June 2010
May 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
2008
June 15, 2010 - Sometimes you just have to ditch the list!
At
the beginning of the season we suggested that to finish a square,
check your square summary sheet and try to track down missing
species and guilds. While this is good advice, in some cases
habitats have really changed and some species that were in your
square during the first atlas are just there anymore. For
example, yesterday I bushwhacked into what appeared to be an
extensive wetland on to my square map, hoping to find the American
Bittern that bred in the square during the first Atlas. However,
when I arrived I found a black spruce and alder bog with no open
water and no suitable bittern habitat in sight. However, I did find
a Wilson’s Warbler—a species that wasn’t detected in the square
during the first Atlas--in that spot (thank goodness the
bushwhacking wasn't in vain). So please…don’t beat yourself over the
head if species that were in your square during the first Atlas
don’t appear to be there anymore. One of the goals of this atlas is
to detect those types of changes and assess how landscape
changes affect breeding bird distribution. So if you have spent your
twenty hours in your square and looked for all possible species then
you have done a great job! And I bet there’s another unsurveyed
square near you that could use your attention even more.
Photo: Wilson's Warbler by Merv Cormier
June 25, 2010 – We’re
nearly at the halfway point

Many atlassers are sharing their day’s highlights
online and it isn’t just the rarities…it is the special moments that
bring a smile to your face like the fledgling Tree Swallows,
pictured here, awaiting their next meal. Photo by Denis Doucet.
Already at the tail end of
June…my how time flies (sorry, that’s terrible but I just couldn’t
resist the puns). We’re nearly at the halfway point this season and
all signs show that the final year of the Maritimes Atlas is shaping
up to be one of our most successful. Many people are entering data
as they atlas and volunteers have already logged over 3,100 hours
this season and have submitted over 18,000 bird records (and I
suspect the equivalent amount of data are still sitting in people’s
notebooks as well). I look forward to continuing watching the data
roll in and reading the many highlights of everyone’s season.
Many atlassers are also using the MBBA listserv to share their
highlights and stories as well as ask questions and notify other
atlassers where they have surveyed. Postings include: tales of
breeding Great Crested Flycatchers, Baltimore Orioles and American
Bitterns as well as atlassing mishaps (such as a bus driving by and
covering one atlasser with mud…you’ll have to join to find out
whom). Staff teams have followed the atlassing plans posted on the
atlas homepage fairly closely covering off priority squares
southwestern NS, Guysborough County, northern NB along the
Upsalquitch river and the Acadian Peninsula plus some parts of south
western NB. Staff have also point counted and atlassed in nearby
non-priority squares. A square by square update of staff activities
is available here. Lastly,
the birds themselves are also moving along quite rapidly. Many
species are already carrying food, fledged young have been seen and
second nesting attempts are underway. So let's get out there,
record those birds and keep this amazing momentum going!
June 24, 2010 – Getting in those final hours
If
your square only needs an hour or two to make it to the “20 hour
mark” and you feel like you have exhausted all of the possibilities,
consider trying one of the suggestions below:
1) Visit your square at dusk for Common Nighthawk or Short-eared Owl
(grassland habitat usually associated with some wetland-type
habitat);
2) Visit a pond, river or wetland area and stay for a while. It
takes time for things to happen and unfortunately ducks, bitterns,
rails and kingbirds don’t just “appear”. For example, after spending
a full day canoeing a river, it wasn’t until the next day when I was
crossing a bridge over that same river that I saw a Common Goldeneye
with fledged young. Now I’m not suggesting that you stay in one
location all day and night but perhaps have a picnic by a lake or
river and just see what happens by;
3) Target some of those more elusive marsh birds. American Bitterns,
believe it or not, can be quite “stealthy” and while they might call
consistently in the early spring at other times they are silent. If
you have appropriate cattail marsh habitat in your square but have
not yet detected American Bittern try visiting the marsh first thing
in the morning or at dusk. As well, marsh birds may need an extra
bit of encouragement (e.g., American Bitterns respond quite
vigorously to playback). And don’t forget while you are chasing
those American Bitterns to try for Virginia Rail and Least Bittern
as well;
4) Pick a elevated area or good vantage point in the square and
watch for soaring raptors;
5) And a final suggestion, follow that drumming woodpecker that you
haven’t yet identified (but don’t forget to take your GPS or compass
with you when you head into the woods).

What if your square is complete and you’d like to do more?
That’s fantastic! Here are some additional things you can do to
boost coverage in your region:
1)
If you miss doing point counts, why not conduct point counts in a
nearby non-priority square? The more squares point counted the
better and we have until July 3rd to conduct point counts. Squares
need a minimum of 10 point counts completed to be used for abundance
mapping;
2) Finish a non-priority square that hasn’t been assigned. Lots of
non-priority squares have 1 – 30 species (usually the species with
widespread distributions that are detected in most squares) but
these squares could really benefit from additional coverage and
added survey hours will give us a better picture of less common
species’ distributions. Contact your RC or the Atlas office to find
out what square could use your help;
3) Plan an atlassing excursion or “square bash” with a couple of
friends to target undersurveyed areas in your region.
The more squares we complete the better picture we’ll have of our
Maritimes’ species distribution and abundance patterns and the
better baseline we’ll create for assessing changes between the
current Atlas and future atlases. Happy atlassing!
Photo credits
(in order of appearance): Black-backed Woodpecker by Samuel Deanult,
Pied-billed Grebe by John Chardine and Bay-breasted Warbler by Merv
Cormier.
June 1, 2010 - A breeding
first – Sandhill Cranes found nesting in NB!
This
spring, during a routine aerial survey for waterfowl, Canadian
Wildlife Service staff Bruce Pollard and Randy Hicks discovered an
active Sandhill Crane nest near Chipman, New Brunswick. This is a
first since breeding records have been kept for this species. (They
may, however, have nested in the province prior to European
settlement of North America.) Sandhill Cranes now nest from the
Rockies east to New Brunswick. While, breeding maps in most field
guides do not show Sandhill Cranes breeding much further east than
the Ontario-Québec border, recent breeding activity has been
recorded in Maine (2000 – 2008), Massachusetts and Vermont (2007 &
2008), and New Jersey (2005). This northeastward range expansion is
a by-product of the recent explosion of Sandhill Crane populations
throughout North America.
Three migratory subspecies of Sandhill Cranes breed in Canada: 1)
lesser (Grus canadensis canadensis), 2) greater (G. c. tabida) and,
3) Canadian (C. g. rowani), though there is ongoing scientific
discussion about the validity of the Canadian subspecies. Some
maintain that the “Canadian” subspecies should be abandoned as it is
a hybrid of lesser and greater. The Greater Sandhill crane breeds in
northeastern North America, and is further divided into regional
populations based on wintering grounds, morphology and migration
routes. The population that breeds in northeastern North America
(i.e., now in New Brunswick) is known as the Eastern Population, or
EP.
The
Eastern population (EP) of the Greater Sandhill Crane has rebounded
from near extirpation in the 19th century and the early 20th century
– for example just 25 breeding pairs were recorded in Wisconsin in
the 1930s. Since that time, two main factors, the cessation of
hunting (from 1916-1961) and the restoration and protection of
wetlands, have allowed the EP to increase to more than 30,000 birds
by 1996. Over the last 30 – 40 years the eastern population of
Sandhill Cranes has increased from previous population levels by
three to five fold! Sandhill Cranes have also increased because they
have since adapted to feed in agricultural fields, and to nest in
smaller wetlands. Much of the available breeding habitat is now
fully occupied and a maximum breeding density has been reached in
core parts of the EP’s breeding range in Ontario, Michigan and
Wisconsin. The continued population growth is forcing Sandhill
Cranes to expand into new areas with suitable breeding habitat in
more northeasterly parts North America – and into New Brunswick.
Most of the Sandhill Cranes that breed in eastern Canada and
northeastern US winter in Florida and southern Georgia. During
migration huge concentrations of up to 20,000 cranes can be seen at
traditional migratory staging areas.
Sandhill Cranes nest in freshwater wetlands in an open landscape of
grasslands or agricultural fields, and tend to avoid forested
uplands. They build their nest over water and lay a two-egg clutch,
but rarely fledge more than one young. In spite of this low annual
recruitment, Sandhill Crane populations increase because the species
is so long lived (20+ years) and can breed for 15 – 20 years. So
keep your eyes peeled. Our bet is while this may be the first nest
to be discovered in the Maritimes, it certainly won’t be the last.
Photos: (top)
Sandhill Crane by Cynthia Lemay; Sandhill Crane chick by Michael
Shepard
May 28, 2010 - Spring
Newsletter is now available

Boreal Owl by Christian Artuso
Just in the nick of time for the Atlas season, the
spring newsletter
is now available online. For those who have requested it by mail, it
should be arriving at your doorstep shortly. This newsletter is
short and sweet focusing on the priorities for 2010 and the
challenges and atlassing needs in each region. 2010 is our very last
chance to put Maritimes breeding birds on the map and we’re going to
need each and every one of us to get the job done. Hopefully this
newsletter will inspire you to get out and finish off those squares.
May 28, 2010 - Preliminary abundance maps
Andrew
Couturier, Bird Studies Canada’s Senior Analyst for Landscape
Ecology and Conservation (and the individual responsible for
creating all of the Atlas’ online maps) has created a few
preliminary abundance maps for the Maritimes, just to give you a
taste of what will come of all those point counts you’ve completed.
Below is the abundance map for the Northern Parula, a species found
in virtually every square in the Maritimes. Its abundance map shows
that, as far as the Northern Parula is concerned, not all squares
are created equal. While this species is widespread there are
several areas, like the southeastern corner of New Brunswick and the
Tobeatic region of southern NS, where it occurs in particularly high
concentration (those areas are in blue). We’ve posted this map as a
“teaser”. Check out the spring newsletter for abundance maps for two
other Maritimes species.

Preliminary abundance map for the Northern Parula.
If you like what you see take a look at the spring newsletter.
Photo: Brandon Holden
May 28, 2010 - Don’t forget to share your highlights
At the recent Nova Scotia Bird Society out-of-area meeting, held in
Economy on the Chignecto Peninisula in mid-May, the area’s regional
coordinator Joan Czapalay did a simple yet amazing thing—she began
the meeting by asking everyone to share their birding “highlight” of
the day. The highlight didn’t need to be a spectacular species just
a magical moment. And as we went around the room, sharing each of
our highlights, the enthusiasm was really something to behold.
Highlights ranged from “good looks” at an elusive Swainson’s Thrush
and Canada Warbler to a Black-backed Woodpecker and a Brown Creeper
carrying food. I encourage each of you to share your highlights of
the season with your fellow atlassers either through conversation,
the Atlas listserv or your provincial listservs. Let’s face it,
those magical moments are what it is all about.

