Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Loose Alliance Field Trip to Kisatchie National Forest & Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden (Grant Parish) -- 5/19/18

Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden
Related Posts:
   Loose Alliance field trips:http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2018/05/loose-alliance-field-trip-to-sicily.html
& http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2017/09/alexandria-lakes-district-field-trip.html

   This location:http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2017/12/kisatchie-nf-and-catahoula-hummingbird.html
 & http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2017/08/kisatchie-national-forest-and-catahoula.html

    I have three more blog entries that'll I'll be posting over the next 36 - 48 hours, and I'll link them here once each is posted. They cover Spring observations for three of my usual locations -- Zimmer Creek Road (La Salle Parish), Snyder Road (La Salle P.), and Catahoula NWR (La Salle & Catahoula Ps.)
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   The Loose Alliance bird club May field trip was to the Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden and adjacent part of Kisatchie National Forest, located on Work Center Road, near the Forest Service office off LA-8, east of Bentley, in Grant Parish. The field trip was led by Jay Huner, with Emlyn Smith (of the forest service), Marty Floyd, Joy and Roger Bradford, Jackie Duncan, and myself participating. Jackie led a wildflower walk for Cenla master naturalist students immediately following the bird club activities, which several of us also attended.
   We began the birding at the garden, 7:30 am. There, species included Red-headed Woodpecker, Gray Catbird, Brown Thrasher, and Orchard Oriole, to name a few.
burnt woods adjacent to the garden
A short walk down the trail to the edge of the grassy pine woods SW of the garden gave us an opportunity to see Brown-headed Nuthatch, Pine Warbler, Chipping Sparrow, and Indigo Bunting.
view south of the garden, Kisatchie NF
   After this we rode over to a location across LA-8 from the garden to check in on the Red-cockaded Woodpeckers.
Thanks to Emlyn's camera-on-a-pole device, used to monitor the nests with minimal disturbance, we were able to see an image of a baby RCWP in the nest.
RCWP nest hole
the future of this endangered species
With the adults approaching, we backed off to allow the birds to carry on about their business. Birds heard singing while at this location included Red-eyed and White-eyed Vireos, Hooded Warbler, Bachman's Sparrow, and Yellow-breasted Chat.
   Back at the garden, as the bird trip wound down and the wildflower walk was starting, we spotted one of the Red-cockaded Woodpeckers from the (failed) nest adjacent to the garden, and heard an additional Bachman's Sparrow singing off in the woods to the southwest.  More on the wildflower walk and other observations (herps, butterflies) after the bird list.

Birds:

May 19, 2018
7:30 am - 9:30 am
7 birders
~0.3 miles
sunny, warm, not much wind.

Turkey Vulture - 2
Mourning Dove - 2
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 1
Red-headed Woodpecker - 2
Red-headed Woodpecker
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2
Red-cockaded Woodpecker - 4
Red-cockaded Woodpecker
Pileated Woodpecker - 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 2
Great Crested Flycatcher - 1
Eastern Kingbird - 2
White-eyed Vireo - 1
Red-eyed Vireo - 1
Blue Jay - 2
American Crow - 1
Carolina Chickadee - 2
Tufted Titmouse - 1
Brown-headed Nuthatch - 3
Brown-headed Nuthatch
Carolina Wren - 2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 1
Eastern Bluebird - 2
Eastern Bluebird (female)
Wood Thrush - 1
Gray Catbird - 2
Gray Catbird
Brown Thrasher - 4
Brown Thrasher
Northern Mockingbird - 4
Hooded Warbler - 1
Pine Warbler - 6
Prairie Warbler - 2
Bachman's Sparrow - 2
Chipping Sparrow - 2
Chipping Sparrow
Chipping Sparrow
Eastern Towhee - 3
Yellow-breasted Chat - 2
Northern Cardinal - 2
Blue Grosbeak - 1
Indigo Bunting - 4
Indigo Bunting (male)
Orchard Oriole - 2
Orchard Oriole (female)
Brown-headed Cowbird - 1

