Sunday, February 27, 2011

Four-and-a-half Digiscoped Hummingbirds

I've been home in Tucson for just this past week between two tours – just back from the Maya Lacandon region of Mexico and now on my way to Hawaii.

As soon as I got home, the new Zeiss 85mm Diascope arrived (actually UPS tried delivering it three times while I was gone, and I was thrilled they came by a fourth time). Despite tons of post-tour stuff to do and the need to prepare for this next tour, I couldn't resist spending time in the back yard trying out the new scope and digiscoping adapter that Zeiss sent me.

I'll be posting more to BirdingBlogs.com in my usual Tuesday installments – both on my recent Chiapas tour as well as a review of this spotting scope and the digiscoping setup. In the meantime, here are some results of the digiscoping experiments in my back yard this week. Click on any photo for a larger image.

Female Anna's Hummingbird

Probable female Black-chinned X Costa's Hummingbird (back for her second winter, DNA analysis still pending)

Male Broad-billed Hummingbird

Female Costa's Hummingbird

Male Violet-crowned Hummingbird (back for his fourth winter, and still here as of February 27, though he was missing from Feb 14-22)

Friday, February 18, 2011

My Birding Adventures Rerun is Airing Tues Feb 22 and Sat Feb 26

A repeat of last year's show in which I helped out is showing again this coming Tuesday:

Tues 22nd Feb 12.30 pm EST; Sat 26th Feb 7.00 am EST
Red-crowned Parrots of the Rio Grande

To find out which channel to tune to:

http://www.birdingadventures.com/batv_schedule.php

or

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Freeze Burned Natives and a couple rare birds in Tucson

As I'm about to head into the mostly Internet-free zone of eastern Chiapas, Mexico, here's just a quick hodgepodge of photos from this past week around Tucson – a couple rare birds and evidence of the damage to plants from last week's hard freeze.

Just two days after the coldest day in over 100 years, I went on a short hike up The Phone Line Trail in Sabino Canyon with my friends Andrew and DuWane.

The vistas are wonderful.

Here's a close-up of the freeze damage to the otherwise very hardy Spiny Hackberry, which is evergreen. You can see how the leaves in the interior of the bush survived with no damage, protected from wind. I suspect most of the outermost branchlets are still alive and will leaf out with the next good rain (whenever that might be, maybe not until July).

Even the outer half of each leaf of the Hopbush was freeze burned.

This is Arizona Spikemoss, Selaginella arizonica, known to a lot as "resurrection plant." It almost always looks like this unless wet from recent rains, so I suspect there is no freeze damage to it.

One of my favorite small native trees is Arizona Rosewood, Vaquelinia californica. Evergreen and apparently hardy to very low temperatures, it's found only in a few scattered localities, probably a relic of a widespread broadleaf forest that covered this area before 10,000 years ago.

Amazingly, there were invertebrates present – lots of these Southwestern (or Echo) Azures (this one was actually in Pima Canyon a few days later), and a few Sara Orangetips.

This is a darkling beetle, family Tenebrionidae.

Finally, just a few more shots from the week. The giant (non-native) Indian fig or beavertail cactus in our yard was damaged severely by our 16°F morning on Friday, February 4 –  at about 10:00 am there were loud crashing sounds all over the yard as the ice thawed in the joints and larger, heavier branches came falling down. I had brought the hummingbird feeders in overnight and put them out before dawn for the two cold mornings we had. Even then, they would start to freeze before the sun was high enough to warm them up.

I spent a long morning at Sweetwater Wetlands just 4.5 miles west of me on Monday the 7th, making a thorough count of the water birds. (3380 Northern Shovelers!) I also enjoyed spotting some of the continuing rarities, such as this Black-and-white Warbler, amazed that it, along with the Yellow Warbler and the Summer Tanager that have been seen by many all winter survived the freeze.

I was surprised to flush this female Indigo Bunting off the stream – a winter rarity that hadn't been reported here this winter. When it flew, it went far off to the east, so I suspect it is wintering nearby and comes infrequently just to drink and bathe. It's a bad photo, but you can see the warmer rusty tones of the back (not as grayish or buffy as Lazuli), and the distinct blue tinge to the tail. Breast center and sides were also brown with faint streaking.

Monday, February 7, 2011

New Violet-crowned Hummingbird Vocalization

This morning the Violet-crowned Hummingbird wintering in my yard in North-Central Tucson began singing a new song. I presume this is the advertising song – meant to attract a mate. I had just stepped outside about 15 minutes before sunrise to see if he was at the feeders already and heard this vaguely familiar repeated "squee" sound. I've heard it in Mexico or in Patagonia (Arizona), but it's been a long time. I ran inside to get my Olympus LS-11 and got this recording.



The much quieter "gurgle" song can be heard in this recording from last winter, and he's been giving it all the time.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Freezing Hummingbirds

With the low forecast for 20°F in Tucson, I brought the hummingbird feeders in last night and then set my alarm for 6:45 a.m. (sunrise at 7:17) to set them out again. With very flat topography and virtually no gradient towards the Rillito River, this part of north-central Tucson is a cold sink, almost always about 5-7 degrees colder than the official low each day, and my 3-parts-water-to-one-part-sugar concentration starts to freeze somewhere between 26 and 28°F.