I bet it was a "magical moment" when Richard Stern
captured this Northern Mockingbird on film.
May 28, 2010 - Where is everybody?
As
we all know the Atlas season is hectic but communicating with each
other is very important and we want to make sure you know where
everyone is and can get a hold of us at any time. The NB Field team,
consisting of Colin McFarlane and Coordinator Becky Stewart, will be
working in southwestern NB in the first part of June (from Charlotte
County to Perth Andover) and then in the northern region of
Restigouche. The NS field team, consisting of Lucas Berrigan and
Jean-François Jetté, will be working on the southwestern shore of NS
as well as Guysborough County and will likely move to Kent County
and the Acadian Peninsula in the latter half of the June.
Click here
for a full list of squares where staff plan to survey. While we have
put every effort into making sure we aren’t duplicating any
volunteer efforts the Maritimes is a big place so please contact us
if these plans conflict in any way with your own. Field teams will
check and return cell phone messages every two to three days and
Becky Stewart will also check email. Kate Bredin, the assistant
coordinator, will be in the Atlas office to answer any coordination
or data entry questions you may have. Kate will also be working to
coordinate surveys along the NS coast. Talk to you soon!
NB Field team (Becky Stewart and Colin McFarlane): 506-540-1822; bstewart@bsc-eoc.org
NS Field team (Jean-François Jetté and Lucas Berrigan) :
506-540-1906
Kate Bredin : 1-866-5ATLAS5 (528-5275);
atlasmaritimes@gmail.com
Photo: Hairy
Woodpecker by Ally Manthorne
May 20, 2010 - The Atlas has a new assistant coordinator
Kate
Bredin (second from the left in the top row)has recently joined Bird
Studies Canada as the new Assistant Coordinator for the Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas. Kate comes to us with a broad range of wildlife
experience having worked with all sorts of taxa from whales to
dragonflies and, of course, birds. She’s a great researcher with
good eye for detail and excellent communication skills. We’re very
excited to have Kate on board as we transition from our final year
of data collection to the publication phase of the Atlas project.
Welcome Kate!
Photo: Kate with
several dedicated volunteers at the recent NS Bird Society meeting
in Chignecto
May 15, 2010 - Dendroica
has been updated and is available to all
Environment
Canada (EC) and the USGS Breeding Bird Survey office are pleased to
announce the official launch of the bird identification training
program Dendroica: An aid to the identification of North American
Birds.
www.natureinstruct.org/dendroica
Dendroica is an interactive website developed to help students,
volunteers and professionals improve their skills at identifying
birds by sight or by sound, particularly so that they can
participate in nature survey and monitoring programs, including
Breeding Bird Atlases. The site includes bird species from
throughout Canada, the USA, and Mexico. The program includes up to 8
or more different sound recordings and photographs for each species
as well as descriptions of the songs of each species. Although there
are still a number of gaps in the site’s coverage, especially from
Mexico, the program also allows participants to contribute new
photographs and sound recordings, so it will continue to improve
over time. Environment Canada and USGS hope that, as more people use
the program, they will be able to fill those gaps in coverage. That
said, there are already more than 12,000 photos and sound recordings
available at the site.
To use all of the features of the program, participants should
register (registration is free) and sign-in. This will allow users
to select lists of species to study, such as all the breeding (or
non-breeding) species in a particular region, or species with a
particular song type or from a particular taxonomic group, or they
can make their own lists. They can then study the photos or sound
recordings and read the song descriptions for the selected species
before quizzing themselves to see how well they are doing. The quiz
randomly picks songs and/or photos (users can choose) from among the
list available for each species. This is particularly valuable for
learning bird songs because since there are multiple recordings of
most species and users don't always hear the same recording for a
particular species.
May 3, 2010 - Spring has sprung and the
birds are back
Spring has sprung and that means the “prime” atlassing season is
just around the corner. Many of our spring migrants like
WHITE-THROATED SPARROW, RUBY-CROWNED KINGLET, HERMIT THRUSH and a
myriad of warblers are moving through in fair numbers, particularly
in the southern parts of the Maritimes. As well, and at the risk of
sounding like a broken record, for many species the breeding season
is already here. Ducks of all kinds have now been seen throughout
the Maritimes, many are paired off and some are on nests. AMERICAN
BITTERN are “ung-ka-glunking” in a marsh near you. EASTERN BLUEBIRDS
are already nest-building in some areas and BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEES
have been seen excavating nests in several regions. For owls and
diurnal raptors breeding is in “full swing”. Both NORTHERN SAW-WHET
and GREAT HORNED OWL have been confirmed. LONG-EARED OWL has been
reported in 4 squares this year, not to mention an EASTERN SCREECH
OWL was heard singing near Moncton. As well, both of our “rarer”
woodpeckers, AMERICAN THREE TOED WOODPECKER and BLACK-BACKED
WOODPECKER have been recorded for 2010. Several Atlassers have also
been out “woodcocking and sniping” and, as a result, AMERICAN
WOODCOCK have so far been detected in 52 squares. Is that enough
detail to entice you to get out atlassing already? I know it is.
Photo: Eastern
Bluebird nest building in Kent Count in April , 2010. Photo by
Denis Doucet.
May 3, 2010 - Going GREEN, or,
planning the final field season
As noted above, a lot of migrants are already back. In particular,
short distance migrants like EASTERN BLUEBIRD, DARK-EYED JUNCO, and
WILSON’S SNIPE have been lured northward by the warmer temperatures
we’ve been experiencing. This means that, in many regions, the
breeding season is likely to come early this year. It also means
that the best time to start planning our final field season is now.
The theme of 2010 is: “think big picture” – beyond square and
regional boundaries. Remember our overarching goal: to map current
Maritimes breeding bird distribution and abundance and assess the
changes that have occurred over the past twenty years. To achieve
this goal we need to make sure that the current Atlas effort is
comparable to the first Atlas effort. In doing so we will ensure
that the whole of the Maritimes is evenly and adequately covered and
that any changes we see are truly representative of changes across
the landscape. With this in mind our priorities for 2010 are as
follows:
1) Survey a minimum of 20 hours in all priority squares;
2) Target missing guilds and under-surveyed habitats in priority
squares;
3) Top up point counts in squares where point counts have been
started;
4) Make abundance estimates where we can.
But, how do these priorities relate to your individual planning
activities you ask? If your square does not have a full 20 survey
hours, check to make sure that you have surveyed all habitats in the
square, e.g., have you checked that marsh in the eastern corner for
AMERICAN BITTERN and VIRGINIA RAIL? (For that matter, have you tried
using your species at risk CD for LEAST BITTERN and YELLOW RAIL?).
Check if you missed surveying for any type of species e.g., have you
gone out a dusk to check for COMMON NIGHTHAWK, or, have you looked
for raptor nests? If you’ve already spent 20 hours in your square,
please move to another priority square that doesn’t have a full 20
hours of survey effort.
What if all the priority squares in my region are assigned? If you
are able, it would be great if you could help out a region with
fewer volunteers (plus there are volunteer travel grants available
to help cover the costs). Of course, this isn’t an option for
everyone. If you are unable to travel to another region, please
consider taking on a non-priority square in your region that has
fewer than 20 survey hours.
What about point counts? Our original goal was to complete point
counts in all priority squares and for the most part these have been
completed. In some squares, some point counts have been completed
BUT fewer than 10 (these squares are the “yellow” ones on the point
count maps). To be used to map relative abundance a square must have
at least 10 point counts. Let’s top up those partially point counted
squares so that the data that has already been gathered can be used.
Are you ready to go? By now most of you should have received your
data forms for 2010 by mail. If you haven’t, or if you require
additional forms, please contact the Atlas office and we’ll post
those to you directly. As well, if you haven’t spoken with your
Regional Coordinator recently, now would be a great time to touch
base and discuss plans for the coming field season—that will help
minimize the duplication of effort and maximize overall coverage. If
you plan to survey in a region without a coordinator, please contact
the Atlas office.
Photo: American
Bittern by Christian Artuso
May 3, 2010 - Apply for volunteer travel grants
We wish to encourage any atlasser planning to travel more than 100
km to survey for breeding birds to apply for a volunteer travel
grant. The goal of the Atlas’ Volunteer Travel Grant Program is to
support volunteers surveying remote, unpopulated and under-surveyed
areas that might not otherwise be covered during this Atlas. In the
past, volunteer travel grants have helped facilitate trips to
numerous off-shore islands as well as cover mileage costs of
volunteers surveying in the northern parts of NB.
To be eligible to apply for a volunteer travel grant your atlassing
plans must:
- include an under-surveyed priority square that is either more
than 100km from your home, or, can only be accessed by boat;
- be of sufficient length to meet the square’s coverage targets
(20 survey hours);
- include at least one experienced birder.
The application process is simple. To apply for a volunteer travel
grant send a brief email (not more than a ½ page) to bstewart@bsc-eoc.org,
or by mail to Becky Stewart at 17 Waterfowl Lane, Sackville, NB E4L
3W7 (email is preferred). Please include the following information:
1. Name of applicant, contact information and details of his/her
birding and wilderness experience;
2. If applicable, names of additional participants and details of
their birding and wilderness experience;
3. Squares to be surveyed;
4. Dates and length of the trip;
5. List of expected expenses (mileage, accommodation, boat rental).
Volunteer travel grants awarded are typically in the amount of $500
or less. The deadline for grant applications is May 14, 2010
(although we will continue to accept applications after this
deadline so long as funds are still available).
Thank-you to Bird Studies Canada’s James L. Baillie Memorial Fund
for once again providing the funding to support our Atlas volunteer
travel grants.
Photo: Canoe on
Sporting Lake by Becky Stewart
January 12, 2010 - 2009 Data Entry Deadline
Well, 2010 is upon us (yikes!) and that means we need to plan for
our final year of field work. To make plan the coming field season
we need to know what has been surveyed and what hasn’t, and the only
way to know that is if you’ve submitted your data. If you are
entering your data online, all 2009 data must be entered by January
31st. So if you have data left to enter please slot some time into
your busy schedule in the next few weeks. If you are submitting
paper forms, please get them in the mail as soon as possible. Once
all the data is in, we will be able to see where to focus our
efforts this summer.
Plus don’t forget to fill out those rare/colonial bird forms. As you
enter your data Maritimes rare, regionally rare and colonial species
are indicated with symbols after the species name and the website
will prompt you to fill out a rare/colonial species report as you
finish off your breeding evidence form.
Please contact the Atlas office with any questions/comments/concerns
or if you need to be reminded of your user number or password, or
try the Data Entry FAQ under “Resources > Instructions”
(drop-down menu is at the top of the page). Thanks for
all your efforts and Happy New Year!
Photo:
Spruce Grouse by Becky Stewart
January 12, 2010 -
Crossbills: Bravely breeding when no other bird will