   The wildflower walk for members of the Cenla master naturalists class began at 9:30 a.m. I am not enrolled in the class myself, so I was grateful to get to tag along, as I learned more on wildflower i.d. in an hour than I might on my own over many trips to the field and many hours pouring through online plant identification guides. We began by walking the garden; learning the names of the native (and a few nonnative) plants found there. After that, we ventured out into the meadow west of the garden and located and identified many types of wildflowers.
meadow west of garden, location of many of the wildflowers
Some of those found in this wild setting included (in no particular order): Colicroot (Aletris)
Colicroot
Colicroot
Colicroot
Colicroot
... Wild Petunia (Ruellia), Meadow-Beauty (Rhexia)....
Meadow-Beauty
... Florida Bluehearts (Buchnera floridana)
Florida Bluehearts (Buchnera floridana)
... Milkwort (Polygala)
Milkwort
Milkwort
 ... Procession Flower (Polygala incarnata)
my tentative i.d.: Polygala incarnata ...I don't recall our i.d for these from the field
... Narrowleaf Mountainmint (Pycnanthemum tenuifolium)
Narrowleaf Mountainmint (I believe that's correct)
... Yellow Stargrass (Hypoxis)
Hypoxis
... Goatsrue (Tephrosia), Black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta), and last, but most certainly not least, Winecup (Callirhoe).
Callirhoe (common names include Winecup and Poppy-mallow) are some of my favorite wildflowers
Callirhoe
Callirhoe
Callirhoe

   In addition to birds and wildflowers...

Herps:

Green Anole -
Green Anole
Prairie Lizard -
a male Prairie Lizard (Sceloporus consobrinus), formally Eastern Fence Lizard (S. undulatus) but now may be considered separate species http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/64156/0
Prairie Lizard
Prairie Lizard
Prairie Lizard

Butterflies:

Horace's Duskywing -
Horace's Duskywing
Whirlabout -
Whirlabout
Whirlabout
Whirlabout
Southern Broken-Dash -
Southern Broken-Dash
Southern Broken-Dash
*Little Glassywing -
*tentative i.d.: Little Glassywing?
tentative i.d.: Little Glassywing
tentative i.d.: Little Glassywing
Pipevine Swallowtail -
Pipevine Swallowtail nectaring on Mimosa
All in all, a good morning in the field.
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Friday, May 4, 2018

Loose Alliance Field Trip to Sicily Island Hills / Stopping by Harrisonburg Rec. Area

Chestnut-sided Warbler -- photo by Connie Guillory
Related Posts:
Same Locations: http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2018/04/hills-and-high-water-catahoula-parish.html
   & http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2018/03/sicily-island-hills-harrisonburg.html
Loose Alliance Field Trips: http://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2017/09/alexandria-lakes-district-field-trip.html
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    This April's Loose Alliance birding club field trip, held on Saturday April 28, was to the J.C. "Sonny" Gilbert WMA in the Sicily Island Hills in Catahoula Parish. Participants were Connie Guillory, Wayne Watkins, and myself. Meet-up time for participants was 8:00 am, and I stopped by the Harrisonburg Landing Recreation Area before that. The rec. area is situated on the east bank of the Ouachita River at the NW end of LA-922. This is about 5 miles from the WMA. (H-burg Rec. Area bird list further down post)
   When I got to the WMA, the other participants had already arrived and were enjoying the birds. We started at the primitive campground road by the sign-in kiosk for the south side of the WMA. After walking the ~0.5 mile campground road,
woods along primitive campground road
we road along the main road, making numerous stops and some additional walks.
typical woods along the main road
We walked the Rock Falls Trail (taking the short cut indicated on the map, rather than the entire 1 mile loop).
The trek is steep and tricky in places, but the nature observed in these woods is worth the effort.
Rock Falls
   After that, we continued driving to the NW end of the main road, hearing and seeing an impressive array of birds, wildflowers, and more. We ended the group trip shortly before 1:00pm. I decided to continue birding solo on the north side of the WMA, which is accessed from LA-915 after a ~15 minute drive off WMA.
   There, I first birded the road that goes south to the biggest of the series of ponds.
I walked the trails around the ponds,
At this spot were Swainson's Thrush, Northern Waterthrush, Tennessee Warbler, and Little Blue Heron. Hogs could be heard by some of the ponds, and there was a lot of tracks and rooting along trail.
turning around at the westernmost of the string of ponds (the one with the bluff).

After this I continued birding driving the main east-west road through the north side of the WMA, making frequent stops.

   I walked the St Mary Falls Trail.

