekend of June
there are festivals across the state
where you can go on guided
trips at a pretty low rate.
And they are a lot of fun
and a great way to improve your skills
and get out there and
see some amazing things.
And even Whitefish Point
has a spring fling,
the last weekend in April.
So put that on your calendar for 2022.
And then another great resource is eBird.
They actually have a tool called BirdCast
that monitors live migrations for you.
So if you want to know if
today is going to be a good
birding day this tool does that for you.
And it uses both habitat and Doppler radar
because there's so many birds
migrating in the spring.
They actually show up at
night on Doppler radar.
And we can look at that radar
overnight to know how dense
that migration was.
Last but not least is eBird
which has a ton of resources
for planning trips
including just the simple,
look at your local hotspots.
So this is Bay City here
in these pins are hotspots
and you can click on them and
see what people are reporting.
They also have bar charts for,
you can put in all of Michigan or a County
and these are months each column
here where these bars are.
And it shows you that, for
example, the Bufflehead
peaks in April and May, early May.
And then, or March and April rather,
and then tails off in May.
So you can kind of target species
by the time of the year using these.
Of course, you can also
report your birds to eBird,
which helps citizen science efforts
fuel real science research on
bird, health and distribution.
You can be a part of that
migration count yourself
by reporting birds to eBird.
And last but not least,
we all have a role in helping these birds.
Literally billions of birds
are flying over our head
every single spring.
Many of us don't know it, but
those birds are in jeopardy.
Lights from humans can really throw off
their navigational abilities.
So if you have lights on at
night, turn them off if you can.
Keep your cats indoors
we've already talked about
how outdoor cats kill billions
of birds every year in North America.
Invest in windows strike deterrence.
So using these simple methods
you can stop birds from
smacking into your windows.
And then upload your sightings to eBird.
And then finally try native landscaping
and don't use pesticides.
These are things we
covered in our last classes
but I wanted to put them as a reminder
that they're especially important
in the spring migration months
when we have these rivers
of birds flying overhead.
With that, we have now about 10 minutes
for our Q and A time,
And Skye, if you can come back on here.
And Cindy's going to tell us
some questions that we got.
So hopefully you enjoyed that and
and let's see what
questions are out there.
- [Cindy] Well, thanks so much Skye.
I know I've been out to Whitefish Point
and I'm just amazed at watching
the counters out there.
And one of our questions that came in is
how do you count those large?
I mean, like you're talking
when the thousands are going by
how do you figure that out?
You're not counting each
one, I know that, so.
- Yeah, it's we're using a mix of methods.
Often birds aren't, even on
the really, really big days,
there's still a pacing
to the rate of which they're flying by.
So sometimes it is literally
just counting by ones
but you definitely,
the longer you're at it
the better you kind of
get at estimating numbers.
So when I'm like out at
one of the ocean counts
you can get really big
numbers of birds going
so I'll often be using a
tally clicker in my hands.
And sometimes I'll even have to switch
where I'm like clicking by
ones to clicking by tens
to clicking by fifties even.
And when they're really rockin'
and sometimes you just
got to be like, well,
that's about what 500 scoters looks like
and you have to move on to the next flock.
And when a time allows
for a little more nuance
I try to count one by one.
But a lot of it is just
scanning and clicking birds in
with tally counters.
I often have, my telescope
is hanging with several
like anywhere from like
five to 20 tally clickers.
And it's like becomes like muscle memory
where I'm just staring through the scope
clicking as these birds are flying by.
And it's a challenge, it's fun, I like it.
- [Cindy] It does sound like a challenge.
Now we've talked about
birds migrating at night.
Are there birds that migrate
during the day then, Elliot,
and how do you know or or Skye,
and which different birds do which?
- You want to answer Skye?
- Yeah, sure.
Definitely, there are,
a lot of birds do sort out to like,
are they diurnal migrants?
Are they nocturnal migrants?
By and large, larger
that they to tends to be
larger birds are day migrants.