Red Crossbill, photo by Mike
Wisnicki
The following article originally appeared in
the Atlas Latest News on January 07, 2009 but we're posting it again
in light of the many questions the office has received about
Crossbills in the past few weeks. If you haven't seen or heard any
crossbills yet, keep your ears and eyes open because it seems
like 2010 may be our "Crossbill Year".
Despite an abundance of winter birds in the Maritimes (chickadees, grosbeaks, finches etc…), only two passerine species
regularly breed in January: White-winged and Red Crossbill. So, what
is it about the crossbills that allow them to breed in the winter
while other songbirds must wait until spring? Crossbills forage on
the seeds in conifer cones, using their crossed mandibles to wedge
open cone scales and their tongues to lift the seeds out. Much of
the crossbills’ breeding behaviour and ecology can be understood in
terms of their exploitation of this food source. Because cone crop
availability is erratic, crossbills are nomads, traveling to take
advantage of developing cone crops and breeding whenever food
sources are sufficient for egg production. Since crossbills do not
require insects for breeding (nestlings are fed partially digested
seeds), breeding occurs year round. In the Maritimes, White-winged
Crossbills generally breed in two bouts: from early January to April
and from July to October, while Red Crossbills primarily breed in
January through April. For atlassers, this means that much of the
crossbills’ breeding activities falls outside of the typical atlassing period (i.e., June and July).
During the first Maritimes Atlas (1986-1990), White-winged
Crossbills were detected in 536 atlas squares; most records were
from the summer and fall of 1988 when the spruce cone crop was
particularly heavy. The breeding evidence observed was primarily
singing males (S) and birds on territory (T). Fledged young (FY)
were reported in 100 squares but only 3 nests were found over the
entire five year period. Red Crossbills were detected in 159 squares
with breeding confirmed (FY) in 25 squares. No Red Crossbill nests
were found during the first Atlas effort. Thus far, during the
second Atlas, White-winged and Red Crossbills have been recorded in
295 and 88 squares, respectively. I’m going to bet we can find them
in a lot more! So, where should we look and what breeding evidence
codes should we use to describe these detections?
Both species are found in coniferous forest (spruce, hemlock, fir
etc…) when trees have an ample cone crop. Breeding males will often
sing while circling overhead—this behaviour should be recorded as
“S” or, “D” if a female is also present. The
Red Crossbill’s song is
a series of short warbled clicks and whistles while the
White-winged
Crossbill’s song is filled with longer trills and warblers and is,
in some ways, reminiscent of the American Goldfinch’s song. Keep
your eyes peeled for females carrying nesting material (this may
also be a good way to find crossbill nesting sites). Also, note that
you won’t see Crossbills carrying food because adults carry food for
young is carried in their crop, but, you may see males feeding
females (D) or parents feeding recently FY (young are heavily
streaked). So, the next time you are out walking or cross-country
skiing in the woods, look and listen for breeding crossbills…you may
even be the first to find a crossbill nest during this atlas effort.
Photo: Female White-winged Crossbill by Clyde Barrett
January 12, 2010 - Quebec Catches Atlassing Fever
Regroupement
Québec Oiseaux, Bird Studies Canada and Environment Canada have
partnered to map all of the birds breeding in “la belle province”
for a second time. Field work for the second Quebec Breeding Bird
Atlas will begin this summer. That means there will be four Canadian
atlases underway this summer giving birders from coast to coast a
chance to get their binoculars and contribute to science.
Like other atlas projects, the Quebec Atlas will provide up-to-date
information on the abundance and distribution of breeding birds
throughout the province. The second Quebec Atlas will also expand
its’ survey coverage beyond that of the first which focused on the
more accessible and populated southern regions of the province. This
time around efforts will be made to cover the northern and remote
sections of the province. In the end the data gathered will be used
to inform policy and guide conservation action in Quebec for years
to come.
Follow the project’s progress on their
website
and anyone spending time in Quebec this summer is encouraged to help
out (once your Maritimes square is complete of course). And don’t
worry if you don’t make it to Quebec this summer, there will be at
least 4 more years to participate once the Maritimes Atlas is
complete.
January 12, 2010 - Maritimes Atlas First Edition Newsletters Now
Available Online
For anyone feeling nostalgic for, or just curious about, newsletters
from the first Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas, you’re in luck because
they are now available online. You can read articles documenting
atlassing trips, tips for atlassers, check out some great artwork in
them, and remember how the first atlas came together. The
newsletters can be viewed and downloaded from the Atlas Newsletter
page.
Top of
Page
December 11, 2009 - I’m
dreaming of a white Christmas Bird Count

Snow Buntings photo by John Chardine
Here in Sackville we got our
first good snowfall of the year on the weekend and when the sun came
out it was glorious to behold that fresh snow in the rising sun. It
finally got me into the holiday spirit and got me very excited about
the Christmas Bird Counts coming up very soon. For those of you
don’t know every year for over 100 years now, birders and scientists
alike have flocked together to be involved in this long-term and far
reaching project. Sometime between mid-December and early-January
all day counts are conducted all over the western hemisphere, with
over 2100 counts done last year from Alaska to Chile. By doing the
census every year during the same period long term trends in bird
abundance can be monitored and mapped, and (up here in the northern
regions at least) rarities and vagrants can be found and celebrated.
Now, don’t fret because
you’re worried that many of the Maritimes’ birds have flown south
for the winter, it doesn’t mean that there’s nothing out there for
you to see. In the Maritimes up to 150 or more bird species are
seen every year, with hundreds of thousands of individual birds
reported. I was talking with a co-worker who was participating last
year and he said they hadn’t seen anything special in the morning,
but in the afternoon they saw a Fox Sparrow, a Northern Mockingbird
and then a Broad-winged Hawk all fly by within a short period of
time, along with a collection of more usual winter sightings. Not
bad for a cold December afternoon.
The weather outside might
not be your idea of ideal birding weather but the camaraderie shared
by everyone who comes out to the counts more than makes up for some
cold toes. And I’m told that the tally-up dinners that follow many
of the counts always bring together good food and good stories to
toast the season with. If you want to get involved in a local
Christmas Bird Count then
click here for more information.
It’s not
too late, organizers are always happy to add someone else to their
crews. We here at the Atlas would like to wish everyone a happy and
safe count this year and all the best into the New Year.
December 11, 2009 - Shell
gives $10,000 to survey Nova Scotia’s coastline and coastal islands
Nova Scotia’s extensive coastline sets it apart from the rest of the
province—both the landscape and bird communities are unique. In
particular, for a short time during the spring and summer months
NS’s coast and coastal islands become extremely important to nesting
birds. For example hard rock ledges and cliffs along the coast
provide nesting sites for Black Guillemots and Black-legged
Kittiwakes. Other species like terns and eiders nest in grassy
areas found on coastal islands. Puffins and petrels nest in
underground burrows. And the bird diversity along the coast isn’t
restricted to seabirds. Islands and coastal areas harbour habitats
for regionally unusual or rare species. For example, Fox Sparrows,
Blackpoll Warblers and Bicknell’s Thrush, which are typically found
in more northern forests and/or at high elevations, breed along
Atlantic coasts and islands where the climatic conditions are much
like those of more northern climes.
However, coastal areas also present a unique challenge to those
people attempting to survey them for breeding birds because while
most of the Maritimes can be accessed by car or foot, most of NS’s
coast and coastal islands can only be accessed by boat. Few
volunteers have the equipment, boating expertise and/or finances to
undertake these types of surveys. To ensure that Nova Scotia’s
coast is surveyed during the course of the Atlas project, the Shell
Environmental Fund has provided $10,000 to support surveys along
Nova Scotia’s coast. The data gathered from these coastal surveys
will help give us a more complete picture of Maritimes bird
biodiversity and will be used to identify important seabird nesting
areas and prioritize sites for future conservation.
Photo: Black Guillemots by Kevin Kelly
December 11, 2009 - Fall
newsletter now available
The Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas’
fall newsletter is now available
online. The format of this seventh edition departs from those of
newsletters previously produced. This edition has the “look and
feel” of the newsletters from the first Maritimes Atlas—it dons the
first Atlas logo and formatting style. But what about the content
you ask? The newsletter focuses on the current Atlas’ progress
relative to the first Atlas as well as provides various trip
reports, strategies for next field season, new breeding records and
suggestions how to approach atlassing in wilderness areas.
Thank-you to everyone who contributed to the newsletter and we
hope you enjoy it!
Photo: Common Redpoll by
John Chardine
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November 20, 2009 -
Want to take your bird checklist into the electronic age?

Herring Gull , photo by John Chardine
Although birding and
entering data online aren’t everyone’s favourite pastime, some
Atlassers really enjoy entering their data online, seeing their
observations appear on the online maps and creating data summaries
with their data as well as with the data submitted by other
atlassers. For those of you who enjoy using the internet and are
going to miss contributing to the Atlas database over the winter,
let us introduce you to ebird Canada (http://ebird.org/content/canada).
eBird is a real-time, online checklist program and it is one of the
fastest growing bird biodiversity data resources in existence.
Initially launched by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the
National Audubon Society in 2002, ebird has now amassed a total of
26,368,659 individual bird observations for North America.
How does it work?
eBird documents the presence/absence of bird species (much like the
Atlas) through an online checklist program. Participants enter
where, how and when they went birding and then fill out a checklist
of bird species seen and/or heard. There are no specific survey
protocols or timing of surveys, instead it is just a program that
allows users to keep track of their bird observations and see what
others have observed as well. For example, eBird has a feature that
allows you to map recent notable bird sightings in your province or
country-wide. In the map below you can see exactly where on
White Head Island Roger Burrows had a Ruddy Turnstone on November
13. And you don’t have to be an eBird participant to use this
feature; although I have a feeling if you visit the site often
you’ll want to see your observations appear on the map too. Where
does all this information go? It goes beyond sharing your
observations with other birders. The information you enter into
eBird is part of a greater global biodiversity information community
(e.g., all data is shared with the Avian Knowledge Network) and thus
any contribution you make will contribute to a better understanding
of bird distribution and richness across the Western Hemisphere and
beyond.

"Screen capture" from
http://ebird.ca/sightings.jsp?prov=NB on November 19, 2009.
Each red balloon represents a recent NB bird sighting.
November 20, 2009 - Spending time in the valley… Okanagan not
Annapolis by Kevin Kelly, Bird Studies Canada Bird Projects
Assistant
I
am new to working with the Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas and Bird
Studies Canada. Coming from the west coast I am often drawn back to
the BC Breeding Bird Atlas site (www.birdatlas.bc.ca) to check
progress there and see where the “hotspots” are back home. If you
have ever looked at the species density map in BC you may have
noticed a strip of squares starting at the US border, in about the
middle of the province, that appears to have an awful lot of bird
species. For those of you not familiar with BC, this is the Okanagan
Valley, a hotspot for BC birding. With habitat that includes more
than just the typical coniferous and boreal forests of the province,
the Okanagan and surrounding areas have their own unique local
species diversity. It has the most breeding species (at least 163
confirmed) in the province and numerous other migrants pass through
each year (the Okanagan Valley Bird checklist boasts 319 birds). So
if you ever find yourself in BC, why not check out the Okanagan
Valley to look for Canyon Wren or Flammulated Owl (it’s the only
place they occur in Canada). Other species you are likely to find
include: White-headed Woodpecker, Black-chinned Hummingbird,
White-throated Swift, and Pygmy Nuthatch—all of which may
occasionally pop up elsewhere but your best chance to see them
without having to use your passport is in the Okanagan. In addition,
the valley’s namesake waterbody, Okanagan Lake, as well as the
surrounding wetlands are host to numerous waterfowl species while
the valley’s slopes support several resident species including the
Mountain Chickadees. So if you’re heading west I suggest stopping in
the Okanagan…who knows? you might even catch a glimpse of the
elusive Ogopogo (not a rare bird but rather Lake Okanagan’s answer
to Nessy).
Photo: Flammulated
Owl by Dick Cannings
November 20, 2009 –
Point counts in the winter? Tell me more.
You
are invited to participate in a study of bird call observer effects
for Maritimes Bird Watchers. Bob Farmer and Andy Horn from the
Leonard Lab at Dalhousie University are studying the factors
influencing bird-point count surveys and they could use your help.
They have created a survey to assess bird call observers and their
abilities to bird by ear. The survey is designed for experienced
bird watchers and consists of 16 simulated “point counts,” each 30
seconds long, and your job is to identify all the birds you can,
just like in the field. The scenarios are designed for Maritimes
birders and, according to the study’s creators, “the diversity of
birds featured in this survey might make it the most thrilling point
count experience you've had in years.” All participation is totally
voluntary and ANONYMOUS and if at any time you want to quit, you
can. The information gathered will be used to improve bird sampling
protocols. That means that the more birders who give this a try, the
better they can tailor future techniques for us all. So if you’ve
got 15 minutes, take the survey to test your knowledge and get some
practice for next summer. The researchers have mentioned that
although they have put out the notice and several people have
visited the site, few have actually completed the survey. We’d like
to encourage you to participate--you’ve got nothing to lose and in
the end it may help us develop better bird monitoring techniques.
Visit http://leonardlab.biology.dal.ca/survey/ for more details and
to take the survey.
Photo: Blue Jay by
John Chardine
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October 7, 2009 - First Atlas Data More Accessible
Denis
Lepage, the Atlas’ database manager, has added a new feature to the
Atlas’ online data summaries page. You can now choose to summarize
data from either the first or current Maritimes Atlas. When
summarizing first Atlas data, you have all the same options as you
do for the current Atlas, and can examine data by year, by region,
by species etc…We hope you’ll find this to be a useful and fun tool.
Photo: Spruce
Grouse by Samuel Denault.
October 7, 2009 - Another
Atlas on the Horizon
It's
true! By next summer, we will have three Canadian atlases
operating simultaneously as Manitoba catches the atlassing
bug (check out their fancy new logo on the right) and British
Columbia heads into their third year of field work. This is Manitoba's first breeding bird atlas
and it will be very exciting to see their breeding birds'
distributions mapped as well as the other important conservation
information that will undoubtedly come out of this effort. For
example, very recently (i.e., in the past two years), it has been
discovered that the Golden-winged Warbler is much more widespread in
Manitoba than was previously estimated. Who knows if this may
be the case for other Manitoba breeding species as well?! Christian Artuso (cartuso@birdscanada.org)
of Bird Studies Canada will be coordinating the Manitoba Atlas and
the Atlas' website will soon be up and running. One challenge that
Manitoba will face is in trying to tackle their northernmost regions which are
primarily road less (British Columbia is already dealing with this
issue). And what does this all mean for the Maritimes, the "senior"
of the three atlases? Well, for
those Maritimes volunteers still "jones-ing" to go atlassing
once our Atlas is complete, I'm sure these provinces will be only
too happy to enlist your help. But remember, you aren't available
until after 2010!

