Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Loose Alliance Field Trip to Alexandria Lakes District (Rapides Parish) / Kisatchie NF (Grant Parish)

Wood Ducks in cypress slough by walking trail at The Lakes District in Alexandria
Related Posts:
 - previous Loose Alliance field trip  -
https://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2019/05/kisatchie-national-forest-in-grant.html
 - 2017 field trip to Lakes District -
https://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2017/09/alexandria-lakes-district-field-trip.html
 - most recent post about Kisatchie NF Grant -
https://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2019/09/kisatchie-nf-grant-parish-and-camp.html
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   The Loose Alliance bird club of Cenla's September 2019 field trip was held on 9/14 at The Lakes District in Alexandria, Louisiana. The six participants were Connie Guillory, Donna Futrell, Jackie Duncan, Jay Huner, Scott Delaney, and Jonathan Clark. We walked the paved trail from the bell tower parking lot on Ansley Blvd to the power line cut, took the mowed path down the power line cut to the far end of the woods, then took the trail back through the woods. Habitat shots are below.
Ansley Blvd
one of the large ponds ("lakes") along the trail
power line cut
...
wooded section of trail
   Bird activity was fair, though we didn't get much migrant action.
Eastern Wood-Pewee
Wood Ducks were numerous in the cypress slough beside the trail, where there was also a Black-bellied Whistling-Duck and a Green Heron.
Wood Ducks in cypress slough by walking trail
Flyover White-winged Doves were a regular sight.
   Butterflies were starting to stir. Long-tailed and Ocola Skippers and a Monarch were visiting the Buttonbushes at the edge of the cypress slough. Flowers in the power line cut attracted Clouded Skippers and Gulf Fritillary.
Long-tailed Skipper and Monarch nectaring on Buttonbush
   Below are the bird and butterfly lists for this location

The Lakes District walking trail and environs, Alexandria
7:35 a.m.; 2 hrs 40 mins; estimated 0.5 miles (maybe more); 6 observers
warm; sunny; calm, then some light breeze

Birds
Black-bellied Whistling-Duck - 1
Canada Goose - ~100 - feral flock in pond across Ansley Blvd
Wood Duck - 32
Rock Pigeon - 7
White-winged Dove - 8
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 4
Killdeer - 1
Great Egret - 1
Green Heron - 1
Belted Kingfisher - 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2
Downy Woodpecker - 3
Northern Flicker - 1
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 2
White-eyed Vireo - 5
swallow sp. - 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 4
Carolina Wren - 5
European Starling - 8
Brown Thrasher - 3
Northern Mockingbird - 4
American Robin - 4
House Finch - 1
Common Grackle - 1
blackbird sp. - 5
Hooded Warbler - 1
Summer Tanager - 1
Northern Cardinal - 3
Indigo Bunting - 1

Butterflies
Long-tailed Skipper - 3
Long-tailed Skipper
Long-tailed Skipper nectaring on Buttonbush
Common Checkered-Skipper - 1
Common Checkered-Skipper
Clouded Skipper - 4
mating pair of Clouded Skippers
Dun Skipper - 1
Ocola Skipper - 2
Ocola Skipper nectaring on Buttonbush
Ocola Skipper on Buttonbush
skipper sp. - ~5 - probably additional Ocola and Clouded
Cloudless Sulphur - 1
Monarch - 1
Gulf Fritillary - 1

Some Other Wildlife...
Eastern Fox Squirrel, Nutria
.......................................

   After departing Alexandria, I visited three locations in the Kisatchie National Forest Catahoula Ranger District in Grant Parish -- Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden, South Tower Road, and Stuart Lake Road. By the time I got to these areas it was hot and bird activity was poor. Most effort was put into finding and ID-ing butterflies, though bird activity on Stuart Lake Rd was fair.
   (video: song of Bachman's Sparrow -- cut short as camera ran out of memory! -- Stuart Lake Rd)



   Butterfly activity was pretty good in some spots along the roads. I found two Barred Yellows on South Tower Road and added Stuart Lake Road to the list of places where I've found Barred Yellows, with 10 individuals counted, most of those about 0.35 miles south of the turn off to Stuart Lake Rec. Area.
Barred Yellow in flight, showing black bar on dorsal surface of forewing -- South Tower Rd
Barred Yellow nectaring on Diodia -- Stuart Lake Rd
   Habitat shots for these locations:
Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden
South Tower Rd
Stuart Lake Rd at good butterfly location -- most Barred Yellows were within ~100 yards of this spot
   Below are the bird lists and butterfly lists for the three Kisatchie NF locations.

