Capture Highlights:
| Purple Finch |
| Brown Creeper |
| Hutton's Vireo |
| Red-breasted Sapsucker |
| White-throated Sparrow |
| Common Yellowthroat (hatch year male, so not the full black mask that an adult would have) |
The past couple of weeks have been pretty busy here at
Palo – we did our Bird-A-Thon, I turned in my Capstone project, my parents came
to visit me at the station and finally got to see what I do in person, I went
to Game 5 of the NLCS (go Giants!), went to the first NASA Ames open house in
17 years, and am in the midst of a 3-day banding certification test (the
written test was this afternoon).
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| Our Bird-A-Thon team: The Lookers! |
First of all, the Bird-A-Thon was awesome – we left just
before 6am and walked 14.5 miles over the next 13 hours. We detected 126 bird
species (see bottom for list), stopped at like 4 staff member’s houses for
refreshments and bathroom breaks, got a second wind after grabbing a quick
round of gin and tonics from the bar in town, and finished the day with beer,
homemade lasagna, and cheesy garlic bread from a staff member who couldn’t
participate that day. It was awesome, and exhausting. Thanks for all of your
support and donations!
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| Our route |
| Mark is checking the barn for barn owls |
| Looking for shorebirds and seabirds |
| Wrapping up the day with a beautiful view |
Last week I turned in a final draft of my Capstone
project, which was adding to an already-started migration booklet to display in
the banding lab. I went through historical recovery data and picked out
interesting recoveries (recovery means not necessarily captured at another
banding station, but may have been hit by a car, run into a window, found injured/dead,
attacked by cat, etc.). Anyways, I picked out interesting recovery locations
and made maps of how far individuals of certain species have traveled. For
instance, we’ve banded Wilson’s Warblers and Western Tanagers that have been
recovered in Mexico, and Hermit Thrushes that have been recovered in northern
Canada! These birds can really move. It was also really interesting to look at
the recovery data – one of the Wilson’s Warblers that I looked at had been
shot, which was super confusing until I heard that it was shot by a kid with a
slingshot, not an actual gun.
I was also fortunate enough to get to go to the Giants
game last Thursday! That was awesome because I haven’t been to a Giants game in
ages, I got to spend time with family, and they advanced to the World Series!!!
Woooo!
| Cutest little Giants fan |
| UAVSAR plane |
Then on Saturday I went to the NASA Ames open house,
which was pretty cool. It was funny because there was a huge range of knowledge
among the visitors, so a space enthusiast would ask someone at a booth
something super complicated, which would be followed by a child asking “WHAT’S
THIS BUTTON DO??” But it was really cool, especially the random freebies and
the massive wind tunnel! The wind tunnel was my favorite, but there was also a
really cool UAVSAR (Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle Synthetic Aperture Radar) plane
which collects radar images of the earth to detect movements
from earthquakes, volcanoes, and such. They just did a flight over Napa and saw
the movement from that earthquake a couple months ago. Neat!
The guys there also gave me a bunch of stickers and patches and a NASA ruler,
so that may have also helped sway me.
| I'M ON MARS! |
| Wind tunnel |
I mentioned that I’m in the middle of a
3-day banding certification test – I just took the written test this afternoon,
and next week I have a specimen exam and then a field exam. The written test
wasn’t so bad, but the specimen and field exams should be interesting. For the
specimen exam I’ll be given 10 stuffed and/or frozen birds along with photos to
identify, age, and sex. I only have 7 minutes per individual which seems like a
lot of time, but since we are fall banders and could potentially see some vagrants
in the area, they might include those in the test, in which case it could be a
bird I’ve never seen before in my life. In that case 7 minutes is not nearly
enough time. Finally, the field exam is just doing our usually banding, but we’ll
have banding trainers following our every move while taking notes the entire
time, from setting up the nets to packing up at the end of the day. That’s a
little intimidating, but I bet it will be fine (or it’ll be the day when
EVERYTHING goes wrong). I guess we'll find out!
