Our 2012 Fall crew is just getting settled in here on Southeast Farallon Island. After two weeks, September has arrived, and so have lots of migrating landbirds, shorebirds, and even our first shark attack of the fall!
As you might have guessed, we have had some fairly foggy weather up to this point, (socked in all day today) but hopes are high for better visibility, calmer winds, and better conditions in general for migrant birds to find our island.
These first few weeks have already turned up some great records. The Ruff that you saw in our last post was only the first of some great observations including a Semipalmated Sandpiper, Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, and Hooded Oriole.
Over the next three months, we will be conducting surveys every day to monitor migrating seabirds, landbirds, shorebirds, pinnipeds, cetaceans, bats, white sharks, and even salamanders. Stay tuned to see what we will find!
Here are some photos of birds we have seen over the past week.
During a daily gull survey, Jim noticed this California Gull which was banded this year at the Mono Lake gull colony. |
We spend long hours counting all of the Black Turnstones roosting at high tide, so it's always a pleasant surprise when we run across a Ruddy Turnstone like this one. |
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher is an especially rare bird in California, however, 9 of the 24 accepted state records have occurred here on SEFI. |
1 comment:
I was hoping that you might donate the Pacific-slope Flycatcher image to my free online Birds of Vancouver Islandhttp://picasaweb.google.com/pat.mary.taylor There is a chance that the guide will be published as a book and you must be willing to do so with this in mind without payment. Please write pat.mary.taylor@gmail.com
Keith Taylor
Victoria, BC
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