Catahoula Hummingbird and Butterfly Garden
10:48 a.m.; 39 mins; 0.1 miles
hot, sunny, light breeze

Birds
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 1
Blue Jay - 2
Brown-headed Nuthatch - 1
Carolina Wren - 3
Chipping Sparrow - 1
Northern Cardinal - 2

Butterflies
Long-tailed Skipper - 2
Long-tailed Skipper nectaring on Lantana
Horace's Duskywing - 1
checkered-skipper sp. - 1
Clouded Skipper - 1
Fiery Skipper - 1
Southern Broken-Dash - 2
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail - 2
Spicebush Swallowtail - 4
Palamedes Swallowtail - 2
Palamedes Swallowtail nectaring on Lantana
Cloudless Sulphur - 8
Little Yellow - 3
Red-banded Hairstreak - 1
Gulf Fritillary - 3
Common Buckeye - 4
Common Buckeye nectaring on Lantana
Carolina Satyr - 12

Some Other Wildlife...
Green Anole
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South Tower Road
11:29 a.m.; 39 mins; 0.8 miles
~90 F.; sunny; light breeze

Birds
American Kestrel - 1
Carolina Chickadee - 1
Carolina Wren - 5
Brown Thrasher - 1
Northern Cardinal - 1

Butterflies
Long-tailed Skipper - 1
Tropical Checkered-Skipper - 1
checkered-skipper sp. - 2
Fiery Skipper - 1
Fiery Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail - 1
Pipevine Swallowtail - 1
Palamedes Swallowtail - 1
Cloudless Sulphur - 6
Barred Yellow - 2
Little Yellow - 28
Sleepy Orange - 1
Gray Hairstreak - 1
Gray Hairstreak
Gulf Fritillary - 2
Pearl Crescent - 1
Common Buckeye - 1

Some Other Wildlife...
White-tailed Deer
...................................

Stuart Lake Road
12:14 p.m.; 1 hrs 19 mins; 3.0 miles
93-94 F.; sunny/mixed sky; light breeze

Birds
Turkey Vulture - 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 2
White-eyed Vireo - 4
American Crow - 1
Carolina Chickadee - 1
Tufted Titmouse - 1
Brown-headed Nuthatch - 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 1
Carolina Wren - 5
Bachman's Sparrow - 2 - one was singing for a little while
Hooded Warbler - 1
Pine Warbler - 2 - one sang
Northern Cardinal - 2
Indigo Bunting - 1

Butterflies
Hoary Edge - 1
Tropical Checkered-Skipper - 1
checkered-skipper sp. - 7
Whirlabout - 1
Whirlabout on Liatris
Southern Broken-Dash - 1
Spicebush Swallowtail - 4
Palamedes Swallowtail - 1 or 2
Pipevine Swallowtail - 2
Cloudless Sulphur - 10
Barred Yellow - 10
Little Yellow - 26
Gray Hairstreak - 1
Gulf Fritillary - 1
'Astyanax' Red-spotted Purple - 1
Pearl Crescent - 4
Goatweed Leafwing - 1
Goatweed Leafwing on side of pine tree
Carolina Satyr - 3

   As always, if you spot any incorrect IDs or have suggestions for those that I'm not sure about, feel free to let me know.

Orange Milkweed -- Stuart Lake Rd
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Monday, September 9, 2019

Catahoula Lake and Catahoula NWR (La Salle Parish)-- 9/8/2019

Sanderlings at Catahoula Lake
Related Posts:
 - Catahoula Lake, August 2018 -
https://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2018/08/catahoula-lake-august-2018.html
&
https://falloutbird2014.blogspot.com/2018/09/catahoula-lake-la-salle-parish-august.html

