Christmas Bird Counts, 2011-2 Edition

Black Oystercatcher, Albany, CA

Black Oystercatcher, Albany, CA

This past weekend was full of birds Birds BIRDS. I once again participated in two of the local Audubon Society Christmas Bird Counts, in central Contra Costa County and in Albany/El Cerrito for the Oakland Count. I’ve explained a bit about Christmas Bird Counts previously including here.

One enduring fact of local counts here seemed to be that the weather would exhibit some daunting combination of at least 2 of the following: cold, wet, or windy. To me, California CBC’s mean trudging out to the end of Albany Bulb, trying to keep my binoculars dry as rain drops pepper my raincoat.

Every once in a while the weather cooperates, and this weekend we had dry and calm conditions (if a little foggy in the morning of the CoCo count). The birds seemed to appreciate it too. Although duck numbers seemed pretty low, we did well, especially on the Oakland count. With Kevin’s great leadership and willing to actually count and look through large flocks of gulls, we ended the day with 110 species! This is all between the bay and top of the Berkeley hills. Possibly the most surprising bird for me were these guys, who were seen right off Buchanan street a few blocks from I-80.

Wild Turkeys

Wild Turkeys in Albany, CA

There are always some birds in the bay, and while we missed some that we usually see (Eurasian Wigeon, Red Knot, Blue-winged Teal, some of the other loon species) we still got some of the classic bay birding experiences, such as finding a perched Peregrine Falcon contemplating breakfast choices, or the wheeling, flashing flocks of small shorebirds crossing low over the water. While not particularly helpful for identifying birds, seeing the shorebirds scattered over immense stretches of exposed mudflat at low-tide gives one a sense that the fragile line between land and water here in the bay does provide quite a bit of habitat for many different species.

The upland birds were particularly active in the afternoon. Some counts we get a few pulses of activity, but we did quite well for bird diversity both at the often quiet Albany Hill and the Sunset View Cemetery. Some birds that we saw a lot of, and that were also seen by a lot of other folks in other parts of the count circle, were things like Lincoln’s Sparrows and Fox Sparrows (below).

Fox Sparrow

Fox Sparrow, Albany, CA

Also a treat was having Andrea Kissack from KQED Quest along with us to do a story on the Christmas Bird Count. Her voice is familiar to anyone who has watched the weekly science magazine on KQED, or listened to the radio or podcasts. She followed along with us for the morning, listening to the process of counting birds. She was also at the countdown dinner to hear the end result and species tally. The program should air in early January.

In the Contra Costa count, our group saw 90 species, and the entire count circle totaled in the 140’s.

Some Year-end Updates

I’m sure the blog doesn’t look any different on your end, but it does on mine, since I’m now typing on a new 13” Macbook Pro! My old laptop had served me pretty well for about 4 years, which I guess is about their typical lifespan. The old one still works more or less (sometimes more, sometimes less), but I decided to be proactive about getting the new model so I didn’t have to deal with a dead computer somewhere particularly inconvenient, like, for example, a trailer in Wyoming.

I’ve also moved forward with hosting for my website. I’m going to wait until I’ve got something up before I pass on the url, but it will be through LMI.net (the great local ISP in Berkeley). I’m also going to be tackling WordPress. Ideally I will have at least some of it ready to go by the time we head to the field. I think a likely scenario might be to shift the blog portion over to WordPress and wait on the static parts until after I get to the field. Those might benefit from some re-working rather than a wholesale copy-paste job, both in terms of the content as well as potentially distributing some of the media files to other hosts (e.g. linking all the videos to Youtube).

We had a great quarter in the lab. Lots of great students working on a few different projects, and it feels like we actually got some stuff done! We’ve made good progress on the analysis of our alarm call playback experiment. Preacher Lek is finished, and the Monument Lek data are coming in rapidly in spite of the challenge of having to work with data from a camera on the hill and a camera located in the playback blind diagonally behind the lek. Definitely requires some mental gymnastics to sort those out.

Most students were working on the female approach project. With our former student/current technician Becca, we wrapped up the female position data for one of the peak breeding days in 2007, which should complete our male strut rate data for that season. We have two remaining days from 2008 and one from 2006 that are in the finishing stages. Michelle, Tawny, and some others have been working on completing the lateralization dataset. That is really close to being done as well. And Becca has finished data collection on the mechanical sounds project. Cool! Now we just have to analyze these great datasets and write up (is that all?)

Welcome!

This is my new website. Stay tuned as I get it going- this is my first foray into WordPress. I will slowly be migrating content from my other website. Apple will be ceasing support for their .mac hosting by June 2012 so until then I may have things in both places.

Looking forward to adding much more here in the coming months!