One of the big reasons why they think
nocturnal migration happens
is that it's safer for birds
because they're not as
exposed to predators
in like a Peregrine falcon
can pick off a duck migrating.
But with these sharp-shinned hawks
that are trying to like get warblers
the warblers just feel like, okay,
the safest thing we can
do is migrate at night.
Hawks tend to be day migrants.
And then waterbirds are goofy.
They will fly both at
night and during the day.
So it there's a mix of of methods
that birds will even use within species.
Like I was saying warblers
are mostly a night terrain migrant.
But here along the shores
of the Great Lakes,
we do get this interesting
phenomenon called morning flight
where songbirds find themselves
a few miles off shore over the lakes.
And they don't want to be
there during the daytime.
So they make a beeline for
the closest point of land.
And then from there they
will often have to do
some sort of reorientation
flight to get to where
they want to be for the rest of the day.
And that'll sometimes
happen for a couple hours
and into the morning.
- [Cindy] Thanks.
So we talked about how they
kind of navigate sometime,
but somebody who was wondering
how to bird see compared to human eyes?
And how do they not run
into trees in the forest?
- Well, birds are really
amazing and you know,
their ways that their eyes work
and their brains processes
probably hard for us to perceive.
They see light in higher
and in a wider range.
They can see ultraviolet lights.
And that actually makes some birds
look different colors to other birds.
And so, yeah, they have a different range
on the electromagnetic range
where their eyes can see.
So that's kind of neat.
How they avoid trees or
each other, for example
in a murmuration I'm not
sure of the answer to that.
I think it's just ingrained
into their biology,
these quick muscle memory responses
that they have and the ability.
And you do have to remember
too, they're are a lot smaller.
So a gap that we see
in a tree that's like,
Oh I'm going to have to be
squeezed in through there,
that's actually a pretty
sizable gap for most birds
since they're a lot smaller than us.
But Skye, do you have any
other insight on that?
- No, just I agree with you,
Physiologically speaking,
birds are amazing.
They definitely, we got the
brains, but they got the skills.
- That's a great summary right there.
Thanks.
- [Cindy] Switching over
to one of my favorite birds
somebody is asking a question
about migrating hummingbirds.
Do they return to a
specific spot, for example
this person's backyard or
my backyard, the same bird?
Is that coming back to the same spot?
- - I'm not totally sure
on what it's called,
I think is it called
site fidelity of species
to particular nesting locations?
So there's a wide range
across bird species.
Some don't return to the same area
and some return very specifically.
I was talking about those gyrfalcon that
there's 2000 years of gyrfalcon
going under this exact
same spot on a cliff side.
So they're returning to the same spot.
Hummingbirds, I would assume
probably don't have a ton of site fidelity
since they're kind of small,
but I don't know if you have
any other insight on that Skye.
- I don't know about
hummingbirds in particular,
but it does seem that
a good chunk of birds
do have a site fidelity to their
favorite breeding location.
I know that the loon
researcher, Joe Kaplan
who works at Seney
National Wildlife Refuge,
he really sort of determined there's like
the loons had a really high site fidelity
to their breeding ponds.
And that this actually,
the concept of like birds mating for life
is not actually the best
way to thinking about it.
That it's like these birds have chosen
this nesting spot for life.
And so then you have the male-female pair
that like were beholderen to this spot.
So we keep coming back to this spot.
But then the moment that one of those,
one of that male-female
pair doesn't show back up,
the other bird that is on
that side, it's like, okay
well, your loss.
I'll go find someone new
because it's about the spot.
Not necessarily, it's partner.
- That's interesting.
we certainly saw that
play out in the eagle nest
where the male that I watch on the webcams
and the male didn't come back one year,
and the female eventually raised the young
and then moved on to another
mate in the same nest.
Somebody did ask, do eagles return
to the same nest year after year.
And my understanding is that's true.
- Yeah.
- Yep, definitely.
There's a nice big one here in Pickford.
And I did do a little search
and I found at least one source that
seemed it had an actual paper cited that
hummingbirds do have
pretty high site fidelity
so they do return.
But they do die.
