[Tweeters] Port Orchard Caspian Terns
John Riegsecker via Tweeters
tweeters at u.washington.edu
Tue Jul 16 17:52:01 PDT 2024
For various reasons, I don't have information back from BBL on all 38
birds. The oldest bird was banded in 2003. Four birds were banded
between 2005 and 2008. A total of thirteen birds were banded in 2009 and
2010 and a total of seven birds were banded between 2014 and 2016.
On 7/16/2024 5:03 PM, Tom Benedict wrote:
> Thank you for posting this report John.
>
> This is the kind of story which really begins to paint a picture of the life of an individual bird. It’s not much, but it’s so much more than the fleeting glimpses we typically get as they pass through “our” world. 13 years! Flying hither and thither! How marvelous!
>
> Of the 38, what kind of age range do they have?
>
> Tom Benedict
> Seahurst, WA
>
>> On Jul 16, 2024, at 16:14, John Riegsecker via Tweeters <tweeters at u.washington.edu> wrote:
>>
>> All,
>>
>> The past few weeks the morning tides were high enough they forced the terns arriving for the day to within a hundred yards of the path which made it easy to count them and photograph leg bands. The highest count was 405 birds. For the year I have photographed 38 birds with readable codes, and 3 with an older system of banding. The majority of the birds were banded at East Sand Island, Bellingham, Walla Walla and one at Dungeness Spit. There was one notable exception. Here is part of an email I received on one of the birds:
>>
>> Thank you so much for reporting this bird to BBL. It is an exciting resight. This 13-year old individual was banded as a chick in the Copper River Delta in Alaska. The bird was one of just 5 individuals that received a field-readable band that year so it is pretty incredible that you found it.
>>
>> John Riegsecker
>> Gig Harbor
--
John Riegsecker
More information about the Tweeters
mailing list