[Tweeters] Robins and varied thrush
Blythe Horman via Tweeters
tweeters at u.washington.edu
Sun Jan 12 23:08:03 PST 2025
Oops, that’s Gary Bletsch. Please blame insomnia for my mistake, and thanks
to the person who corrected me!
Blythe Horman, Lynnwood
On Sun, Jan 12, 2025 at 6:02 PM Blythe Horman <blythe.horman at gmail.com>
wrote:
> Thanks everyone for your research on this, especially Robert Bletsch for
> looking at historical records in books. I have seen varied thrushes very
> occasionally during the spring and summer, and my conclusion parallels
> Robert’s direct quotes. That is, Varied Thrushes nested in the Puget Sound
> Lowlands until urbanization destroyed their habitat. Then, like many
> animals, they were forced to breed in more inaccessible, mountainous areas.
> Also like many animals, in the last 10-25 years, some individuals have
> begun to return to the lowlands to attempt breeding. How successful this
> will be remains to be seen. Are there banding records available?
>
> I think this recolonization of suburban areas is not an uncommon
> phenomenon. That’s why we now have human-wildlife interaction experts, in
> the hopes of resolving conflicts with particularly charismatic or feared
> animals such as cougars, bears, and coyotes without the old method of
> simply killing the animal.
>
> As another example of a large, noticeable animal recolonizing degraded
> habitat, look at the humpback whale in Puget Sound. Unheard of when I moved
> here in 1991, they are now common enough to be feature prominently in whale
> watching tour advertising.
>
> I assume many birds (and other small native wildlife) are attempting to
> recolonize historical lowland breeding areas, but since they’re not
> particularly charismatic or usually problematic to non-birders, they don’t
> get much, if any, mainstream notice. They fly under under the radar, as it
> were.
>
>
>
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