The Golden-winged Warbler...just one of Manitoba's
284 breeding birds waiting to be mapped. Photo by Christian
Artuso.
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August 24, 2009 - Four
down, one to go!

Semipalmated Sandpipers on migration, photo by John
Chardine
Although a few very late breeders may still be hanging around (e.g.,
American Goldfinch and Cedar Waxwing), for the most part our
breeding birds have finished breeding and have already departed for
their southern wintering grounds. And thus, our atlassing season
also comes to a close. Congratulations to all of the atlas
participants—you have completed yet another very successful atlas
season. And while many of us our now using this “down time” to
relax, there are several participants entering their data online
and/or submitting their data to either the Atlas office or their
regional coordinator. As of today, volunteers have already submitted
data for 858 squares, completed 1986 point counts and reported 25,
301 individual bird records for 2009. New species were also found
this summer—including Sedge Wren singing in both NB and NS, as well
as a nesting pair of Orchard Orioles in Region 7. Most importantly,
many atlassers got into areas that hadn’t yet been covered and
topped up hours and species numbers in priority squares. I can’t
wait to see the results as data are added to the database! Just a
final note...several atlassers have estimated abundance for
completed squares. If you haven't done so yet, give abundance
estimates a try--these estimates will help us make comparisons
between the first and second Atlas.
August 7, 2009 - Goodbye
Ivy, we’ll miss you!
Congratulations
to Assistant Coordinator, Ivy Austin, who has landed himself a new
position with Service Canada. We’re definitely going to miss you,
but we know that even with your new job you’ll still be an active
atlasser. Thanks so much for all your hard work and dedication to
the project. Good luck and all the best!
Ivy Austin, former Assistant Coordinator, photo by
Becky Stewart
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July 24, 2009 - There's
still lots of good atlassing to be had!
It
is at this time of year that atlassing slows down. However this
year, maybe because of the weather, things haven’t quite slowed down
quite as much as usual. Although you aren’t likely to get a
Blackburnian Warbler singing there are still many other species
singing like Hermit Thrush, Black-throated Green Warblers, Red-eyed
Vireos, even Alder flycatchers, etc… and some of the later breeding
species like Cedar Waxwing and American Goldfinch are still just
getting started. At the same time, other birds are beginning their
southward migration, so the question is, how to atlas at this time
of year? The answer: “carefully”. “H” is the only breeding evidence
code that I would really hesitate to use at this time of year. For
example, I heard chipping the other day, so I pished and out came a
male Black-throated Green Warbler. He didn’t seem particularly
agitated by my presence, and hopped around on the branches in front
of me foraging. I heard another few chips and thought that maybe he
had fledged young hiding somewhere behind him so I pished again and,
to my surprise, out came another male Black-throated Green and a
male Magnolia Warbler in fall plumage. I believe those individuals
must have already been migrating and I didn’t record them at all.
Further down the road I heard a Black-throated Green male sing. I
pished and he burst from the forest, flying right at me, with a
mouthful of food and chipping rapidly. This male was obviously
breeding (it wasn’t long before I saw a Black-throated Green
fledgling). This example highlights some of the ways that you can
distinguish migrants from breeding birds. Firstly, birds don’t
usually sing during fall migration, so if a bird is singing it is
likely breeding (or trying to breed; one exception is White-throated
Sparrow fledglings that “practice” singing). This atlassing season,
bad weather may have delayed breeding or caused nests to fail
because many species, even flycatchers, are still singing. Second,
migrating birds also don’t respond to pishing at any great speed and
when they do, they don’t appear agitated. On the other hand,
breeding birds that respond to pishing do so almost immediately,
generally giving chips or alarm calls, or show other signs of being
agitated. Lastly, as a general rule of thumb at this time of year,
it is best to look for higher levels of breeding such as carrying
food, fledged young, agitated behaviour, pairs or distraction
displays. So if you are asking the question can I still atlas? The
Answer: Yes, please do! For southerly regions atlassing will likely
continue for a week or two, for Cape Breton and Northern NB, it may
be even longer.
Photo:
Bay-breasted Warbler by Merv Cormier
July 15, 2009 -
Tales from the field
I’d
like to share with you one of my best mornings of atlassing this
season; it occurred just the other day on July 14th. A bit of
background before I begin… Kyle Wellband, fellow atlasser, and I had
just returned from a fairly grueling and fantastic canoe trip in the
Tobeatic the night before. We had enjoyed our atlassing/canoe trip
so much that our expectations weren’t that high for the 14th—how
could it compare to where we had just been? Our plan for the morning
was to walk in separate directions for a couple of hours, returning
to the truck sometime around 8:30 so we could continue to another
section of the square to survey. My walk was towards a river through
upland and coniferous habitat types. By the time I reached the
river, the morning had already been very good, exceeding my
expectations by far—I’d had two Canada Warblers “agitated” by my
presence, a Hermit Thrush “carrying food” and Boreal Chickadee
“fledged young”. It was also at the river that I realized it was
8:20 and that I had 10 minutes to return along a trail it had taken
me 2 hours to walk. So half running, half stumbling I began to hurry
back hoping that Kyle wouldn’t think that I had ended up in a ditch
with a twisted ankle (actually Kyle’s quite used to my being late
when we set a meeting time…he usually just has a snack while he
waits). I was halfway back when I heard a woodpecker tapping. I
looked up to see a Black-backed Woodpecker working on a pine tree
almost directly beside the path; flaking off bark and looking for
the insects beneath. I paused, hoping that I might see the
Black-backed gathering food for young in a nest. Sure enough, he
pulled out an insect and didn’t eat it himself. However, instead of
flying off, the woodpecker turned to the side and fed the fledgling
(that I had missed) sitting directly on the branch behind him. The
adult then went back to probing the tree soon finding another insect
to feed the young. The fledgling too worked flaking off bark
himself, but quickly returned to his father’s side each time
the adult pulled out a new prey item. I continued to watch them
foraging and feeding on that same pine tree for about ten minutes.
The morning sun was on the pair, lighting up them and the tree..the
sight was absolutely magical and I watched the Black-backs for about
ten minutes before I continued up the path to meet Kyle. My advice
to all: if you haven’t been out atlassing yet, get out there, and if
you’ve already been out, try a new walk, new habitat or even a new
square—the reward can be quite high.
Photo:
Black-backed Woodpecker by Samuel Denault
July 15, 2009 -
Abundance estimates
The
time has come to estimate abundance and many of us don’t know where
to begin. Indeed it took me until year four to come up with a system
that worked for me. The key thing to remember when you are
estimating abundance is that it is an estimate, in other words, you
can’t be wrong. Also, keep in mind, you don’t have to estimate
abundance for every species, only the ones for which you feel
comfortable doing so.
There are several different ways to arrive at abundance estimates
(see the Latest News Archives for previous discussions). Despite
this, many of us have had trouble getting started so I thought I
would explain how I have been arriving at my abundance estimates as
a “jumping off” point for other atlassers. When in a square I have
been keeping rough track of the number of individuals of each
species (rather than just recording breeding evidence). Later, I try
to relate the number of individuals observed to the amount of
similar habitat in the square. For example, along a 3 km stretch of
road in a single square I had approximately 25 Palm Warblers. The
same habitat covers about 60% of the square so I felt safe saying
that there must be more than 100 pairs of Palm Warblers in the
square as a whole. I thus coded Palm Warbler abundance as a “4”
indicating that I estimate there to be between 101 and 1000 pairs of
Palm Warblers in the square as a whole (see page 12 for a
description of abundance indices). In the same square there were two
Eastern Wood-Pewees singing in mature deciduous forest, the only
deciduous forest in the square. I recorded my abundance index for
Eastern Wood-Pewee as “2” indicating that I estimate there to be
between 2 and 10 pairs of pewees in the square. In one section of
the square, there was a fairly wide section of river with 5 Yellow
Warblers singing along the area that I could access. The river
continued through the square and I imagine had similar suitable
Yellow Warbler habitat along it. I didn’t find Yellow Warbler
anywhere else in the square. I recorded “3” as the abundance index
for Yellow Warbler, guessing that they were likely found all along
the river thus there were probably more than 10 pairs but less than
100 pairs total. Whether or not you use this “system” to arrive at
your abundance estimates doesn’t matter, all that matters it that
you give estimating abundance a try. The first Maritimes Breeding
Bird Atlas is one of the only first generation atlases to estimate
abundance thus we have a unique opportunity to examine changes in
abundance between the first and second Maritimes Atlas (of course
this will only happen if we all estimate abundance for our squares).
Photo: Palm
Warbler by Ivy Austin
July 8, 2009 -
Birding the Chignecto Game Sanctuary
BSC’s
Atlantic Canada Program Manager Becky Whittam recently joined
Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) staff Lindsay Notzl
and Jon Feldgajer, as well as Vicki Daley of Cumberland Wilderness,
for a day of bird atlassing in the Chignecto Game Sanctuary near
Joggins, Nova Scotia. The area contains large tracts of mature
deciduous and coniferous forest and a series of bogs known as the
Bucktagen Barrens, and provides habitat for many regionally
interesting bird species including Spruce Grouse, Gray Jay, Boreal
Chickadee, Palm Warbler, Lincoln’s Sparrow, Barred Owl, Northern
Goshawk, Black-throated Blue Warbler, and Eastern Wood Pewee. CPAWS
and Cumberland Wilderness are campaigning for the NS government to
protect this area under the Wilderness Areas Protection Act, as the
current Game Sanctuary designation offers no protection from
resource extraction activities such as forestry and mining. Read the
Fall 2008 CPAWS newsletter for more information about the campaign.
The area is in square 20LR84.
Photo: Lindsay Notzl, Jon Feldgajer and Vicki Daley by Becky Whittam
July 7, 2009
- Atlassing East Ironbound and Flat Island
This summer, several volunteers received volunteer travel grants to
survey remote and difficult to access areas in the Maritimes. Below is a report
from atlasser and trip leader, Chris Fields, for one such trip. I'm sure you'll
agree, their trip was a great success and thank-you to Bird Studies Canada's Baillie
Fund for helping make this trip possible.
Report on Trip to East Ironbound and Flat Island by Chris Field
The
trip took place on July 1, 2009 on a boat chartered from Daryl
Gates, a local fisherman from Blandford. There were six birders,
Alan Covert, Blake Maybank, Ian McLaren, Eric Mills, Hans Toom and
me, Chris Field. We left the dock in Blandford shortly after 6:00am
and headed to East Ironbound. The wind was light from the southeast
with overcast skies and light fog. On the trip out, there were a
number of seabirds including a Wilson's Storm-petrel, several
gannets and several Greater and Sooty Shearwaters. Once on East
Ironbound, we split into two groups, one heading east and the other
west. The birdlife on the island was quite active and we were able
to both add new species and get confirmations for several other
species for square 20MQ12. We added Fox Sparrows (CF), Bay-breasted
Warbler (S) and Cliff Swallow (P). We confirmed Barn Swallows (NY)
(large numbers of barn swallows around the fish sheds), redstart
(CF), Savannah Sparrow (CF), Boreal Chickadee (FY) and Black
Guillemots (AE). In terms of improving the breeding status, we had
Blackpoll Warbler (A). Another 11 species were found on the island
for which there was already comparable breeding evidence. After
leaving East Ironbound, about 9:30am, we headed towards Flat Island.
This island is uninhabited and has a fringe of live boreal forest
around the perimeter, with deadfall everywhere in the interior. We
landed in a small boat and again split up into groups. We were on
the part of the island in 20MQ11 (Pearl Island) so almost all the
breeding activity observed was new. There was evidence of a Greater
Black-backed Gull colony but no fledged birds but one nest contained a
broken egg. It was felt that the breeding had not been successful
and we wondered if it had been predated by the Bald Eagle on the
island. Eric Mills observed a single Greater Yellowlegs which might
be a possible breeder. Other notable birds were a Nelson's
Sharp-tailed Sparrow (S) and a Lincoln's Sparrow (S). We had a total
of 20 species on Flat Island of which Song Sparrows (CF) were by far
the most abundant. We also confirmed eider (FY), crow (FY), robin
(CF), Yellow-rumped Warbler (FY), Savannah Sparrow (CF) and raven
(FY).
We
then headed to Grassy Island in 20MQ02 (Tancook). Grassy Island is a
rock outcrop with a small grassy area in the center. There were
fledged young herring gulls and we estimated the colony size to be
between 11-100 pairs. We had Arctic Terns and a tree swallow near
the island and large numbers of eiders with edged young. As we
sailed past Little Tancook, we were able to confirm Greater
Black-backed Gulls (FY) and Herring Gulls (FY). We returned to the
wharf in Blandford shortly after 1:30pm. Everyone agreed it had been
a very successful altlassing trip and expressed an interest in
re-visiting East Ironbound during Fall migration.
Photos : Bald Eagle
and Tree Swallow by John Chardine
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June 21, 2009 -
Update on field staff activities
Although
the work of a few staff members can not begin to compare with the
work of several hundred volunteers --it seems like the colours on
the online maps are changing daily--staff have been doing their best
to help get the job done, particularly in difficult to access areas.
This year, starting May 29th (the beginning of point count season),
two Atlas point count teams were deployed from the Atlas office, one
to New Brunswick and another to Nova Scotia. In addition, a third
crew headed to Gagetown to survey for species at risk on the
Gagetown base and in the surrounding area (the southern Saint John
River Valley). Bird Studies Canada staff working on other programs
(e.g., the High Elevation Landbird Program that surveys for
Bicknell’s Thrush and other high elevation birds) have also been
doing point counts around their study. Lastly, a final staff member
spent two weeks conducting point counts on Prince Edward Island.
Despite flat tires and an incident involving a truck in a marsh,
things have gone extremely well. Some birding highlights include:
two observations of Sedge Wren (on the Digby neck, NS and in region
12, NB), Fox Sparrows along the south shore of Nova Scotia, a pair
of breeding Orchard Orioles in western New Brunswick and many, many
Canada Warblers. Combined, staff have already completed point counts
in 50 squares..and they are hungry for more. Staff will likely have
time to do more point counts than we had initially planned so if you
aren't able to get to the point counts in your square this year and
would like some help, please call the Atlas office.
Photo: Northern Parula by Brandon Holden
June 11, 2009 -
Mid-June is a great time for atlassing!
Whether
you are conducting point counts or are getting out to survey your
square, mid-June is a fantastic time to Atlas. Depending upon the
province or region in which you reside, different bird species are
likely to be in very different stages of breeding. In southern Nova
Scotia several species, including Palm Warbler, Yellow-rumped
Warbler, Swamp Sparrow and Hermit Thrush, are already carrying food.
In northern New Brunswick and Cape Breton species like
Black-throated Green Warbler, Mourning Warbler and Alder Flycatcher
are establishing territories and pairing up. No matter where you
are, there are lots of birds are singing so it is the perfect time
to practice or learn bird songs. Lastly, don't be shy about
following a strange song or chip, you never know when you might find
a new breeder for your region--Sedge Wren, Red-bellied Woodpecker,
Field Sparrow and Orchard Oriole have already all been found in the
Digby Neck area, so who knows what might turn up in your
region...Good luck and have fun!
Picture: Pair of
Tree Swallows by John
Chardine
June 11, 2009 -
2nd Atlas record numbers surpass those of the first!
Some
time over the course of the evening on Wednesday June 10, 2009, as
atlassers were entering their data for the day's work, the number of
individual bird records for the second Maritimes Breeding bird Atlas
reached 144,831 thus
surpassing the number of records submitted during the first
Maritimes Atlas which was 144,642. Congratulations everyone on all
of your hard work! The information that you are gathering is going
to be key to update the status of, and conserve, many of our
Maritimes breeding birds and, given the amount of data being
gathered, the Atlas will provide the most comprehensive snapshot of
our breeding birds' distribution and abundance to date. Of course,
don't bask in the glory too long... we've still got a lot of ground
to cover this season and we wouldn't want this
announcement to make people think we were finished already...
Congratulations on this great achievement!
Picture: Savannah
Sparrow by John
Chardine
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May 27, 2009 -
It's time to atlas!

