ML619171934
Beitragende/r
Datum
Ort
- Alter
- nicht spezifiziert
- Geschlecht
- nicht spezifiziert
Beobachtungsdetails
Scarce to rare migrant, true abundance confounded by the ID challenges associated with this species. Essentially annual in some numbers throughout the City, typically depending on audio recordings for confident, confirmatory identification. This first-year individual was discovered early in the morning by Tomas Kay and subsequently tracked throughout the day by numerous birders as it moved around the rocky outcrop north and west of Azalea Pond. Recordings obtained by the original finder and Enrico Leonardi, possibly others, providing supporting evidence for reports that this individual ended its song variants with an upwards (or sometimes neutral) inflection rather than the distinctive descending ending heard in Gray-cheeked Thrush. On visuals alone, this bird fit the typical “search image” for a classic Bicknell’s, with warmer plumage tones with faint reddish tint to the tail and wings, a less sleek or elongated silhouette, and extensive yellow on the bill. When I was present, I heard several sharp, descending flight calls as the bird moved about its foraging circuit. A snippet of overheard song may have originated from the bird, but I can’t confidently rule out the possibility that someone wasn’t playing tape nearby. At any rate, this individual is demonstrably the same bird that was documented singing earlier, easily recognized by plumage details like the pattern of pale tips on its coverts and its faithfulness to the same general area throughout the day
Technische Angaben
- Modell
- NIKON D7500
- ISO
- 20000
- Brennweite
- 500 mm
- Blitz
- Flash did not fire
- Blende
- f/5.6
- Belichtungszeit
- 0.01 sec
- Abmessungen
- 4085 pixels x 2723 pixels
- Größe der Originaldatei
- 3.39 MB