The official low temperature this morning was in fact 18°F, and with the gusty winds we had stirring things up all night and into the morning hours, we had exactly the same temperature at 3919 N Vine Ave.

Some Anna's Hummingbirds were already starting to chip and hover over the feeder sites when I began hanging the feeders, and the Violet-crowned Hummingbird appeared right at 7:00 a.m. Within an hour, the sugar water began to freeze, so I had to go out and add a little bit of hot water and shake them up until the sun got on them.

This Anna's Hummingbird has an unusual pattern of iridescence on the throat. I'm not certain if it's a male still molting in its helmet or if it's an older female. Most young males that have this much red in the gorget won't have it so symmetrical and will also have patches of elsewhere in the face and on top of the head, and most of them have virtually all of their adult plumage, so I suspect it's a female.




These are male Anna's Hummingbirds. I'm guessing around 20-40 different individuals utilize the yard's feeders, but that may be an underestimation.

The Broad-billed Hummingbirds were the last to wake up and begin defending their feeders. There are at least two territorial males and 4-6 additional floaters (or more). This guy was still trying to get warm in the sun and let me approach within a few inches while keeping his eye on the feeder.

Finally, here's a series of digiscoped shots of the Violet-crowned Hummingbird from this morning. He first showed up October 16 this year, has occasionally left the yard from two days to three weeks at a time but has been back now for two weeks and defends two feeders full time. He allowed much closer approach this morning, choosing a new perch in the open that allowed him to view both feeders at once. I think he know how important the food supply was in weather like this.


The forecast low for Tucson is 18°F tomorrow morning...and no wind. So we could very well get down to the low teens. The coldest temperature we've had here in the nearly 13 years I've lived here was 17°F on January 15, 2007.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Dirt Fields, Mountain Plovers, and a Rufous-backed Robin

On Friday, January 21, John Yerger and I volunteered our time to survey the southern Santa Cruz Flats of Pinal County for wintering Mountain Plovers. We made countless stops along remote county roads such as this, overlooking off-season cotton fields. This is looking NE toward Picacho Peak, familiar to commuters along I-10 between Tucson and Phoenix.

In our search for Mountain Plovers, we were getting warmer when we looked over the sod farms near Tweedy and Pretzer roads.

We finally located a group of 15 Mountain Plovers in a relatively flat dirt field (few dirt clods or plants) to the southwest of the intersection of Hotts and Tweedy Roads.

I also noticed this minute velvet ant – actually a wingless female wasp. This species is Dasymutilla foxi.

Since it was in our area, we also stopped at this row of fruiting privet where Richard Fray and Laura Steward found a Rufous-backed Robin just five days earlier.

It was not there for the first several minutes, but while we were chatting with Laurens Halsey and Andrew Core, it flew in and began feeding out in the open. I managed this "digibinned" shot with my Canon PowerShot S90 held up to my Zeiss binoculars.
I kept track of our sightings for entering into eBird. We came up with a total of 55 species:

Mallard 5
Great Blue Heron 1
White-tailed Kite 2
Northern Harrier 6
Cooper's Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 22
Ferruginous Hawk 3
Crested Caracara 11
American Kestrel 9
Prairie Falcon 1
Killdeer 3
Mountain Plover 15
Least Sandpiper 16
Eurasian Collared-Dove 158
Mourning Dove 576
Greater Roadrunner 1
Gila Woodpecker 25
Ladder-backed Woodpecker 1
Black Phoebe 2
Say's Phoebe 18
Loggerhead Shrike 6
Chihuahuan Raven 18
Common Raven 41
Horned Lark 176
Verdin 2
Rock Wren 1
House Wren 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2
Rufous-backed Robin 1
Bendire's Thrasher 1
Curve-billed Thrasher 2
European Starling 19
American Pipit 212
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler 18
Common Yellowthroat 1
Green-tailed Towhee 1
Abert's Towhee 6
Brewer's Sparrow 12
Vesper Sparrow 43
Lark Sparrow 10
Lark Bunting 161
Savannah Sparrow 68
Song Sparrow 6
White-crowned Sparrow 39
Northern Cardinal 1
Pyrrhuloxia 6
Red-winged Blackbird 550
Western Meadowlark 222
Yellow-headed Blackbird 50
Brewer's Blackbird 475
Great-tailed Grackle 12
Brown-headed Cowbird 350
House Finch 5
House Sparrow 19

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Rock Corral Canyon – A Subtropical Surprise in SE Arizona

Rock Corral Canyon in the Tumacacori Mountains is better known to some as Arizona's Wild Chile Botanical Area, but few have been there. It's reached via a short, but rough dirt road that leads west from the Tumacaori/Carmen Exit #29 on I-19 between Tucson and Nogales. (Click on any photo for a larger image.)

