Thursday, June 29, 2017

Breeding Bird Survey -- Frogmore route, 2017

Snowy Egret -- Ames Road, Concordia Parish
   The Frogmore route in northern and central Concordia Parish, which I surveyed on June 9, starts just south of the Tensas River at the junction of Bob Rife Road and hwy 566 between Clayton and Dunbarton...
highway 566 east of Dunbarton
...continues west then south along hwy 566...
looking south along hwy 566 at Dunbarton church

hwy 566 south of Dunbarton
...down through Frogmore and Stacy area on Hwy 84...
Hwy 84 at Frogmore
...south along highway 129...
hwy 129 south of Stacy
...takes Ames and Gallup Roads as a reprieve from the highways...
Ames Road
Gallup Road

Gallup Road north of Lismore
...and ends south of hwy 565 in the Lismore area. This entire region is rather flat -- the land of patchy bottomland hardwoods, cypress brakes, and seemingly endless soybean fields. For those not familiar with BBS procedure, it's 50 stops at half-mile intervals (same spots each year), birds are counted for three minutes at each stop.

   It was nice to hear Northern Bobwhite again on this route, as I did in 2015. There were two calling at one of the stops about 2 miles south of Dunbarton church (small field on west side of highway before woods and houses). Video below (one can be heard clearly, calling a couple of times, the second individual is calling in the background, almost lost among the other birds singing):


   Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks, once again, were present as flyovers at several stops. Black-crowned Night-Heron was seen as flyover at two stops. There was a pair of Red-headed Woodpeckers at Frogmore (I think these were my first Red-headed seen on this route).
   The route passes through more wooded areas south of Frogmore along highway 129 and Ames Road, and here is where I heard the morning's four Swainson's Warblers and one Hooded Warbler. At my second-to-last stop a fellow stopped his pick-up truck to chat and mentioned that there are, or at least have been in recent years, Bald Eagles nesting in the vicinity of Black River Lake and Horseshoe/Cocodrie Lake, both nearby.
   After finishing the BBS, I stopped by the west end of the power substation at the junction of hwy 3037 and Hwy 84 just west of Jonesville (Catahoula Parish) to check for Scissor-tailed Flycatcher. I didn't see any, though I only stopped for a moment and there was mowing going on. Some breeding seasons, a pair can be found at this location, and it's become my tradition to check for them after completing the Frogmore count.
   The reason for such a delay between doing the BBS and posting this blog entry was that I wanted to tally up the number of individuals of each species over the course of the entire route and include that info here. Well, ...I still haven't done that, but wanted to go ahead and do this entry before posting new material. So, here's the list of birds seen and heard along the entire Frogmore BBS route on 6/9/17. I'll come back and add the number of individuals in the future. 

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck -
Northern Bobwhite -
Anhinga -
Great Blue Heron -
Great Egret -
Snowy Egret -
Snowy Egret, Ames Road
Little Blue Heron -
Cattle Egret -
Green Heron -
Black-crowned Night-Heron -
White Ibis -
Turkey Vulture -
Mississippi Kite -
Red-shouldered Hawk -
Red-tailed Hawk -
Killdeer -
Eurasian Collared-Dove -
Mourning Dove -
Yellow-billed Cuckoo -
Chimney Swift -
Ruby-throated Hummingbird -
Red-headed Woodpecker -
Red-bellied Woodpecker -
Downy Woodpecker -
Pileated Woodpecker -
Eastern Wood-Pewee -
Acadian Flycatcher -
Great Crested Flycatcher -
Great Crested Flycatcher, Frogmore
Eastern Kingbird -
Eastern Kingbird, Gallup Road
Loggerhead Shrike -
White-eyed Vireo -
Red-eyed Vireo -
Blue Jay -
American Crow -
Purple Martin -
Barn Swallow -
Carolina Chickadee -
Tufted Titmouse -
Carolina Wren -
Eastern Bluebird -
Wood Thrush -
Northern Mockingbird -
European Starling -
Prothonotary Warbler -
Swainson's Warbler -
Kentucky Warbler -
Common Yellowthroat -
Hooded Warbler -
Northern Parula -
Yellow-breasted Chat -
Eastern Towhee -
Summer Tanager -
Northern Cardinal -
Blue Grosbeak -
Indigo Bunting -
Painted Bunting -
Dickcissel -
Red-winged Blackbird -
Red-winged Blackbird (male)
Eastern Meadowlark -
Common Grackle -
Brown-headed Cowbird -
Orchard Oriole -
House Sparrow - 

Ames Road, Concordia Parish
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Saturday, June 3, 2017