Common Yellowthroat by John
Chardine
This past Sunday, while out doing my Baillie Birdathon, I was
surrounded by breeding evidence. There was a Yellow-rumped Warbler
carrying nesting material, two male Black-throated Green Warblers "duking
it out" over a territory and an American Robin carrying food.
Plus, I just had a phone call from someone asking to "what are these
white "balls" that blackbirds are dropping"? I was very excited to
report that they were fecal sacs and that there must be a nest with
nestlings nearby. So for anyone wondering when is a good time
to start atlassing, the answer is right now. For those conducting
point counts, don't forget that the point count season begins May
29th and ends July 3rd. Peak singing begins about a half an hour
before sunrise and usually continues for about 5 hours after
sunrise. For those who have spent 15 hours in their square and are
wondering how to put in those last few atlassing hour, check your
species list thus far and see if any species groups or habitat types
are underrepresented. If you've finished your square, we've got
another one for you to start--talk to your Regional Coordinator for
more details. And of course we're here in the Atlas office, ready to
answer any questions you might have and send you any additional data
forms you might need. Have a fantastic fourth field season!
May 26, 2009 - Dendroica is now available online

Just in time for the field season, the atlasser's favourite CD-ROM,
"Dendroica: an aid to learning Canadian bird songs" is now online.
This newly updated, web-based version was developed by the Canadian
Wildlife Service of Environment Canada to help those participating
in Canadian bird survey programs to enhance their bird
identification skills (i.e., you!). Like in the CD-ROM version you
can study different bird species using photographs and songs and you
can limit the species you study by province, Bird Conservation
Region, taxonomy or song type. There's also a quiz module to test
yourself. A great new feature of the online version is that you can
now create and manage your own bird lists.
As of now, all those
participating in the Maritimes Atlas should have received login and
password information by email (it is different than your regular
atlasser user ID but you can change it once you have accessed the
program). If you haven't received this information, please
contact the Atlas office and we'll provide you with that
information. You can access the
new Dendroica at
www.natureinstruct.org. As well, the creators are still
looking for additional recordings of sounds, as well as photos of
plumages, not currently represented. If you would like to contribute
please contact Charles Francis
charles.francis@ec.gc.ca.
Photo: Dendroica
banner from
www.natureinstruct.org
May 26, 2009 - A call for bird photos from John Chardine
I am assuming the role of photo editor for the Atlas publication and
am soliciting good quality photographs of Maritime breeding birds
for the final Atlas publication. We plan to include an outstanding
colour image of each species along with its write-up. If you
have any photos please consider submitting one or more to me for
evaluation by a small selection committee. If chosen, your name will
be printed along side the photograph. If you know of someone who has
images please put them in-touch with me (contact info below).

Red-winged Blackbird by John
Chardine
Here are some
guidelines to help you select images to send in:
1. We would like to include photos of breeders taken in the
Maritimes by as many Maritime photographers as possible. We may have
to go further afield for more difficult species.
2. Photos should be of the whole bird, in good, even, front light.
The subject, particularly the head and eye should be sharp with
minimal if any habitat elements in front of the bird. Optimum head
angle is looking in the direction of, but not straight at, the
photographer. Images showing breeding activity such as carrying nest
material or food for chicks are particularly appropriate. However,
we do not plan to show images of birds at the nest except in rare
circumstances.
3. Submit your images at a minimum resolution of 1200 pixels wide x
1200 high in jpeg or tiff format on a CD, DVD, or by email. Images
larger than 10 megabytes will be rejected by our email system and
may be by yours too, so these will have to come on disk. Good
quality slide scans are also acceptable.
4. If one or more of your images is chosen you will be asked to sign
a release for one-time use of the image. Copyright will remain with
the photographer.
My contact information is as follows:
Address: John Chardine, Environment Canada, P.O. Box 6227,
Sackville, NB, E4L 1G6; Email:
john.chardine@ec.gc.ca;
Tel: 506-364-5046
May 26, 2009 - Travel grants for Atlassers
We have awarded travel grants to five atlassers planning to conduct
point counts in some relatively remote and unpopulated regions in
the Maritimes including squares in northern NB, Cape Breton,
southwest NS and Guysborough county. Thank-you to Bird Studies
Canada's Baillie Fund for making these grants possible and thank-you
to those atlassers willing and able to travel great distances to
cover difficult areas.
May 8, 2009 -
Commit one hour to night time atlassing!