This was my first time on this trail, and man was it a doozy! The going is often steep, sometimes rocky, and there's a number of fallen logs, steam crossings, and other obstacles, but it takes you through some beautiful forests and along the scenic Sandy Bayou.
St Mary Falls
Sandy Bayou

Sandy Bayou
Sandy Bayou
   After this I continued my birding drive down the main road, stopping at some random spot that looked safe to turn around in, down toward the west end, farther than I'd been on my previous visit to this part of the WMA.
It was getting dark, though, and I decided against continuing into unfamiliar territory along an increasingly rough road.
   On the drive back out I made frequent stops to listen for both Chuck-will's-widow and Eastern Whip-poor-will. I used Whip playback at several stops, but never heard one. They may have moved on through by this point in migration. I did, however, hear three unsolicited Chucks calling -- two on the main road, and one back down the road to the ponds.
I ended my day listening to frogs at the big pond around a quarter to 9.

   Below is the bird list for the Harrisonburg Rec. Area visit. Following that is the entire bird list for the day on the WMA. The first number represents the group effort in the south part of the WMA, the second number is for birds I saw solo in the north. After that are lists for Mammals, Herps, Fish, Butterflies and Moths, Dragonflies and Damselflies, and Wildflowers.
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Harrisonburg Landing Recreation Area:
6:46 am - 48 minutes
52 - 53 degrees F., sunny, calm, water level in Ouachita River dropping

Wood Duck - 1
Greater Yellowlegs - 1
Greater Yellowlegs
Lesser Yellowlegs - 1
Mourning Dove - 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 1
Downy Woodpecker - 1
Pileated Woodpecker - 1
Great Crested Flycatcher - 1
Eastern Kingbird - 1
White-eyed Vireo - 1
Blue-headed Vireo - 1



Blue Jay - 2
American Crow - 1
Barn Swallow - 3
Carolina Chickadee - 2
Tufted Titmouse - 1
Carolina Wren - 3
Eastern Bluebird - 1
Brown Thrasher - 1
Northern Mockingbird -2
Cedar Waxwing - x
Northern Waterthrush - 2


Tennessee Warbler - 1
Common Yellowthroat - 1
Northern Parula - 1
Pine Warbler - 1
Prairie Warbler - 2
White-throated Sparrow - 2
Eastern Towhee - 1
Yellow-breasted Chat - 1
Summer Tanager - 1
Northern Cardinal - 5
Indigo Bunting - 2
Red-winged Blackbird - 4
Brown-headed Cowbird - 3
American Goldfinch - 2
American Goldfinch
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Sicily Island Hills:

South part of WMA -
7:42am - 4hours, 56minutes
5.3 miles
3 birders
57 - 80 degrees F., sunny, hardly any wind

North part of WMA -
12:56pm - 6hours, 46minutes
*plus: nocturnal listening for Chuck-will's-widow - 8:17-8:43pm
5.8 miles
1 birder
70's and 80's F., sunny, not much wind

Wood Duck - 2, 0
Wild Turkey - 3, 0 - tracks of one also seen in North part of WMA
Wild Turkey track -- St Mary Creek
Little Blue Heron - 0, 1
Green Heron - 0, 1
Black Vulture - 2, 4
Turkey Vulture - 2, 1
Mississippi Kite - 1, 5
Red-shouldered Hawk - 1, 0
Broad-winged Hawk - 3, 0

Broad-winged Hawk - primitive campground road in south part of WMA. Photo by Connie Guillory.

Red-tailed Hawk - 0, 1
Common Gallinule - 0, 2
pair of Common Gallinule at the biggest pond. same in video below.



Common Gallinule




Killdeer - 1 during nocturnal phase, flew from road at end of biggest pond
Mourning Dove - 3, 3
Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 0, 1
Chuck-will's-widow - 3 during nocturnal phase
   (Chuck-will's-widow can be heard in video below.)