Breeding Bird Survey -- Enterprise route, 2017

Catahoula Church Road near Haggerty Creek
   On 5/31/17, I ran the Enterprise BBS route in northern and central Catahoula Parish. This is the 7th year that I've done this route. The starting point is where Catahoula Church Rd turns south off of hwy 124 between the Ouachita River Duty Ferry and the community of Enterprise. The route straight away begins climbing into the hills south and west of the Ouachita River...
(woods along Catahoula Church Road, Stop 2 or 3)
...
(Catahoula Church Road -- Stop 3, I think)
 ...
 ...
(continuing uphill from Stop 5 -- Catahoula Church Road)
 ...
(in the pines -- in the highest section of Catahoula Church Road around Stop 6)
 ...
(view from Catahoula Church Road, between stops 7 and 8, across creek bottoms to hills beyond. CC Road crosses several creeks, including Haggerty Creek and Hooter Creek)
...
(Stop 9 -- At one point, Old Columbia Road runs by some pastures near a cluster of houses, allowing for some different habitat)
...
(woods along Old Columbia Road, about Stop 10)
...crosses the Chalk Hills ...
(after crossing Sugar Creek, the route steeply climbs into the Chalk Hills)
...
(up into the hills again after crossing Sugar Creek bottoms)
...
(the route continues up into the Chalk Hills (see also: video below taken at stop 13) -- much of the habitat in the Chalk Hills section is cutovers and young and medium-aged pine plantation.) 



 ...
(woods near the upper branches of Rawson Creek after route comes down from Chalk Hills -- approaching Stop 18 beyond creek)
...
(new cutover at Stop 20 -- hills south of Rawson Creek and north of Posey-Webb Camp Highway)
(woods north of Manifest, Stop 25 -- Much of the upland part of the route is similar habitat to this - pine plantation that never quite gets to grow into real woods)
...comes back down to flood plain about 2/3 of the way through the route where hwy 126 crosses Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit...
(Stop 39 -- Sandy Lake Road at hwy 126 -- The bottomland terrain in the Bushley Bayou Unit section (three stops, along hwy 126) where the habitat is generally replanted hardwoods with smaller areas of mature trees)
... goes through Sandy Lake community, and ends on hwy 923 in the middle of an ag. field a half mile from where the highway ends at north side of Little River.
Stop 48, hwy 923
...
habitat near Stop 49 of 50 along hwy 923
In other words, there's a nice mix of habitats.

5:35 am - 10:29 am
Conditions: 68 to 77 degrees F.; sky near clear at beginning, cloudy-to-overcast for much of the time, then mix cloud and sun at the end; very little wind.  
Description: 50 stops at "half-mile" intervals (sometimes a little over half a mile), three minutes at each stop. The first number after the species name is a total of how many were detected during the 50 stops (the birds actually appearing on official BBS results), the + number are additional individuals detected while traveling between stops or outside the 3 minute limit at a stop.

Great Egret - 1 + 7
Snowy Egret - 0 + 1
Littel Blue Heron - 3 + 1
Cattle Egret - 13 + 4
Turkey  Vulture - 16 + 1
Red-shouldered Hawk - 1 + 1
Broad-Winged Hawk - 0 + 1
Killdeer - 2 + 1
Eurasian Collared-Dove - 0 + 2
Mourning Dove - 16 + 7
Yellow-Billed Cuckoo - 14 + 1
Chuck-Will's-Widow - 1
Chimney Swift - 3 + 1
Ruby-Throated Hummingbird - 1
Red-Bellied Woodpecker - 15 + 1
Downy Woodpecker - 5 + 1
Northern Flicker - 1
Pileated Woodpecker - 3 + 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 1 + 1
Acadian Flycatcher - 7 + 4
Great Crested Flycatcher - 5 + 5
Eastern Kingbird - 3
Loggerhead Shrike - 1 + 2
Blue Jay - 11
American Crow - 39 + 5
White-Eyed Vireo - 29 + 6
Red-Eyed Vireo - 17 + 8
Barn Swallow - 8 + 6
Carolina Chickadee - 17 + 9 (video below -- Carolina Chickadee in nest cavity; presumably a fledgling, adults seen nearby. Stop 31.)