So if you have had one for 20 years
it's probably not the
same one for 20 years
their lifespans aren't super long
although they can hang around for awhile.
Get lucky or something.
- It's an interesting question here.
Do you think that the
pandemic has affected birds?
- The pandemic has affected
nearly every aspect
of human life.
And because we are one of
the most dramatic impacts
on local ecosystems, the
answer probably is yes
to some degree.
And one of the larger impacts
has been the reduction in travel,
which I know has kind of
lessened air pollution
in certain places.
Because there's less people
out and about traveling,
probably not enough to slow
climate change or anything, but
it probably does replicate
what we need to do
which is really cut back
on our carbon emissions.
So there's some of that.
There are of course negative impacts too.
Like the pandemic has sort
of seen a huge research
in disposable plastics
and disposable masks
and things like that.
And that ends up as microplastics
which are really becoming an
increasingly large problem,
especially for seabirds
and other aquatic animals
that are consuming
these pieces of plastic.
So yes, it's probably had some impacts
but it's hard certainly to know
at this point what those might be.
It was also had a big impact
on birders and birding.
There's anecdotal stuff
coming out right now
that's saying that birding
has really increased
as people look for ways to
maintain their mental health
and still find a way to get
out and enjoy nature safely
and engage with that.
And that may have a big lasting impact.
Because generally birders
learned about birds
and loving birds.
And then they learn the reality of
that many birds are in a lot of trouble
and we're to blame for that.
And so hopefully it will
create more conservationists
and people taking action to
help protect those birds.
- And that my friend is an excellent segue
into thanking everybody for being part
of our birding 101 class
because that's exactly what we sure hope
you will go forth and bird
all this year and beyond.
And it's 8:01, so I want to make sure
to be real conscious of people's time
and say thank you to Skye and
to Elliot and to everybody
who has attended over these times.
Elliot, are you planning
on sticking around
to do a couple of questions?
- Yeah, I can stick for
a few more questions...
- [Cindy] We do want to let people know
that if they need to
go, we'd understand it.
We won't stay on too long though, Elliot.
We're not going to stay on too long.
- I don't know if Skye and I get chatting.
- [Cindy] We do have a question that said,
did you see in the news
that a couple in Illinois
saw a yellow Cardinal?
You've seen that?
- Yeah, yeah.
So yellow Cardinal made a
big splash a few years ago
and these color variants recently,
half male plumage to half female plumage,
cardinal also made the news.
And these are really cool.
Plumage variations are caused
by a number of different
genetic abnormalities
that cause either albinism or melanism
or the extra pigment.
- [Cindy] Hey Skye, we're
getting a little bit of feedback
on your computer on that.
Sorry, sorry.
- Yeah, but it is just
that, it's an anomaly.
And it's pretty cool to see.
- [Cindy] I saw an Albino robin at MSU
in the horticulture gardens.
That was pretty exciting to see.
Is a midge what fisher
persons call fish flies?
- No, there are actually a ton
of different aquatic insects.
In fact, most of our insects that we have
a lot of them spend a huge
portion of their life,
maybe years in the water,
and then eventually come out and hatch.
The Great Lakes are a massive bowl
of basically insect breeding.
And fish flies, I think
are maybe stoneflies or...
The problem with that is
there's a lot of common names
that get thrown around for these things,
but there are other hatches beside midges.
We have the mayflies, you have
stoneflies that hatch out.
And they happen throughout
different times of the year
on summer, primarily.
And those again are taken
advantage of by different birds
like a variety of different
colonial bird nesters
may take advantage of the mayfly hatch.
And these provide really
protein rich sources
for a lot of our birds
that are dependent on the Great Lakes.
- [Cindy] Here's an
interesting question too.
Why does some birds migrate so far North
instead of just flying
to the forested areas
in the Northern US or Southern Canada?
Why do they keep going?
- You want to answer that one, Skye?
- Yeah, it's all about food resources.
I'm sure you've heard
stories about just how
miserable the Arctic is
in regards to its mosquito situation.
But that's a lot of food for a baby birds.