My reason for going in here with Jake Mohlmann and Corey Mitchell earlier this week to was to get to know it for the Atascosa Highlands Christmas Bird Count. Chris McCreedy had several good birds here, such as Elegant Trogon, Western Flycatcher, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet, and Hepatic Tanager on this year's CBC. As you can see from the shaded pink area on this map, the upper parts of the canyon are just within the NE part of the CBC circle.

The 2.5-mile entrance road is rough in places, requiring high clearance (and 4wd would be good to have), but it goes through lots of Rufous-winged Sparrow habitat.

The rock corral itself, the Wild Chile Botanical Area (the northernmost natural occurrence of Capsicum annuum var. glabriusculum, Cayenne Pepper in Arizona), and the location of the Black-capped Gnatcatchers that Keith Graves found in January 2004 are all actually just outside the circle, but there is plenty of habitat inside the circle. There's a fun NPR Weekend Edition Saturday show with Scott Simon being led by Kevin Dahl too look for chiles. They went up there after a near-record late start to the monsoon (remember the fire in the Santa Ritas in 2005?), and the area was still parched and plant-free. Poor Kevin! You can listen to it here.

Once inside the CBC area, the canyon is rocky and steep-sided, but with very interesting thorn-scrubby vegetation on the more protected canyon walls.

The very range-limited Goodding's Ash, Fraxinus gooddingii, occurs here in good numbers. It has small leaves and is evergreen.



Another thorn-scrub-indicating plant is Hopbush, Dodonaea viscosa, one of few plants found native on every vegetated continent in the world – even on Hawaii. In SE Arizona, wherever Five-striped Sparrows have been found breeding, these two shrubs are common, also occurring with Kidneywood and several other species of shrubs on steep slopes to create a distinctive habitat found nowhere else in this country. One should look for Five-striped Sparrow here after mid-April when they are singing.


The main road going higher into the canyon.

Looking NNE down the canyon. The blue line is my GPS track, showing that we hiked quite a ways up the NW fork side canyon (towards the upper left), but didn't get far up the main draw (towards the lower left).

In some areas, the bottom of the main canyon opens up into mesquite grasslands with scattered oaks, and this is where we relocated the pair of Hepatic Tanagers and the Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet.


The south-facing slopes are more like typical Sonoran desert scrub, and Rock and Canyon Wrens are common here. We also found several Black-chinned Sparrows in this part of the canyon (apparently a recent influx, as they've never been in this area on the CBC).

Another satellite view looking WNW up the middle draw. The CBC area goes all the way up to the watershed divide, and in this shot you can see the green area of the Bear Grass Tank, Murphy Canyon, and Lobo Canyon area and the the turquoise Peck Canyon Complex area.

The middle side canyon to the NW actually has an old mining track one can hike up, in some places very steep and in one stretch annoyingly choked with Catclaw Mimosa, Mimosa aculeaticarpa.

This side canyon is very well vegetated, and the Evergreen Sumac, Rhus virens, was full of berries, loved by Hermit Thrushes.


The denser oak woodlands had Bridled Titmouse, Hutton's Vireo, at least two Black-throated Gray Warblers, two Dusky Flycatchers, one Hammond's Flycatcher, and two Red-naped Sapsuckers.

This is near the end of the track.

Looking downcanyon to the SE.

This lush oak grove is at the very head of the canyon, though the intrepid birder could scramble up higher into some steep, oak-lined draws just below the cliffs.


Spiny Hackberry, Celtis ehrenbergiana, also a good wildlife plant.

 Another indicator of good thorn-scrubby vegetation is Kidneywood, Eysenhardtia orthocarpa.


The upper cliffs had a nook with a roosting Great Horned Owl, and later we saw a Peregrine Falcon flying and calling.

One of the exciting finds was this evergreen vine in the pea family. It was growing up this rather large Texas Mulberry, Morus micryphylla, right at the end of the track, in a very protected spot. The tree is leafless, and all the leaves belong to the vine.


The big attraction were these gorgeous seeds hanging on to the opened and twisted seed pods. Thanks to my friend Greg Corman and his contacts, I was able to give it a name – Rosary Snoutvine, Rhynchosia precatoria. And it turns out this is the only place it is know in the entire U.S., first collected in 1977. Check out the specimen maps at the SEINet Collections website. (Note that their coordinates are a bit off, but the locality description is the same.)

Here's one last satellite view looking down towards the SSW. Chris had found an Elegant Trogon in the side canyon in the lower right, and we hiked up here as well.

The habitat is much more open, so I suspect that the trogon wintering here (one of eight on the Atascosa Highlands CBC!) roves about the entire canyon complex.

It was surprising to see water still in some of the tinajas.



It's still winter, but in these cold-drained canyons, and especially on warmer sunnier days, there are insects to be found. We saw at least five species of butterflies, and I'm still trying to ID this spur-throated grasshopper. [Update: Thanks to Bob Behrstock for the ID as Gray Bird Grasshopper, Schistocerca nitens.]