Tufted Titmouse - 22 + 4
Carolina Wren - 34 + 6
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 7 + 4
Eastern Bluebird - 7 + 1
Wood Thrush - 6 + 4
Northern Mockingbird - 16 + 1
Brown Thrasher - 3
European Starling - 3
Worm-eating Warbler - 3 + 3
Black-&-White Warbler - 6 + 1
Louisiana Waterthrush - 0 + 1
Swainson's Warbler - 4 + 3
Prothonotary Warbler - 4
Hooded Warbler - 26 + 12 + 1
Kentucky Warbler - 7 + 1
Common Yellowthroat - 5
Northern Parula - 9 + 3
Pine Warbler - 20 + 5
Prairie Warbler - 8 + 2
Yellow-breasted Chat - 39 + 6
Eastern Towhee - 16 + 12
Summer Tanager - 5 + 3
Northern Cardinal - 64 + 22
Blue Grosbeak - 5 + 2
Indigo Bunting - 16 + 2
Painted Bunting - 10 + 2
Red-Winged Blackbird - 7
Eastern Meadowlark - 6
Eastern Meadowlark
Common Grackle - 1
Brown-headed Cowbird - 15 + 13
Orchard Oriole - 3
 
a few notes...
*While on the way to the starting point in the pre-dawn I saw 3 Chuck-will's-widows, each sitting on/flushed from highway 503. This was in La Salle Parish.
*Best warbler diversity is in first 20 or so stops.
*Species found on route some years that weren't detected this year include: Black-bellied Whistling-Duck, Northern Bobwhite, Wild Turkey, Wood Stork, Great Blue Heron, White Ibis, Black Vulture, Mississippi Kite, Red-tailed Hawk, Barred Owl, Scissor-tailed Flycatcher, American Redstart.
*There's a new cutover or two each year. 

A few other things from that morning...

birdsong videos, Catahoula Church Road:
 (Green (Bronze) Frogs join the chorus in the first video.)





Woods along Catahoula Church Road
Coneflower (Echinacea) -- Chalk Hills
Pond Slider
road south of Rawson Creek and north of Posey-Webb Camp Highway
Larkspur and Rudbeckia
Beebalm (Monarda)

Cotton Morning-Glory
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Friday, June 2, 2017

Catahoula NWR Butterfly Count, 2017

female Black Swallowtail -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
   This year's North American Butterfly Association Catahoula NWR Butterfly Count was held on May 20th. Craig Marks organized the count, and there were seven participants this year: Craig, Jeff Trahan, Phillip Wallace, Dave Patton, Matthew King, Noah Brewer, and myself. The count circle is centered near the Catahoula NWR headquarters and encompasses the area within a 7.5 mile radius in La Salle and Catahoula Parishes. This includes areas on and off the NWR. Most of the accessible locations are in the alluvial plain section, and this is where we spent most of our effort; but there are some upland, piney-woods areas as well, in the north part of the circle.
   The weather was not on our side, with generally cloudy skies that soon devolved into on-and-off rain showers. But we made the most of the conditions handed us, and ended up with a modest but respectable list. Later in the afternoon conditions started clearing and it was generally sunny and quite warm by the time I did my solo section.  
   The count kicked off at 10:00 am on the Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit, with the participants divided into two groups.
habitat shot: north end of Duck Lake on Catahoula NWR HQ Unit
habitat shot: woods along refuge loop -- Catahoula NWR HQ Unit
When the rain set in in earnest, we rejoined and broke for lunch (BBQ in Jena!), then took advantage of a break in the weather to visit the part of Blade Loop Road that falls in the circle. This was the day's upland location.
habitat shot: Blade Loop Road
Afterwards, we all went to Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit, specifically the Muddy Bayou Road entrance off hwy 28.
habitat shot: Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
   When the group split up at about 3:10 pm, I did some solo butterflying to try and add to the day's list. I stopped at the tiny, hard to pull into (Yikes, don't try it!) boat launch area on Muddy Bayou off hwy 28. After that, I returned to Willow Lake Unit (which I had birded that morning before the count), by which time it was sunny and the butterflies were more active.
habitat shot: Catahoula NWR Willow Lake Unit (w/ lots of Brazilian Verbena in bloom)
I ended my butterflying at the part of Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit along Minnow Ponds Rd and Dry Bayou Rd, in the north/northeast part of the count circle.
habitat shot: Green's Creek on Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit
Unfortunately, things were slowing down in the afternoon heat, and I didn't get some of the species I was looking to find there, such as Dun Skipper, but this locations did add Goatweed Leafwing, and a few more individuals of species already on the list. I ended at 5:30 pm.
   I had begun the day by birding at Willow Lake Unit (starting 7:07 am) and then to HQ Unit ( starting 8:32 am), and continued, keeping bird lists for the day's other locations. The composite bird list for these locations is included after the butterfly content.

Butterflies:
Here's the list we got for the count, compiled by Craig.