The Lookers’ Species List (taxonomic order, not
chronological)
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American Wigeon - Anas americana
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Mallard - Anas platyrhynchos
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Northern Shoveler - Anas clypeata
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Northern Pintail - Anas acuta
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Green-winged Teal - Anas crecca
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Ring-necked Duck - Aythya collaris
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Surf Scoter - Melanitta perspicillata
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California Quail - Callipepla californica
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Red-throated Loon - Gavia stellata
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Common Loon - Gavia immer
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Pied-billed Grebe - Podilymbus podiceps
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Eared Grebe - Podiceps nigricollis
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Western Grebe - Aechmophorus occidentalis
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Clark's Grebe - Aechmophorus clarkii
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Brandt's Cormorant - Phalacrocorax penicillatus
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Double-crested Cormorant - Phalacrocorax auritus
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Pelagic Cormorant - Phalacrocorax pelagicus
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Brown Pelican - Pelecanus occidentalis
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Great Blue Heron - Ardea herodias
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Great Egret - Ardea alba
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Snowy Egret - Egretta thula
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Green Heron - Butorides virescens
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Turkey Vulture - Cathartes aura
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White-tailed Kite - Elanus leucurus
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Northern Harrier - Circus cyaneus
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Sharp-shinned Hawk - Accipiter striatus
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Cooper's Hawk - Accipiter cooperii
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Red-shouldered Hawk - Buteo lineatus
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Red-tailed Hawk - Buteo jamaicensis
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American Coot - Fulica americana
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American Avocet - Recurvirostra americana
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Black-bellied Plover - Pluvialis squatarola
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Killdeer - Charadrius vociferus
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Greater Yellowlegs - Tringa melanoleuca
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Willet - Tringa semipalmata
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Whimbrel - Numenius phaeopus
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Long-billed Curlew - Numenius americanus
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Marbled Godwit - Limosa fedoa
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Least Sandpiper - Calidris minutilla
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Pectoral Sandpiper - Calidris melanotos
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Western Sandpiper - Calidris mauri
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Parasitic Jaeger - Stercorarius parasiticus
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Common Murre - Uria aalge
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Heermann's Gull - Larus heermanni
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Ring-billed Gull - Larus delawarensis
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Western Gull - Larus occidentalis
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California Gull - Larus californicus
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Glaucous-winged Gull - Larus glaucescens
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Elegant Tern - Thalasseus elegans
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Band-tailed Pigeon - Patagioenas fasciata
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Eurasian Collared-Dove - Streptopelia decaocto
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Mourning Dove - Zenaida macroura
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Great Horned Owl - Bubo virginianus
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Spotted Owl - Strix occidentalis
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Northern Saw-whet Owl - Aegolius acadicus
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Anna's Hummingbird - Calypte anna
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Belted Kingfisher - Megaceryle alcyon
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Acorn Woodpecker - Melanerpes formicivorus
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Red-breasted Sapsucker - Sphyrapicus ruber
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Nuttall's Woodpecker - Picoides nuttallii
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Downy Woodpecker - Picoides pubescens
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Hairy Woodpecker - Picoides villosus
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Northern Flicker - Colaptes auratus
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American Kestrel - Falco sparverius
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Merlin - Falco columbarius
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Peregrine Falcon - Falco peregrinus
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Black Phoebe - Sayornis nigricans
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Say's Phoebe - Sayornis saya
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Tropical Kingbird - Tyrannus melancholicus
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Cassin's Vireo - Vireo cassinii
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Hutton's Vireo - Vireo huttoni
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Warbling Vireo - Vireo gilvus
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Steller's Jay - Cyanocitta stelleri
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Western Scrub-Jay - Aphelocoma californica
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American Crow - Corvus brachyrhynchos
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Common Raven - Corvus corax
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Chestnut-backed Chickadee - Poecile rufescens
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Bushtit - Psaltriparus minimus
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Red-breasted Nuthatch - Sitta canadensis
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Pygmy Nuthatch - Sitta pygmaea
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Brown Creeper - Certhia americana
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House Wren - Troglodytes aedon
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Pacific Wren - Troglodytes pacificus
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Marsh Wren - Cistothorus palustris
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Bewick's Wren - Thryomanes bewickii
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Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - Polioptila caerulea
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Golden-crowned Kinglet - Regulus satrapa
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Ruby-crowned Kinglet - Regulus calendula
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Wrentit - Chamaea fasciata
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Western Bluebird - Sialia mexicana
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Swainson's Thrush - Catharus ustulatus
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Hermit Thrush - Catharus guttatus
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American Robin - Turdus migratorius
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Northern Mockingbird - Mimus polyglottos
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European Starling - Sturnus vulgaris
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American Pipit - Anthus rubescens
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Cedar Waxwing - Bombycilla cedrorum
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Orange-crowned Warbler - Oreothlypis celata
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MacGillivray's/Mourning Warbler - Geothlypis
tolmiei/philadelphia
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Common Yellowthroat - Geothlypis trichas
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Yellow Warbler - Setophaga petechia
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Yellow-rumped Warbler - Setophaga coronata
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Black-throated Gray Warbler - Setophaga nigrescens
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Townsend's Warbler - Setophaga townsendi
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Spotted Towhee - Pipilo maculatus
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California Towhee - Melozone crissalis
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Chipping Sparrow - Spizella passerina
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Savannah Sparrow - Passerculus sandwichensis
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Fox Sparrow - Passerella iliaca
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Song Sparrow - Melospiza melodia
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Lincoln's Sparrow - Melospiza lincolnii
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White-crowned Sparrow - Zonotrichia leucophrys
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Golden-crowned Sparrow - Zonotrichia atricapilla
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Dark-eyed Junco - Junco hyemalis
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Western Tanager - Piranga ludoviciana
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Red-winged Blackbird - Agelaius phoeniceus
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Tricolored Blackbird - Agelaius tricolor
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Western Meadowlark - Sturnella neglecta
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Brewer's Blackbird - Euphagus cyanocephalus
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Brown-headed Cowbird - Molothrus ater
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House Finch - Haemorhous mexicanus
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Purple Finch - Haemorhous purpureus
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Pine Siskin - Spinus pinus
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Lesser Goldfinch - Spinus psaltria
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American Goldfinch - Spinus tristis
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House Sparrow - Passer domesticus
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