American Woodcock by Merv Cormier
The American Woodcock is a shorebird species of "young forests and
old fields", found in damp, open areas with some shrub or sapling
coverage next to forest. Although woodcocks are widespread across
the Maritimes, this doesn't necessarily come across in their online
distribution map. This species is likely underrepresented in nearly
every Atlas region, primarily because they are most active at a time
of year and day when few atlassers are out. However, we can change
that! Woodcocks are "crepuscular" meaning they are most active at
dawn and dusk. By picking a few spots containing suitable Woodcock
habitat in your square, a relatively short visit beginning somewhere
between 8:45 - 9:00 pm will likely provide a woodcock for that
square (and possibly a winnowing snipe or owl too). Last night, I
detected woodcocks in adjacent squares in under a half an hour.
Listen for their distinctive "peent"
call given from the ground as well as their "twittering
wings" during their display flight. Happy woodcocking!
May 8, 2009 - New form for
Abundance Estimates
Previously
atlassers who waited until their square was complete before
estimating abundance sometimes encountered a problem because the
online system would only accept abundance estimates for the current
year and for species with breeding evidence codes. This is no longer
an issue. Denis Lepage, the MBBA database manager, has solved the
problem by creating a new online form for entering abundance
estimates. The new form, which can be accessed from the data entry
page, allows you to enter abundance estimates for all species
reported in the square so far. More than one atlasser can estimate
abundance for a single square but, to avoid biasing our estimates,
you will only be able to see your own estimates. In the future, when
you submit a breeding evidence form with abundance codes, they will
be automatically added to this new form.
For those of you saying to yourself - abundance estimates... what are
those? During the first atlas volunteers were asked to make their
best "educated guess" of the number of pairs of each species in
their square and then place their estimate into one of six abundance
categories or codes. To make our results comparable to those of the
first Maritimes Atlas we're doing the same. Abundance index
categories are as follows: 0) 0 pairs; 1) 1 pair; 2) 2 - 10 pairs;
3) 11-100 pairs; 4) 101-1000 pairs; 5) 1001-10,000 pairs. Articles
answering frequently asked questions about abundance estimates and
describing how they are done can be found on pages 11-12 of the
2008 Fall Newsletter and pages
8-9 of the 2007 Fall Newsletter.
Instructions for estimating abundance are found on page 12 of the
"Guide for Atlassers".
Photo: Black-and-white Warbler by
Merv Cormier
Top of
Page
April 30, 2009 - 2009 Spring Newsletter is online and in the mail!
The
2009 spring newsletter is now available online. For those who have
requested it by mail it should arrive at your door shortly. This
newsletter focuses on priorities for year four, frequently asked
questions about point counts and has various tips for atlassing for
suites of species as well as how to atlas in certain habitat types.
It also contains the results of the Atlas publication Survey from
the fall newsletter and information about applying for volunteer
travel grants.
April 23, 2009 - Owls aren’t the only raptors breeding this time
of year

Bald Eagle by John Chardine
Raptors, like Bald Eagle, Northern Goshawk, Red-tailed Hawk and
American Kestrel have already begun breeding in many regions and
Broad-winged Hawk, Northern Harrier, Sharp-shinned Hawk and Osprey
should be breeding very soon (if they too haven’t started already).
Now’s a good time, before the leaves are out, to look for raptor
nests (or any evidence of breeding raptors…just a few days ago Julie
Paquet, RC for Region 14, saw a Bald Eagle carrying a stick over the
Tantramar Marsh).
Peter Bush, a professor at Dalhousie University (and an atlasser),
is particularly interested in NS nesting Northern Goshawk,
Broad-winged Hawk and Red-tailed Hawk in Nova Scotia and would very
much appreciate any information that atlassers could provide on
specific nesting locations. Peter will follow up on your
observations to determine nesting success and take habitat
measurements later on in the summer. If you can, please let Peter
know (peter.bush@dal.ca)
when you find one of these raptors’ nests in Nova Scotia.
April 23, 2009 - Spring Regional Coordinator’s Meeting a success!

Regional Coordinators, staff and steering committee
left to right from the top: John Chardine, Ron Arsenault, Pat Kelly,
Andy Horn, Denis Doucet, Ivy Austin, Richard Elliot, Peter Hope,
James Hirtle, Roy LaPointe, Fritz McEvoy, Suzanne Borkowski, Ken
McKenna, Pierrette Mercier, Raymond Chiasson, Ross Hall, David
Johnston, Dave McCorquodale, Joan Czapalay, Becky Stewart, Julie
Paquet and Rosemary Curley. Photo by Becky Whittam.
More
than 20 Regional Coordinators (RCs) as well as Atlas staff and
members of the project’s steering committee met at the Coastal Inn
in Sackville, NB, April 18 and 19, 2009, to plan the upcoming field
season. The bulk of the meeting was spent discussing the priorities
for 2009 which are: 1) Finish atlassing in priority squares, 2)
Complete 15 point counts in every priority square, and 3)
Begin/continue atlassing in remaining squares. Other topics
included: the need for abundance estimates in completed squares (to
make this atlas comparable to the first), the availability of travel
dollars for atlassers (volunteer grants will be available again this
year) and a call for bird photos for the final publication.
Most importantly, RCs provided updates for each of their
regions—-the amount of work that went on in 2008 is absolutely
phenomenal (so give yourselves a pat on the back) and rest assured
that your RCs are working hard to make sure that the fourth Atlas
field season will be well organized and a great success. One thing
that was clear from the updates: there’s still much more to be done
and many RCs could use more atlassers and more point counters to
help reach their region’s coverage goals. If you are able to atlas
in an additional square or region, or if you are able to conduct
point counts, please let your RC know. Thank-you to all the RCs for
their hard work and for making the trek to Sackville for the
meeting.
Photo: Regional Coordinators on an early morning
stroll through Sackville Waterfowl Park, photo by Raymond Chiasson
April 23, 2009 - Thank-you to our many funders of 2009 Atlas
field season
Several
granting agencies recently announced their support the Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas in 2009. Supporters include: NB Wildlife Trust
Fund, NB Environmental Trust Fund, the southwestern NS and Halifax
chapters of TD Friends of the Environment Foundation and Bird
Studies Canada’s Baillie Fund. The money received will go towards
supporting volunteers (though mailouts, presentations, the online
system etc…), travel grants for volunteers and the coordination and
implementation of the 2009 field season. Thank-you to each of these
agencies for their support. A full list of
Atlas supporters is at the bottom of the Atlas homepage.
Photo: Black-capped Chickadee by John Chardine
April 23, 2009 Upcoming Nova Scotia Bird Society Meeting is all
about Atlassing!
This
year the Nova Scotia Bird Society is hosting their annual “out-of
area” Bird Society meeting at the Mountain Gap Inn near Digby Nova
Scotia on May 30th and 31st, 2009. The goal of this year’s meeting
is to promote Region 16: Annapolis Valley-Digby Neck, and Region 17:
Southwest Shore. Speakers include Becky Stewart (Atlas Coordinator)
and Patrick Kelly (Region 16). The meeting will start at 7:30 pm in
the Annapolise Room, followed by an owl prowl. Sunday morning, 6:00
am, there will be a point count demonstration, followed by
breakfast. Field trips will be led by Pat Kelly and Paul Gould. To
book your room for Saturday night, go to
www.mountaingapinn.ca and
click on “Around the Inn”. This map will show you what each of the
rooms is like by clicking on any rooftop. Choose from #1, 2, 3, 8,
9, 10, 11, 12, 24,25,26,27 ($100.00 per room) or #41, 42, 43 ($90.00
per room). This meeting/workshop is open to everyone!
April 6, 2009 - April is Owl
Month!
Whoooo gives a hoot about owls? We do! In May of 2008, data from
Bird Studies Canada’s nocturnal owl surveys in NB, PE and mainland
NS were added to the Atlas database. Data from the nocturnal owl
surveys contributed to 258 Atlas squares and added 435 individual
bird records to the Atlas database. As a result, there have already
been more owls detected in the Maritimes during the second MBBA than
during the first Atlas. That said, to get a complete picture of
where owls breed in the Maritimes the Atlas still needs volunteers
to survey on roads, areas and squares that are not surveyed by owl
surveyors. To encourage as many people as possible to get out and
look for breeding owls Bird Studies Canada and the Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas are promoting April as owl month! This month is
the month of peak breeding activity for most species of Maritimes
owls and is thus great time to bundle up and spend an evening
surveying for owls in one or more squares.
Click here for a list of
priority squares that still require owl surveys and/or contact your
Regional Coordinator to find out where your owling talents can be
put
to use. If you require a pre-recorded CD of owl calls to help with
your survey effort, please contact the Atlas office and we’ll be
happy to send a CD your way. As well, for each week in April we’ll
be featuring a Maritimes owl on the Atlas website—the owl of the
week this week is the Barred Owl.
Photo: Boreal Owl by Perry Greico
Owl of the
week 1: Barred Owl

Barred Owl, photo by Chris Dutton
The Barred Owl is by far the most common of our
Maritime owls. Surveyors with Bird Studies Canada’s Nocturnal Owl
Survey detect an average of over 2.5 Barred Owls per route. It is
especially common on mainland Nova Scotia where densities can reach
more than 20 owls on a 16 km survey route! Barred Owls like large
tracks of continuous forest and are most often found in mid-aged
mixed forests. They nest in cavities, nest boxes and even use old
crow or hawk nests. For food Barred Owls are especially fond of
small mammal species but during the breeding season invertebrates,
amphibians and even fish are important parts of a Barred Owl’s diet.
One wouldn’t think that a bird as big as a Barred Owl would have
much to be afraid of but Barred Owls will actually avoid parts of
their territories that overlap with another owl, their main
predator, the Great Horned Owl.
Owl of
the week 2: Northern Saw-whet Owl
The Northern Saw-whet Owl, named after the sound
of one of its calls (an eerie screech that sounds like the whetting
of a saw), is our smallest owl in the Maritimes. This species nests
in cavities excavated by Northern Flickers and
Pileated Woodpeckers as well as in nest boxes. They prefer remote
areas away from human habitation; however, pairs have been found
nesting in residential areas provided there are suitable cavities.
Saw-whet Owls lay 5-6 eggs in early April and young fledge in late
May and early June. Northern Saw-whet Owls consume small mammals
almost exclusively. They must spread some prey items over multiple
meals, however, as one report indicates that a young male saw-whet
owl apparently died as a result of trying to swallow an entire mouse
whole. Remember when your mother told you to take smaller bites and
chew your food before swallowing?
Photo: Northern Saw-whet Owl by Denis
Doucet
Owl of the week 3: Short-eared Owl

Short-eared Owl by Charles Kendell
Short-eared Owls are the only regularly breeding Maritime owl that
primarily hunts during the day. They are most active in the early
morning and late afternoon when they can be found flying low over
fields and marshes in search of prey. Like other owls, they locate
prey primarily by sound using ear openings that are asymmetrical,
allowing them to localize prey in both horizontal and vertical
planes simultaneously. The Short-eared Owl is the only Maritime owl
to consistently nest on the ground and unlike other owls, which are
primarily forest nesters, the Short-eared Owl is a grassland
specialist. Their nests are a mix of coarse grass and weed stems,
sometimes concealed in low bushes in open country.
Federally-listed as a "species of special concern", Short-eared Owl
populations have undergone substantial declines over the past
decade. Loss of grassland habitat is thought to be a key
factor causing these declines. Tips for atlassing for
Short-eared Owls can be found in the guide
to atlassing for species at risk.
Owl of the week 4: Great Horned Owl