Pipevine Swallowtail - 6
Pipevine Swallowtail -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
 Black Swallowtail - 107 -- These were everywhere! The day's most numerous butterfly.
male Black Swallowtail -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
female Black Swallowtail -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
Spicebush Swallowtail - 1
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail - 3

Southern Dogface - 4
Cloudless Sulphur -5
Little Yellow - 3

Red-banded Hairstreak - 1 -- I saw an additional one a couple of hours before the count began.

Gulf Fritillary - 1
Phaon Crescent - 6
Pearl Crescent - 22
Common Buckeye - 3
American Lady - 2
American Lady -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
Red Admiral - 1
Viceroy - 2
Viceroy -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
Red-spotted Purple - 5
'Astyanax' Red-spotted Purple -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
'Astyanax' Red-spotted Purple -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
Question Mark - 5
Goatweed Leafwing - 1
Little Wood-Satyr - 15
Little Wood-Satyr -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
Carolina Satyr - 5

Silver-spotted Skipper - 2
Silver-spotted Skipper nectaring on Winter Vetch -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
Long-tailed Skipper - 1 -- One of the highlights of the day! Catahoula NWR HQ Unit, west side of north-south section of road south of headquarters/entrance area.
Sit still! (Long-tailed Skipper -- lower left part of image) -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
Horace's Duskywing - 4
Common/White Checkered-Skipper - 2
Common/White Checkered-Skipper -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit

Common/White Checkered-Skipper -- Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit
   On their way home, Matthew and Noah checked out an area just outside the count circle, including Diversion Canal Road, and had some nice finds there. Their Funereal Duskywing was a new one for the La Salle Parish list, the unexpected species of the day, and an all-around really nice find. Other species they found included Variegated Fritillary, Gulf Fritillary, Southern Dogface, Black Swallowtail, Red-banded Hairstreak, and Question Mark.

The primary focus of our efforts were, of course, the butterflies, but participants' interests in other groups of organisms meant that many of those species were recorded as well.  Below are lists of some of these categories.

Moths included Thin-lined Erastria, Cross-lined Waved, Lychnosea intermicata, Caenurgia species, Macaria sp., and an owlet moth of some sort (TBD), among others.

Dragonflies and Damselflies:
   Below is Dave's Odonata list for the day. Dave, Phillip, and Jeff are the Odonata guys of the group. Most species would probably have gone unidentified or even completely unnoticed if those guys weren't present. Where they weren't present, no doubt many Odes went uncounted: I know I saw many individuals of some of the common species while on my own at Willow Lake and BB Units that I didn't write down.

Cyrano Darner - 2
Eastern Pondhawk - 47 +
This female-type Eastern Pondhawk was also on the lookout for butterflies. She snagged this Pearl Crescent that we'd just counted. -- Catahoula NWR HQ Unit
Blue Dasher - 25 +
Four-spotted Pennant - 1
Common Green Darner - 4
tentative i.d.: Common Green Darner (and not sure yet what species it captured) -- Once again reminding us what fierce little predators dragonflies really are! -- Catahoula NWR Willow Lake Unit
Jade Clubtail - 2
Jade Clubtail -- Catahoula NWR HQ Unit
Citrine Forktail - 4
Prince Baskettail - 3
Royal River Cruiser - 1
Prince Baskettail taking a break once the rain started (Catahoula NWR HQ Unit, Spotted by Dave) *edited on 6/18/18 - I had originally labeled it as Royal River Cruiser 
Little Blue Dragonlet - 2
Little Blue Dragonlet -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
Golden-winged Skimmer - 2
Golden-winged Skimmer -- Catahoula NWR French Fork Unit
I snapped this photo of a Halloween Pennant at HQ Unit, and Matthew and Noah reported seeing Halloween Pennants in the area they visited after the count.
Halloween Pennant
There were also a number of Ebony Jewelwing seen by members of the group at a gully in the upland area, and by me at Green's Creek on Bushley Bayou Unit of the refuge.
Ebony Jewelwing -- Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit
female Slaty Skimmer -- Green's Creek, Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit
At Green's Creek, I also had numerous Common Whitetail of both sexes, and what appears to be a female Slaty Skimmer. Many thanks to Dave, Phillip, and Jeff for sorting out the i.d. -- I had originally assumed it was female Great Blue Skimmer.
female Slaty Skimmer -- Catahoula NWR Bushley Bayou Unit
Birds:
This composite list includes birds I listed at the following locations: Catahoula NWR Willow Lake Unit, Headquarters Unit, Blade Loop Road, French Fork Unit, Muddy Bayou boat launch at hwy 28, and Bushley Bayou Unit, and a few of the birds noticed while traveling between the specific locations where we butterflied or I birded. I don't have a list of the birds heard/seen by the other group when we were in separate groups, and didn't keep track of all birds between the specific locations, so this doesn't actually cover every bird encountered by count participants all day. Also, when the weather deteriorated, my note-taking got sloppy re: everything other than butterflies. Just wanted to give some account of what birds we were encountering. Same goes for the other non-butterfly lists here.