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   On September 8 I went to Catahoula Lake to look for shorebirds. I had gone on August 23, but found the lake bed too muddy to walk on and water still a touch too high on that day. By Sept. 8 more than enough time had passed for things to dry out and the lake bed to become more accessible.
   I started by birding the Catahoula Lake Recreation Area location, in which I include the mile of Diversion Canal Road between LA-28 and the rec. area, and the short dirt road down to the lake.
Diversion Canal Rd
rec. area / spillway and canal
canal, between spillway and lake
dirt road to lake
I then walked out on the lake bed roughly paralleling the east side of the diversion canal channel where it cuts across the lake bed. In order not to frighten away the shorebirds along the canal, I would approach the canal for a good view of what's around that area, then arch away from the water as I walked along, until approaching another spot on the canal.
...
diversion canal on lake bed
...
looking southwest along the lake
looking northwest across the lake
looking northeast down the lake
The water was the lowest that I've ever seen it on one of these visits. I walked as far as where the edge of shallow water or mudflats would typically be this time of the season, but this time it was slightly muddy but basically solid ground covered in short grass with the broad expanse of shallows nonexistent. The permanent pool, off in the distance, was basically invisible from there. Not feeling like walking miles round-trip to access more water, I decided that the birding along the canal had been good enough and turned back. When I got close to the edge of the lake bed, instead of taking the main dirt road I stayed on the lake bed and followed the edge of the woody vegetation around to the canal and took the shortcut back to the parking area.
...
Swainson's Warbler location
Birds
   There were a good many flyover water birds seen from the rec. area when I arrived that morning, including Wood Storks and Roseate Spoonbills. A Broad-winged Hawk flew over fairly low, pursued by a swallow. There was a male Ring-necked Duck, perhaps wounded during duck season and unable to migrate, in the canal between the spillway and the lake.
Ring-necked Duck
   Songbirds were on the move. A few passerines, giving flight calls, were seen coming out of the sky over the lake to land in the thick woody growth between the lake and the dirt road. Searching for them in the thicket I found Kentucky and Hooded Warblers, and a Prothonotary Warbler that may have been with them, mingling with Blue-gray Gnatcatchers (resident and/or arrivals?) and a (resident?) family group of White-eyed Vireos.
Kentucky Warbler
(video: female or hatch-year Hooded Warbler, foraging)



A Dickcissel was heard and seen circling overhead at the parking area. A group of four Painted Buntings -- at least three of them adult males, the other ID-ed by call -- came flying from the lake together.

   Once out on the lake bed, I found all the shorebirds concentrated along the canal. There were lots of noisy flamboyant Black-necked Stilts and Killdeer.
Black-necked Stilts
Least Sandpipers and Spotted Sandpipers foraged along the water's edge.
Least Sandpiper
Spotted Sandpiper
There was a Pectoral Sandpiper by a small pool across the canal, and groups of peeps would occasionally be seen flying along or across the canal further down, beyond where I went.
Pectoral Sandpiper and Black-necked Stilt
Besides these "gimme" species, there was also a Willet and a few Sanderlings.

Willet
Willet in flight, showing the distinctive black-and-white wing pattern

Sanderlings
Sanderling
Sanderling



Sanderling
Sanderlings

Black-necked Stilts and Willet
   This was a nice little assortment of shorebirds, but overall numbers of individuals was low and some species that I'd commonly seen here in past years went undetected. These missing species include Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, Long-billed and/or Short-billed Dowitchers, American Avocet, and Black-bellied and Semipalmated Plovers. Some others that I'd occasionally find in previous years but not this time include Buff-bellied, Upland, and Semipalmated Sandpipers, and Marbled Godwit. No Least or Black Terns were seen this time either, nor were any ducks detected (Blue-winged Teal and sometime one or both whistling-duck species can be found here this time of year), and wading birds were not as numerous as they often would be (no doubt concentrated far off around the permanent pool and channels, where I couldn't see them).

   Back near the edge of the lake bed I found two Northern Parulas (both calling, one seen) and two Swainson's Warblers (both calling, one seen) foraging in the edge of the woody growth not too far from where I had seen the other warblers earlier that morning.
Swainson's Warbler
   Below are the two separate bird lists for the Rec. Area and Catahoula Lake.

Catahoula Lake Rec. Area
La Salle Parish
7:17 a.m.; 1 hr 7 mins; 1.3 miles
start temp. 73 F.; clear; mostly calm

Ring-necked Duck - 1
Mourning Dove - 4
Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 1
Black-necked Stilt - x
Killdeer - 1
Spotted Sandpiper - 1
Wood Stork - 8
Wood Storks
Great Blue Heron - 3
Great Egret - 42
Snowy Egret - 2
white egret sp. - 37 - distant
Roseate Spoonbill - 10
Broad-winged Hawk - 1
Belted Kingfisher - 2
White-eyed Vireo - 14
Blue Jay - 2
American Crow - 2
Carolina Chickadee - 2
swallow sp. - 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 6
Carolina Wren - 4
Common Grackle - 6
Prothonotary Warbler - 1
Kentucky Warbler - 1
Hooded Warbler - 1
Summer Tanager - 3
Northern Cardinal - 11
Dickcissel - 1