Great Horned Owl by Denis Doucet
Great Horned Owls are the largest species of regularly breeding owl
in the Maritimes. Great Horned Owls do not construct
their own nests but reuse those of crows, ravens and raptors. They
nest in the forest but hunt in open fields and wetlands where they
locate most prey from an elevated perch. Great Horned Owls are a
major predator of other owls and large bird species. They are also
reliant on mammals for a large portion of their diet and are one of
the few animals that eat skunks (Great Horneds don't have a sense of
smell). Great Horned Owls are also highly territorial and thus
their breeding densities are often very low. In fact Great
Horned Owls defend their territories so ferociously that unmated
adults that fail to establish a territory live in silence as
"floaters". Floaters' ranges overlap with the edges of other owls'
established territories but they do not “hoot” for fear of being
detected and driven off by the territorial pair. Territorial Great
Horned Owls rarely travel more than a kilometer from their nest
site.
April 6, 2009 - Bird Studies
Canada invites you to participate in the Baillie Birdathon and a
portion of the money raised will directly support the Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas!
Bird Studies Canada’s Baillie Birdathon is the
oldest sponsored bird count in North America, raising money for bird
research and conservation. The money raised benefits Bird Studies
Canada, the James L. Baillie Memorial Fund, and participating
migration monitoring stations and conservation organizations. This
year for the first time, participants can choose to designate the
Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas program to receive a portion of the
funds raised
(if
you already participate in Birdathon, please continue to support the
station or club of your choice, but if you have never done a
Birdathon, this is an excellent way to support the Atlas). Your Atlas Coordinators will be participating in the
Baillie Birdathon this year and if you have the time and inclination
we hope you’ll participate too.
How does the Birdathon work? It is basically a great excuse to go
birding. The challenge is to identify as many bird species as
possible within a 24-hour period, any time during the month of May.
So choose a day for your birdathon (you can schedule yourself a rain
day) and then find sponsors to support your birding effort. You can
be sponsored at a flat rate or for each species identified. Tax
receipts will be issued for all donations of $10.00 or more. To find
out more about the Baillie Birdathon, download the 2009
participants’ kit, or to register online now, visit
www.birdscanada.org/support/birdathon or call 1-888-448-BIRD(2473).
Top of Page
March 16th, 2009 -
Institutional data adds 11,700 records to the Atlas database
Data
from three sources—Canadian Wildlife Service Eastern Waterfowl
Breeding Ground Survey, Breeding Bird Survey of Environment Canada
and Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resource Bald Eagle Surveys
from Inverness and Victoria Counties on Cape Breton Island--were recently added to the Atlas
database. This has added approximately 11,700 new records to the
Atlas database (a jump of nearly 10% of what we already had). These
institutional data will help provide a complete snapshot of breeding
birds in the Maritime provinces for 2006-2008 and having the data
incorporated into the database now will help us to better identify
coverage gaps and target our efforts in areas not covered or
surveyed by other programs. The NB, mainland NS and PE Owl data that
was previously uploaded to the Atlas database last fall has already
provided us with more owl records than the first Maritimes Atlas and
is helping us to focus our owl survey efforts in uncovered territory
this winter and next. Over the course of the next two years we will
continue to look for additional breeding bird data from outside
sources.
Photo: Ring-necked Duck by John Chardine
March 16th, 2009 - Tern It Up 2009 Open Mic and
Silent Auction – Saturday, March 28, 7 to 11pm
Picture: “Tern it Up” 2009 website
Atlas volunteers and staff continue to fondly
remember Gareth Akerman, a former Bird Studies Canada employee that
died in a plane crash in Florida last spring. The Gareth Akerman
Memorial Scholarship was created in honour of Gareth at Saint Mary’s
University, Halifax to financially help a science student whose
interests reflect those held by Gareth. On Saturday March 28, 7 to
11pm, the Gorsebrook lounge at Saint Mary’s University will host "Tern
it Up 2009" the first fundraising event for the Scholarship. The
night will celebrate two of Gareth’s great loves--music and
birds--with an open mic and silent auction. A five-dollar donation
is suggested at the door and there will be a sign-up station for
anyone wishing to participate in the open mic. Please visit
http://ternitup.com/ for further
details. Hope to see you there!
March 16th, 2009 - Bringing Back the Bobolink

Bobolink, photo by Christian Artuso
An article entitled “Bringing Back the Bobolink: what’s happening to
our grassland birds and why are farmers their last hope?” by Becky
Stewart, Atlas Coordinator, was featured in the March issue of Rural
Delivery. Rural Delivery, published by DVL Publishing Inc., is a
farm and country journal that comes from the homes and farms of
Atlantic Canada and beyond. The idea for the article stemmed from a
discussion on the decline in Bobolinks, and grassland bird species
in general, at the “For Our Birds 2008” meeting held in Halifax, NS
last fall. The article discusses the history of grassland birds in
the Maritimes, their close ties with the agricultural community and
the importance of farm habitat to sustaining our national and
regional grassland bird populations. The Maritimes is home to nearly
100% of the Acadian subspecies of Nelson’s Sharp-tailed Sparrow and
10% of the Canadian population of Bobolinks
breed here as well. The Atlas would like to encourage farmers to
find out more about the birds sharing their agricultural land. As a
first step, we are offering landowners a free copy of the first
Maritimes Atlas. If you or someone you know are interested in
receiving a copy of the first Atlas, please contact the atlas office
atlasmaritimes@gmail.com
or 1-866-5Atlas5.
March 16th, 2009 - What’s been going on in the
Atlas office during the winter?
Since February and March are generally quiet months on the Atlassing
front we thought we should let you know what has been going on
behind closed doors to give you an idea of where we are at in the
planning process for the coming months. To encourage winter
atlassing we put together a short one-pager on atlassing for owls (available
from the website) and April has been designated as Bird Studies
Canada’s official “Owl Month”. Throughout the month of April we’ll
be featuring an owl of the week on the Atlas website. A spring
newsletter has been written and is currently being reviewed by a few
members of the Steering Committee, after which it will go to
translation and we hope to have it out to all of you by mid-April.
Another important winter activity for office staff is grant writing
and budget preparation for the coming fiscal year. So far we have
submitted 15 applications (totaling approximately 120k) to support
the continuation of the Atlas project. As well, we have already
heard that our applications to the New Brunswick Wildlife Trust Fund
and the James L. Baillie Memorial Fund were successful (this means
there will be
additional travel grant money for atlassers again this year)—thank-you
to both funds for their continued support of the Atlas project.
Summer field positions for point count crews have been posted and we
hope to have summer staff in place by mid-April. We’ve also spent a
good deal of time searching out data from various other
institutional and individual sources and will continue to update the
database as more data comes in. We have also begun planning for our
next year of data collection—identifying gaps in coverage for both
point counts and general atlassing—so hopefully year 4 will be our
most coordinated and productive field season yet. We’ll be meeting
with the 27 Regional Coordinators on the weekend of April 18 and 19
to come up with a “plan of attack” for the different regions.
Photo: Common Redpoll by John Chardine
Top of Page
February 5, 2008 - Whooooo is in your square?

Northern Hawk Owl, photo by
Denis Doucet
February is here and that means atlassing is just around the corner…
and you may be asking yourself: what kind of bird would be breeding
at this time of year? The answer (of course): Owls! Atlassing for
our secretive, primarily nocturnal friends requires a slightly
different timing and approach than atlassing for other bird species
(i.e., we have to go out at night in the winter and early spring, we
usually rely on our ears more than our eyes and we use playback more
so than when surveying for other bird species). Data from the 2006
and 2007 Nocturnal Owl Survey (Bird Studies Canada) have been
incorporated into the Maritimes Atlas database and as result we have
already accumulated more owl records than during the first Atlas
effort. But, the Atlas is a golden opportunity to get a
comprehensive
“snapshot” of Maritime owl distributions across the entire region –
not just in areas with owl survey routes.
To maximize detections you’ll need to visit your square a few times
over the course of the late winter and early spring. The atlas
office has put together some tips on atlassing for owls to help you
get started and there are playback CDs available for those who don’t
have their own recordings. Please call or email the Atlas office for
your copy. If you’ve already surveyed your square for owls,
click
here for a list of priority squares, by region, that do not have an
owl survey route running through them and/or squares where no owl
species have been detected thus far. Please contact the appropriate
Regional Coordinator if you are able to conduct owl surveys in their
region (they can help direct you to unassigned Atlas squares). If
you are looking for more details about the timing of owl breeding
check out the table below.
Good luck and happy owling!
|
|
Feb. |
Mar. |
Apr. |
May |
Jun. |
Jul. |
|
SPECIES |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
|
Great Horned Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Northern Hawk Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barred Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long-eared Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Short-eared Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Boreal Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Northern Saw-whet Owl |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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Top of
Page
January 22, 2009 -
Sheffield Mills, NS to host its’ 18th Annual Eagle Watch!

Bald Eagle, photo by
John Chardine
No one can say that the Bald
Eagle has “had it easy” over the last
century. Once seen as pest by the farmers,
eagles were hunted from farmlands in the Maritimes. The use of DDT
in agriculture and forestry practices in the early 50s also took a toll
on Maritimes Eagle populations. In many areas throughout the
Maritimes, and across the country, eagle populations were severely
reduced or disappeared entirely and by 1978 the Bald Eagle was
considered nationally endangered. It was at this time, when eagle
populations were at their lowest, that the seeds were sown for the
Sheffield’s Annual Eagle Watch. A farmer saw an eagle flying over
the Annapolis valley one winter. The farmer, knowing that it was no
longer a usual sighting, thought that maybe the eagle was looking
for food. So, he laid out some dead chickens in a field for the
eagle to eat. With time, more farmers joined him in laying out free
food for the magnificent birds. Word of the eagles spread and more
people came to see the over wintering eagles and to take pictures.
It was from here that “Eagle Watch” stemmed. Since that time, DDT
use has been banned and eagle populations are rebounding (between
the first and second Atlas, there’s been a 16% increase in eagle
detections rates). Nearly 300 to 400 eagles over winter in the
Annapolis Valley and Sheffield’s annual Eagle Watch will take place
over the next three weekends (Jan. 23-24, Jan. 31-Feb.1 and Feb.
7–8). So if you’re passing by the Sheffield Mills area, be sure to
join the numerous birdwatchers and nature enthusiasts at one of the
town’s many designated “eagle-viewing areas” or drop-in for a
pancake breakfast and see the numerous eagle-related exhibits on
display.
Visit the Eagle Watch
website for more information.
January 22, 2009 -
Many rare bird sightings still require your attention
If
the current traffic on the Atlas website is any indication, many of
you are working hard to enter all of your 2008 data before the
January 31st deadline. However, you may not be aware that you can
also complete rare/ colonial forms from previous years (i.e., 2006
and 2007)…many of you may not know if you have rare forms to fill
out. There are currently close to 700 observations from 2006 and
2007 that require additional documentation. Since, you are entering
your data anyway, now would be an excellent time to get those rare
bird forms done.
To find out if you have any undocumented records, login to the
online data entry system and click the “Your data forms” button
(appears about half-way down the screen, under the “Browse Results”
title). This will take you to a page that lists all your data forms
and from a drop-down menu at the top of the page, you can choose to
see your undocumented rare records (i.e., any observation that still
requires a rare bird form). Unlike with breeding evidence data, you
can still use the online system to fill out rare forms from years
past. From the main data entry page, pick the square in which the
observation was made and either year (2008 or 2009), then click on
the “Rare/colonial” button. Once you begin to fill out the rare
form, you will be able to choose any project year. Undocumented
observations may be rejected so please take the time to fill in the
additional required information.
Photo: Red-shouldered Hawk
nest with eggs (NE) by Scott Makepeace
January 7, 2009 -
Crossbills: Bravely breeding when no other bird will