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck - 1 - French Fork Unit, I believe Noah pointed it out
Wood Duck - 10

Anhinga - 6

Great Blue Heron - 1
Great Egret - 3
Snowy Egret - 1
Little Blue Heron - 4
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron - 2

Black Vulture - 8 +
Turkey Vulture - 4 +
Red-shouldered Hawk - 1

Purple Gallinule - 2 -- 1 at French Fork Unit, and 1 at hwy 28 x Muddy Bayou boat launch
Purple Gallinule, Muddy Bayou near hwy 28
Common Gallinule - 9 -- French Fork Unit

Killdeer - 4

Mourning Dove - 12

Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 7

Chimney Swift - 7

Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 5

Red-bellied Woodpecker - 3
Downy Woodpecker - 3
Pileated Woodpecker - 3

Eastern Wood-Pewee - 2
Acadian Flycatcher - 8
Great Crested Flycatcher - 2
Eastern Kingbird - 4

White-eyed Vireo - 19
Red-eyed Vireo - 15

Blue Jay - 3
American Crow - 3 +

Cliff Swallow - 55 +
Vids: Cliff Swallows at the boat launch on Muddy Bayou, gathering mud for nests.






Cliff Swallows gathering mud

Carolina Chickadee - 16
Tufted Titmouse - 12

Carolina Wren - 12

Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 11

Wood Thrush - 3

Northern Mockingbird - 2

Worm-eating Warbler - 2 - Blade Loop Road: both singing on wooded hillside just east of Roark Bottom Road; one near BL Road and one more distant. We got to see the one by the road. (heard singing in video below along with Hooded Warbler, Tufted Titmouse, and Northern Cardinal)



singing Worm-eating Warbler -- Always nice to actually see one ...even when it won't stay in any open spot long enough for a birder to employ their camera's zoom!
Prothonotary Warbler - 12
Swainson's Warbler - 4 - Two on Blade Loop (I only heard the second one myself), and one at Willow Lake Unit, one at HQ Unit.
Kentucky Warbler - 3 - HQ and WL Units, and Blade Loop
Common Yellowthroat - 3
Hooded Warbler - 7
Northern Parula - 9
Yellow-throated Warbler - 1 - Cowpen Bayou on HQ Unit
Pine Warbler - 1 - Blade Loop
Prairie Warbler - 4
Yellow-breasted Chat - 10

Eastern Towhee - 6

Summer Tanager - 7
Northern Cardinal - 28
Blue Grosbeak - 4
Indigo Bunting - 24
Painted Bunting - 16
Dickcissel - 10 - my FOS. All 10 at Willow Lake Unit weedy meadow -- at least one female seen, most were singing males. Video below:



Red-winged Blackbird - 21
Eastern Meadowlark - 1 -- heard singing at Dickcissel locale
Common Grackle - 1
Brown-headed Cowbird - 18
Orchard Oriole - 4

Herps:
Likely missed a few things here, but...

Fowler's Toad
Cope's Gray Treefrog
Green Treefrog
Squirrel Treefrog
Blanchard's Cricket Frog
Cajun Chorus Frog
American Bullfrog
(It seems like I remember hearing Green (Bronze) Frog and Southern Leopard Frog, but can't say for sure.)

American Alligator
Little Brown Skink
Pond Slider

Wildflowers:
   I don't have anything like a complete list, of course, but I like to note generally what was in bloom on a given day. And, of course, noticing what wildflowers are present is important when the chief purpose of an outing is locating butterflies. Some types noted included Brazilian Verbena, Spermolepis sp., vetch, clovers, assorted Asteraceae species (yellows and whites), Justicia, Ranunculus, Commelina, Germander, Carolina Nightshade, Persicaria, Swamp Leather Flower, Lady's Tresses, Maypop, Elderberry.
Black Swallowtail nectaring from Brazilian Verbena -- Catahoula NWR Willow Lake Unit
   Some stand-out flowers include the brilliant red poisonous Coralbean (Erythrina herbacea) at Blade Loop...
Coralbean
...and the always lovely Bluestar (Amsonia species) at Dry Bayou Road.
Bluestar
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