ML298689181
Участник
Дата
Местоположение
- Возраст
- Не указано
- Пол
- Не указано
- Воспроизведение
- Playback used
Подробности наблюдения
Third parish record, presumably a SY female as it is very drab. Dan Lane continues his Cape May Warbler whispering ways, as he's spotted all three of the records for East Baton Rouge Parish (!). Not only is this a very rare warbler locally, but it is almost never found in winter in Louisiana. There are no winter records (Dec-Feb) in Lowery (1974) and, much like Tennessee Warbler, only five records in eBird for January and February (including one that Dan found in Arsenal Park almost exactly one year, 11-12 January 2020). The third and final record for the parish was at Dan's house in May 2011. Throughout the morning, we saw it 4x at the same location (the intersection of Hundred Oaks and Richland Ave), first seen here (30.432434, -91.148007) in response to mob tape. Fortunately, the bird seemed tied to this specific location and was also seen in the yards on either side of this pin (both N and S of Hundred Oaks just to the E of Richland Ave). It was later seen by Matt Brady in the same yard to the N of Hundred Oaks. Although the bird's natural foraging behavior may have been affected by playback, it spent a fair amount of time foraging in the tall pine trees here, working the bases of the pine needle clumps like a Pine Warbler. This meant that it was often high and obscured, making it difficult to see well. It also spent some time in the surrounding live oaks. Silent when we discovered it, it seemed to respond consistently (though not aggressively) to playback of its chip and flight calls. Although we did hear the bird give some buzzy flight calls, it would primarily respond with very high, quick "tip" notes that were difficult to pinpoint.
Техническая информация
- Видеокамера
- Микрофон
- Вспомогательная аппаратура
- Исходный размер файла
- 16.39 MB