Catahoula Lake
La Salle Parish
8:25 a.m.; 2 hours; ~1 mile
~80's F.; clear; not much wind to speak of; water very low even by summer/fall draw down standards

Mourning Dove - 1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 3
Black-necked Stilt - 39
Black-necked Stilt
Killdeer - 12
Sanderling - 7
Sanderling
Least Sandpiper - 5 - probably more among "peep sp."
Least Sandpiper
Pectoral Sandpiper - 1
peep sp. - ~50 - distant along canal
Spotted Sandpiper - 7
Willet - 1
Cattle Egret - 14
white egret sp. - ~100 - distant, or flyovers noted while I was busy ID-ing shorebirds
White Ibis - 1
Turkey Vulture - 3
Red-shouldered Hawk - 3 - two hatch-year, one adult
Eastern Kingbird - 3
White-eyed Vireo - 2
American Crow - 7
Carolina Chickadee - 1
Barn Swallow - 10
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 3
Carolina Wren - 1
Common Grackle - x - flyover(s) heard while I was scanning shorebirds
Swainson's Warbler - 2
Swainson's Warbler
Northern Parula - 2
Northern Cardinal - 2
Painted Bunting - 4

Other wildlife on Catahoula Lake and around the Rec. Area...
   Mammals included Swamp Rabbit...
...
...Eastern Fox Squirrel, and a family of Northern Raccoons (mamma raccoon and two half-grown youngsters).
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...
...
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...



   Butterflies included duskywing sp., Common Checkered-Skipper, dark swallowtail sp., Little Yellow, Sleepy Orange, Gulf Fritillary, 'Astyanax' Red-spotted Purple, and Question Mark. This is from memory as I did not record butterflies in my notes this time. Species diversity was low, and the only ones that I'd say were numerous were the Little Yellows.
Sleepy Orange

   After leaving Catahoula Lake, I decided to pay a visit to Catahoula NWR Headquarters Unit. This is one of my most frequented birding locations, but during the past couple of months I'd neglected to bird there as often as I normally would. I drove, making numerous stops, the portion of the refuge loop that goes past the north end of Duck Lake to the corner by Cowpen Bayou, then drove back, and down the east leg of the loop as far as the gated side road that goes to the east side of Duck Lake. A large part of the refuge loop is still closed until damage from the flood earlier this year can be repaired.
north end of Duck Lake
inflow/outflow channel (Duck Lake Slough)
east leg of refuge loop
...
...
   The water level in Duck Lake, though low-ish and gradually dropping, was still high relative to the rest of the Catahoula Lake system and there wasn't a lot of good shorebird habitat. However, the low water on the outflow side of the levee had wading birds concentrated along the slough that connects the lake to the rest of the Catahoula Lake system.
   In the woods there was a fair amount of activity, despite the heat.

Catahoula NWR HQ Unit
mostly La Salle Parish with a sliver of Catahoula Parish
11:06 a.m.; 1 hr 34 mins; 2.4 miles
~90 F.; clear; not much wind to speak of; water level marker in Duck Lake: ~34'

Black-bellied Whistling Duck - 1
Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 1
Ruby-throated Hummingbird - 1
Black-necked Stilt - 2
Killdeer - 1
Wood Stork - 32
Anhinga - 2
Double-crested Cormorant - 4
Great Blue Heron - 5
Great Egret - 127
Snowy Egret - 9
Little Blue Heron - 2
Tricolored Heron - 2
Green Heron - 2
Green Heron
White Ibis - 8
Turkey Vulture - 3
Red-bellied Woodpecker - 3
Downy Woodpecker - 1
Hairy Woodpecker - 1
Pileated Woodpecker - 2
Eastern Wood-Pewee - 1
Empidonax sp. - 1 - seen very briefly; couldn't say which sp. except that it was a very small green/gray/brown flycatcher with buffy or white wingbars
White-eyed Vireo - 6
Red-eyed Vireo - 1
Blue Jay - 4
Carolina Chickadee - 6
Tufted Titmouse - 3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 4
Carolina Wren - 7
Kentucky Warbler - 1
Summer Tanager - 1
male Summer Tanager
Northern Cardinal - 9
Indigo Bunting - 1

Butterflies at the NWR included (from memory; did not record butterflies in my notes this time): Common Checkered-Skipper, Cloudless Sulphur, Hackberry Emperor.
a pair of Cloudless Sulphurs
   As always, if you spot any incorrect IDs or have suggestions for those that I'm unsure about, feel free to let me know.
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