Chimney Swift - 1, 1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 5, 4
Ruby-throated Hummingbird (male) - primitive campground road, south part of WMA

Belted Kingfisher - 0, 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 5, 3
Downy Woodpecker - 1, 3
Pileated Woodpecker - 4, 5
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 2, 2
Eastern Wood-Pewee -- primitive campground road in south part of WMA (same in video below). Photo by Connie Guillory


Acadian Flycatcher - 8, 4
Great Crested Flycatcher - 4, 7
Eastern Kingbird - 0, 1
White-eyed Vireo - 8, 9
Red-eyed Vireo - 17, 9
Blue Jay - 0, 1
American Crow - 3, 3
Fish Crow - 1, 0
Northern Rough-winged Swallow - 2, 0
Purple Martin - 0, 2
Carolina Chickadee - 6, 14
Tufted Titmouse - 11, 10
Carolina Wren - 11, 24
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 10, 3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 1, 1
Swainson's Thrush - 0, 1
an ever-shy Swainson's Thrush - trail by ponds, north part of WMA
Wood Thrush - 5, 7
Wood Thrush - north part of WMA



Gray Catbird - 0, 2
Cedar Waxwing - 0, x - calls heard a multiple spots, none seen
Worm-eating Warbler - 6, 4



Worm-eating Warbler -- primitive campground road, south part of WMA (same in above video). Photo by Connie Guillory.
Worm-eating Warbler - St Mary Falls Trail trail head (same individual in video below)



Northern Waterthrush - 0, 2 - brushy margins of one of the small ponds; calling and seen
Louisiana Waterthrush - 2, 2

Louisiana Waterthrush - Rock Falls Trail. Photo by Connie Guillory.
Louisiana Waterthrush - Rock Falls Trail. Photo by Connie Guillory.
Black-and-white Warbler - 1, 1
Black-and-white Warbler (male) - road to ponds, north part of WMA
Tennessee Warbler - 13, 6
Tennessee Warbler (male) - road to ponds, north part of WMA

Kentucky Warbler - 5, 0
Hooded Warbler - 16, 10
Hooded Warbler (male) - primitive campground road, south part of WMA



Northern Parula - 5, 0
Chestnut-sided Warbler - 1, 0
Chestnut-sided Warbler - primitive campground road in south part of WMA. Photo by Connie Guillory.



Chestnut-sided Warbler - primitive campground road in south part of WMA. Photo by Connie Guillory.
Chestnut-sided Warbler - primitive campground road in south part of WMA. Photo by Connie Guillory.



Chestnut-sided Warbler (male) - primitive campground road, south part of WMA
Pine Warbler - 8, 8
Yellow-rumped Warbler - 1, 1
Black-throated Green Warbler - 1, 0
Yellow-breasted Chat - 1, 0
Summer Tanager - 7, 23
Summer Tanager (female) - trail by ponds

Summer Tanager (female) - trail by ponds

Northern Cardinal - 6, 13
Rose-breasted Grosbeak - 0, 1
Indigo Bunting - 17, 3
Red-winged Blackbird - 1, 2
Brown-headed Cowbird - 4, 0
..................

Mammals:
Eastern Gray Squirrel, Eastern Fox Squirrel, ...feral hogs

Please note that I am not an expert and there could be something misidentified in the sections below. Feel free to let me know in the comments and I'll correct that. My i.d.s should be taken as tentative.

Herps:
Fowler's Toad -
Blanchard's Cricket Frog -
Blanchard's Cricket Frog -- Rock Falls Trail
Green Treefrog -
Cope's Gray Treefrog -
Green (Bronze) Frog -
American Bullfrog -
American Bullfrog -- the biggest pond
American Bullfrog -- biggest pond
The frog chorus heard in the video below includes Blanchard's Cricket Frog, Green Treefrog, and Green (Bronze) Frog. This was taken from the road at the biggest pond ~ just before 8:40 pm.



Pond Slider -
Pond Slider -- trial by ponds
Little Brown Skink -
(colubrid?) snake sp. - fled from St Mary Falls Trail before I could get a clear look at it.

Fish: Creek Chub, shiner/minnow Cyprinid spp., Western Mosquitofish

Lepidoptera:

Butterflies:
skipper sp. - poorly seen; couldn't tell what they were - 2 or 3 brown skippers, such as Clouded Skipper.
Pipevine Swallowtail -
Pipevine Swallowtail nectaring on thistle -- primitive campground road, south part of WMA
Palamedes Swallowtail -
Spicebush Swallowtail -
Spicebush Swallowtail -- south part of WMA
Orange Sulphur -
either Spring Azure or Summer Azure - These were quite common.
Azure sp. -- south part of WMA
Monarch -
'Astyanax' Red-spotted Purple -
Common Buckeye -
Common Buckeye -- north part of WMA
Pearl Crescent -
Red Admiral -
Question Mark -
Question Mark -- south part of WMA
Goatweed Leafwing -

Moths:
Renia-type moths or similar - I think these are Renia, and I think there's a couple of species represented here (next 4 photos), but this is tricky and I'll leave it at that for now. 
Renia sp.?
Renia sp.?
Renia sp.?
Renia sp.?