There's a lot of studies
have shown for example
that warblers actually
that they in the tropics.
And that they began to
go farther and farther
to search for food resources.
And that ultimately becomes a trade off of
the dangers of migration,
of traveling so far
to the boom that is a summer feeding
for raising up a nest full of babies.
So it's, there's a lot of
insects in the far North,
and that's why they're going that far up.
And because there's also so many,
so in the tropics there
are already a ton of birds
that are year round residents.
So that's,
there's only so many resources.
So they're, they're trying to
exploit these boom resources
in the far North.
- [Cindy] I see Amber
still on and she asked,
she's going to visit
in Gaylord in mid May.
So what about the good
birding spots there?
- That is not a place that
I have birded in mid May.
But it is a spot where very close
to where Kirtland's warblers come.
So there are guided
Kirtland's warblers tours
if you've never seen one in Gaylord
where people come from around
the country to see these birds
because this is the
only place in the world
that this bird nests.
They have a very small population, in fact
it was almost under a 200
singing males at one point.
They were nearly extinct.
They were brought back from
the verge of extinction,
but there's still a very small population
just a few thousand of these birds.
And so that's what most people go
to the Gaylord/Grayling area for.
And the forest service in partnership
with the local Audubon
does some guided tours
to take people to where they are.
So that's probably what
most people go for.
But just find a local pond
or river, follow the rivers
and walk along the river areas
that can be really good during migration.
Wastewater treatment plants
are actually exceptionally
great places to bird watch.
If you have one that you're able to access
or see the ponds from,
they can attract waterfowls
and along the edges
there'll be lots of midges
hatching out of them.
So good places for migrants too.
- [Cindy] Do just have
someone asking, Skye,
do you teach any classes on
bird or wildlife photography?
- Not currently.
And I've done some outreach stuff
with my Borealis Birding Company, but I am
I have some plans to do some
birding teaching classes
next year, but nothing currently.
- [Cindy] Great.
One other question on there is
are there opportunities
for the general public
to be involved in or
observed the migration counts
at Whitefish Point or Brockway Mountain?
- Yeah, yeah.
Visitors are all welcomed.
The counters there, they are hired
by the organizations that
are running these sites.
So there's not really any
volunteer type opportunities
but honestly, one of the
ways that I became a birder
was just by going up to Whitefish Point,
sitting there on the Hawk deck,
sitting there by the water
bird shack and just listening.
Listening to what the
other birders had to say
or how they did it.
And you just eventually
you start soaking it up.
I think one of the best ways that
a birdwatcher can contribute to a science
is as Elliot had brought
up earlier to use eBird.
eBird is a fantastic method
to get people engaged
and take their sightings and
turn it into meaningful data.
And even if one's still just starting out
as a beginning birder,
there are people who vet this data,
crazy stuff gets caught.
And the important thing is just like,
the individual data points,
the more the merrier.
So like definitely eBird
is a fantastic resource to contribute.
- [Cindy] Yeah, and Wanda
also mentioned in our chat
that they are looking for volunteers
to help count Kirtland warblers.
And someone else just posted
citizen science projects
through Cornell Lab Of Ornithology too.
- So actually...
- [Cindy] Any time we
get volunteers there.
- Cornell is is who runs eBird.
So that's probably most
of their science projects
run through eBird now, but yeah,
they do have a few other offshoots.
- [Cindy] So one quick question,
what effect do you think the wind farms
are having on migration of songbirds?
- Yeah, so, you know,
it's kind of a double-edged
sword with wind farms.
Climate change is one
of the biggest threats
to bird species in the world right now.
It affects on nearly every
bird species across the world.
And there's definitely more
that are going to be harmed
by it than they're going
to be helped by it.
And so wind farms are a
potential energy source
to really help offset that.
But unfortunately right
now there hasn't been
a ton of consideration
on wind farm management
to help reduce bird kills.
Birds do run into the turbines.
And there's studies going on now
to try to exactly evaluate that impact.
That doesn't mean that
wind farms can't happen
in a way that is safe for birds.
