[Tweeters] Nuthatch dispersal
Steve Hampton
stevechampton at gmail.com
Sun Sep 24 07:29:41 PDT 2023
oops, I meant Type 2 (Ponderosa) Red Crossbills. We've also had some Type 4
(Doug-firs).
On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 7:28 AM Steve Hampton <stevechampton at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Adding to this thread -- a White-br Nuthatch was photographed in the
> Sequim area yesterday.
>
> We've had some Type 4 (Ponderosa) Red Crossbills around Port Townsend.
>
> good birding,
>
>
>
> On Wed, Aug 23, 2023 at 12:57 PM Eric Heisey <magicman32 at rocketmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> Apologies for my tardy reply, I have been out of service lately. Thank
>> you to the many who have commented and contributed to the conversation, I
>> especially want to thank Bill Tweit for his in-depth commentary on the
>> matter. I want to add in a couple more thoughts that I omitted from my
>> initial brief message.
>>
>> In Yakima Co, I have spent a ton of time at Clear Lake over the past
>> decade. Pygmy Nuthatches are typically quite rare here, I have only
>> recorded them a couple of times in the past despite the presence of
>> Ponderosa Pines, always in the second half of July. This year I have
>> encountered small groups of PYNU at Clear Lake on at least six occasions
>> between 27 Jul and 21 Aug, further evidence of their dispersal from the
>> core parts of their range, at least along the east flank of the cascades.
>> My encounter of White-breasted and Pygmy Nuthatches right along the county
>> line in Lewis Co suggest that the fringes of westside counties, such as the
>> far eastern edges of Whatcom, Skagit, Snohomish, or King Cos may be good
>> areas to search for dispersing nuthatches. I would wager that we will see
>> at least a couple of nuthatches further afield on the westside as we
>> continue to transition into fall (though, maybe I am wrong and this will
>> end up being the primary dispersal window and later in fall will furnish
>> few records).
>>
>> A White-breasted Nuthatch was photographed on the Hurricane Hill Trail in
>> Olympic NP a few days ago (Charlie & Linnea Wright, Ryan Shaw;
>> https://ebird.org/checklist/S147728940?fbclid=IwAR3BYD3oPhH4pjZ7hwnlHbRimlbzUDP1hN6AU3v-_KaPKeVNes698AiclNk),
>> while a Pygmy Nuthatch was reported recently (though not documented) by a
>> reliable observer, David Bell, at Rocky Point Bird Observatory on Vancouver
>> Island, BC. This to me suggests that there is good potential for both
>> White-breasted and Pygmy Nuthatches showing up along the coast. Tatoosh
>> Island offshore Neah Bay has a record from 1970 (Dennis Paulson), and Neah
>> Bay may be a prime locale to seek displaced nuthatches. I would postulate
>> that Leadbetter Point (Grassy Island) or Cape Disappointment SP may also
>> present ideal places to search for coastal p-nuts and WBNU, though it seems
>> that with the relative lack of concentrating geography on the Washington
>> coast away from these traps one might show up anywhere. The Olympic NP WBNU
>> may suggest that wandering birds that make it to the coast may find the
>> Olympic Mountains more to their liking, who knows. Keep an eye out wherever
>> you may be!
>>
>> I have heard of out-of-place crossbills in many places. While I have
>> observed Crossbills virtually annually at this time of the year in the
>> Columbia basin and lowland Yakima Co, it does seem that they are straying
>> more this fall than in years past. I will be curious to see the proportions
>> of type 2 crossbills recorded on the westside through the fall. This is the
>> type which is most reliant on Ponderosa Pines, and I suspect they might
>> wander widely this fall. I have alerted several of my friends out east to
>> take care in searching for type 2s this fall and winter, I will be curious
>> to see how widely they wander/irrupt.
>>
>> Good luck, this should be a very interesting fall, what with this
>> phenomenon as well as with the approaching downstream effects of the strong
>> El Niño.
>>
>> Eric Heisey
>> _______________________________________________
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>> Tweeters at u.washington.edu
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>>
>
>
> --
> Steve Hampton
> Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)
>
>
>
--
Steve Hampton
Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)
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