"Looper"-type moth -
 something like Vetch Looper or similar sp. -- primitive campground road, south part of WMA

Black-bordered Lemon Moth -
...and this moth -
?moth

?moth

POSSIBLY Common Ptichodis Moth (Ptichodis herbarum) --
My best guess is a Ptichodis, specifically P. herbarum, though none of the pictures I've looked at exactly match. -- near St Mary Falls

POSSIBLY Macaria bicolorata --
a Macaria sp., possibly M. bicolorata
...among many other moths.
I'll have to give the moth photos more attention later and try to come closer to a correct i.d. for as many as I can. Some, I'm sure, will be left vague. 

Odonata:

Damselflies:
Ebony Jewelwing -
Ebony Jewelwing -- Rock Falls Trail
larger damselfly sp./spp. -
?damselfly -- primitive campground road, south part of WMA

?damselfly sp. -- trail by ponds
small damselfly sp./spp. -
maybe Citrine Forktail? -- primitive campground road, south part of WMA

? damselfly -- trail by ponds. Same in the next pic.
? damselfly -- trail by ponds. Same in above pic.
Dragonflies:
Eastern Pondhawk -
Common Whitetail -
Blue Corporal -
Blue Corporal -- trail by ponds
Swamp Darner -
darner sp./spp. - 
clubtail sp./spp. -
clubtail sp. (I think) -- trail by ponds

Wildflowers:

   As good as the birding was, the show was very nearly stolen by a flower.
Indian Pink -- south part of WMA
Not only were the exotic-looking, candy-colored flowers of the Indian Pink (Spigelia marilandica) seen in numerous spots throughout the day, but the plants of the big patch which were only on the verge of blooming when I saw them during my 3/27 visit were now in full bloom, creating a natural flower bed hundreds of feet long.

Indian Pink -- south part of WMA
Indian Pink -- north part of WMA
Indian Pink -- north part of WMA
Indian Pink -- south part of WMA
Indian Pink -- near a tributary of Sandy Bayou

Indian Pink -- St Mary Falls Trail
Phlox of one or more species were found scattered throughout the WMA.
Phlox sp. -- Rock Falls Trail
Phlox sp. - St Mary Falls Trail
Phlox sp. -- St Mary Falls Trail

Another common sight, especially along roadsides, were these Verbena (I think that's what they are).
Verbena sp. - south part of WMA
A couple of individual wakerobins (Trillium) were spotted along the St Mary Falls Trail.
Trillium
Trillium
   These Partridgeberry were found along the Rock Falls Trail.
Partridgeberry -- Rock Falls Trail
   Bear's Foot was an unexpected sight for me. My experience with this plant is limited, but both of the times that I have seen it before were in bottomland hardwoods during September.
Bear's Foot -- south part of WMA. Photo by Connie Guillory
  We paid a visit to the small patch of Green Antelopehorn that I had previously located on 3/27.
Green Antelopehorn - near NW end of the main road in the south part of WMA
   One whitish lobelia -- familiar springtime flower, though the exact species is a mystery to me -- was seen.
Lobelia - primitive campground road, south part of WMA
A couple of species of Sisyrinchium (Blue-eyed Grass) were found in open, grassy areas.
Sisyrinchium (Blue-eyed Grass sp.) -- trail by ponds.
   Venus's Looking-Glass was also common in open areas.
Venus's Looking-Glass -- trail by ponds, north part of WMA
Beard Tongue (Penstemon) sp. -
Penstemon sp. -- north part of WMA
 In a couple of places along the Rock Falls Trail we found fallen blooms from Tulip Poplar trees.
flower of Tulip Poplar - Rock Falls Trail
   The Sicily Island Hills are certainly one of the most fascinating ecosystems in our region. They deserve -- and I hope they are receiving -- protection and good stewardship. I look forward to exploring these woods more in the future.
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