There are methods of marking the blades
in a way such that they are less likely
to be hit by a bird, to be more visible.
There is also a lot of
consideration that has to take place
on where the wind farms go,
because migration although
it is pretty massive
and across the whole country
does have migration hotspots
and funnels like we talked about.
So placing a wind farm where
those migration funnels are
could potentially have a
really negative impact,
or as opposed to placing
them where migration
is much dispersed might
have a much lower impact.
So it is an issue that
needs to be considered
with wind farms.
I don't know if you have anything
else to add to that, Skye.
- Yeah, just real quick.
Yeah, its location is a big part of it.
I think style of wind
farm goes a long way too.
I personally would like
to see us move away
as a society from the big huge wind farms
to a more dispersed level of
wind mills being just installed
throughout communities on
a tiered to help sort of
keep the effects of a massive farm down.
But like the location is a big one.
Like we definitely here
in the Great Lakes,
it's the fish and wildlife
currently recommends
that they don't put towers
within 10 miles of the lake shore.
Currently, there is no actual regulation
that forces the wind companies do it.
So we do have companies
that are putting wind towers
right up on the lake shore,
because you got to get good gusts of wind.
They are definitely
favorable locations for wind.
But the very famous birder
and author, Ken Kaufman,
who I'm sure at least some of you
have probably heard before.
he had a great statement about wind farms
being on coastlines of
why that you wouldn't,
that you have all these
birds pouring off the water
during migration, and it's
done, they're coming in.
They're tired.
They've been migrating
for hundreds of miles,
and they're basically
they're making a landing on the shore.
So as Ken Kaufman says,
you wouldn't put a turbine
at the end of an airplane runway.
So why would we do it at the
end of runway for migration?
I liked that, I liked that.
So it's about siting,
siting is a big part.
- [Cindy] Interesting.
Yeah, this is a great, so I'm going to,
I'm going to let this one be the last one.
'Cause it's getting about that
time that we got to wrap up.
There's some that we
haven't been able to get to
and I apologize for that
but there are just so
many great questions here.
But I love this one because
it's a very much a bird activity
that we will all see as beginning birders
and experienced birders.
I often see a very large bird
with a tiny bird flying close by.
What's up with that?
So I'm assuming to me,
that's a Raptor getting
chased by a smaller bird.
or it's always, for me it's always
the birds ganging up on the bigger bird.
And so it's always
surprising when you see,
and it's all subjective as to which is
you don't know if it's a, it
could be an eagle with crows.
It could be a Hawk with jays chasing it.
It's always fun to see that, I think.
And it's always amazing that
the bigger bird doesn't just turn around
and take a swipe at him.
- Yeah, that mobbing behavior
is really interesting and unique.
You may have even experienced it
if you walk too close to your
Red-winged Blackbird nest
they may start dive bombing you.
And there'll be actually mixed species
flocks of birds that will gang up.
I've seen here on campus, a long-eared owl
at Lake Superior State University
that I heard this crazy sounding squirrel.
And I looked up and there
were like a squirrel
and a chipmunk and a chickadee
and a crow and a blue jay.
And they were all just
ticked off like none other.
And that was because
there was a long-eared owl
snuggled up against that tree there.
Not for much longer, he kind
of got pushed out by them.
But yeah, so those birds
do have that instinct to
get those predators out of there,
even if that means working
with a different species
to get it done.
- [Cindy] So I just want
to say, thanks again
to everybody for tuning in.
And I hope that you will go forward
and find some really fun bird activity,
watch their behaviors,
learn those backyard birds.
And a lot of folks are putting in the,
we hope you're going to do another one.
We hope we're going to do another one too
but we're not sure yet
what it's going to be.
There's been some great suggestions
about like doing the Raptor class
or doing a warbler class
and we get so excited.
We'd be happy to do them all
but we do have to do other
things in our jobs too.
So thanks everybody.
Skye, thanks so much, Elliot.
Awesome as always.
- Bye everyone, thank you.
- [Cindy] Bye bye.
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