Red Crossbill, photo by Mike
Wisnicki
Despite an abundance of winter birds in the Maritimes (chickadees, grosbeaks, finches etc…), only two passerine species
regularly breed in January: White-winged and Red Crossbill. So, what
is it about the crossbills that allow them to breed in the winter
while other songbirds must wait until spring? Crossbills forage on
the seeds in conifer cones, using their crossed mandibles to wedge
open cone scales and their tongues to lift the seeds out. Much of
the crossbills’ breeding behaviour and ecology can be understood in
terms of their exploitation of this food source. Because cone crop
availability is erratic, crossbills are nomads, traveling to take
advantage of developing cone crops and breeding whenever food
sources are sufficient for egg production. Since crossbills do not
require insects for breeding (nestlings are fed partially digested
seeds), breeding occurs year round. In the Maritimes, White-winged
Crossbills generally breed in two bouts: from early January to April
and from July to October, while Red Crossbills primarily breed in
January through April. For atlassers, this means that much of the
crossbills’ breeding activities falls outside of the typical atlassing period (i.e., June and July).
During the first Maritimes Atlas (1986-1990), White-winged
Crossbills were detected in 536 atlas squares; most records were
from the summer and fall of 1988 when the spruce cone crop was
particularly heavy. The breeding evidence observed was primarily
singing males (S) and birds on territory (T). Fledged young (FY)
were reported in 100 squares but only 3 nests were found over the
entire five year period. Red Crossbills were detected in 159 squares
with breeding confirmed (FY) in 25 squares. No Red Crossbill nests
were found during the first Atlas effort. Thus far, during the
second Atlas, White-winged and Red Crossbills have been recorded in
295 and 88 squares, respectively. I’m going to bet we can find them
in a lot more! So, where should we look and what breeding evidence
codes should we use to describe these detections?
Both species are found in coniferous forest (spruce, hemlock, fir
etc…) when trees have an ample cone crop. Breeding males will often
sing while circling overhead—this behaviour should be recorded as
“S” or, “D” if a female is also present. The
Red Crossbill’s song is
a series of short warbled clicks and whistles while the
White-winged
Crossbill’s song is filled with longer trills and warblers and is,
in some ways, reminiscent of the American Goldfinch’s song. Keep
your eyes peeled for females carrying nesting material (this may
also be a good way to find crossbill nesting sites). Also, note that
you won’t see Crossbills carrying food because adults carry food for
young is carried in their crop, but, you may see males feeding
females (D) or parents feeding recently FY (young are heavily
streaked). So, the next time you are out walking or cross-country
skiing in the woods, look and listen for breeding crossbills…you may
even be the first to find a crossbill nest during this atlas effort.
Photo: Female White-winged Crossbill by Clyde Barrett
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December 11, 2008 - The
Christmas Bird Counts are coming!
As
the festive season draws near, that means one thing for atlassers:
Christmas Bird Count time! Although most of our breeding birds have
flown south for the winter that doesn’t mean that our volunteers
stop birding. They continue to contribute their time and effort to
citizen science through programs like Project Feeder Watch and the
Christmas Bird Count. The Christmas Bird Count began in 1900 with a
group of 27 conservationist lead by scientist and writer Frank
Chapman. They proposed that they identify, count, and record all the
birds that they saw on Christmas Day instead of the traditional
“side hunt” which involved teams competing to see who could shoot
the most birds and small mammals. Since then, the Christmas Bird
Count has become one of the most significant citizen-based
conservation efforts in the world and is an annual tradition for
many in the birding community.
Last year, over 1200 volunteers in the Maritimes counted a whopping
320000 birds of 155 species on 34 counts. This year the Christmas
Bird Count is expected to be even larger than before, providing
crucial information about the distribution and abundance of our
wintering birds. The Atlas staff would like to wish everyone a very
enjoyable and safe count this year, and remind you that it is not
too late to join a Christmas Bird Count near you.
Photo: Pictou Harbour
tally-up, photo provided by Ken McKenna
December 1, 2008 - Atlas
maps have a new face!
Andrew Couturier, Bird Studies Canada’s GIS Analyst, has revamped
the Maritimes Atlas online distribution maps to show change between
the 1st and 2nd Maritimes Atlases, in addition to the level of
breeding evidence detected during the current Atlas. Coloured dots
are used to show changes between the first and second atlases. Black
dots indicate that the species was detected in that square during
the first atlas effort but not yet in the second and yellow dots
indicate that the species has been newly detected in that square
during the second atlas (note that yellow dots are only placed on
squares that were surveyed during both atlases).

Black-throated Blue Warbler as detected just far during the second
Atlas. Black-throated Blue Warbler detections have
increased substantially in Northern New Brunswick but not in Nova
Scotia or Prince Edward Island.
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November 28, 2008 – Help the Publication Committee make some
decisions!
As
we finish year three, it is time to look ahead to what the second
“Atlas of the Breeding Birds of the Maritime Provinces” will look
like. This fall, the Publication Committee met to discuss exactly
that. But, it soon became clear that a voice was missing from the
discussion—yours! If you have an opinion about the final
publication, we want to hear it. Please fill out the survey in the
fall newsletter or
click here to fill out the survey online.
Photo: Wilson’s Warbler by Merv Cormier
November 28, 2008 - 2008 Fall Newsletter is online!
The 2008 fall newsletter is now available online and for those who
have requested it by mail it will be arriving at your door shortly.
This fall's newsletter includes articles on: highlights of 2008;
updates from your Regional Coordinators; comparisons between the
first and second Atlas (we’re starting to see some real
differences); an update on atlassing for species at risk (how we did
with our four newly-listed species); a closer look at what’s
happening with our finches; and much more. Thank-you to all who
contributed. If you would like to write an article for a future
newsletter or have story ideas contact the Atlas office at atlasmaritimes@gmail.com.
November 17, 2008 – “For Our Birds 2008” was a great success!
On November 15th and 16th, Nova Scotia Bird Society Members,
biologists, researchers, citizen scientists and conservationists
flocked to Dalhousie University in Halifax to discuss the state of
Nova Scotia birds and what we could do about it. There were many
truly inspiring presentations from citizen scientists like Susann
Myers, who explained how the information gathered in her shorebird
surveys helped halt the development of a proposed coal strip-mine
immediately adjacent to her survey site and led to the site being
nominated as an important bird area. Ted D’Eon another citizen
scientist, who describes himself as a “pharmacist by trade –
naturalist by nature” on his webpage (www.ted.ca), discussed the
challenges he faced working with Roseate Terns on the Brothers
islands. Those are just two of many thought-provoking and
well-delivered talks;
click here for a full list of conference
speakers and their presentation titles. Some key themes that ran
through all of the presentations were: many migratory bird species
are declining; the threats facing birds today are complex (e.g. stem
from numerous factors including habitat loss, climate change,
uncoupling of insect emergence and timing of breeding and much
more…yikes!); we need to take action now to conserve birds; there
are several amazing conservation success stories out there; and
volunteers are doing some incredible things.
Another unique component of the conference was the second day in
which participants broke-out into discussion groups and discussed
how participants could work together to address threats facing Nova
Scotia birds through outreach and education; advocacy; specific
conservation actions; and central messages arising from the
conference that could be communicated to the media. The conference
organizing committee is currently putting together a conference
website which will be up shortly and keep your eye on the NSBS
website, as well as the Atlas website, for future actions in which
you can get involved. It appears that this conference will become an
annual event in NS (and it would be great to roll it out to our
other Maritimes Provinces). I can't wait to see what progress we can
make between now and "For Our Birds 2009"!
Top photo: Fledgling Tree Swallows by Denis Doucet;
Tree Swallows are one of many aerial insectivorous species that are
in decline.
Bottom photo: One of Sunday break-out groups by Becky Whittam
"For our Birds" 2008
was jointly organized by Bird Studies Canada, Dalhousie University,
Ecology Action Centre and the Nova Scotia Bird Society.
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October 29, 2008 - Volunteer
Submits 3000 Nest Record Cards in 33 Years
There
are some individuals so dedicated to birds and understanding their
natural history that the rest of us are truly humbled by their
efforts--Bernard Forsythe, of Wolfville NS, is one of those
people and he is a inspiration to volunteers and conservationists
alike. Bernard made his first contribution to the Maritimes
Nest Records Scheme (MNRS) in 1975. This year, Bernard became
the first MNRS volunteer in history to submit over 3000 nest record
cards to the program. Congratulations Bernard!
The MNRS is essentially a
collection of cards, each detailing one or more visits to an active
bird’s nest or colony in the Maritimes. These records are an
effective tool for monitoring bird population health, particularly
breeding success. Bernard’s records along with all other
nest records submitted to the MNRS between 2006 and 2010 will be
incorporated into the Atlas database.
Photo: Bernard Forsythe
in the field, photo by Mark Elderkin
October 29, 2008 - A breeding
first for Atlantic Canada!
In
June 2008, Willi Wolfe, of St. Andrews NB, observed a Tufted
Titmouse, on her back deck carrying dog fur in its beak. This nest
building behaviour is the first confirmed breeding evidence for
Tufted Titmouse in the Maritimes. Willi and her husband Max had been
watching the titmice come and go from their feeders since early
April of this year. Shortly after their June sighting, the titmice
“disappeared” until early September when 3 or 4 titmice began
visiting the regularly. Amazingly, this isn’t the only
evidence that Tufted Titmice were breeding in NB this summer. Tracy
Dean also caught and banded a hatch-year (a bird hatched this
summer) Titmouse at the St. Andrews Bird Banding Station which, as
Willi explains, “as titmice fly, Tracey's banding station is less
than 1 km away...”. What an exciting new record!
Photo: Tufted
Titmouse, photo by Robert M. Smith
October 29, 2008 - "For Our Birds 2008" to be held in NS this
November

“For Our Birds 2008” is a weekend
conference for anyone interested in bird conservation (gee…I wonder
why Maritimes Atlas participants immediately come to mind?). It is
being held the weekend of November 15th in Halifax, NS and all are
welcome to attend. The goals of the conference are to increase
communication about science and the conservation of birds, engage
new people in bird conservation and increase public awareness and
action for birds. The conference’s keynote speaker is Dr. Janis
Dickinson, Director of Citizen Science at Laboratory of Ornithology,
Cornell University. The conference will be a mix of presentations
(by scientists, birders, government representatives and your Atlas
Coordinator ), lively discussions and workshops.
October 29, 2008 -
Unregistered assistants to be acknowledged
Previously, when you tried to add an assistant to your online
profile, the system would only allow you to enter the name of an
assistant IF he/she was a registered atlasser. This is no longer the
case. Many of you asked that your assistants, registered or not, be
recognized for their hard work and we want to make sure that
everyone who contributes to the project receives the recognition
they deserve. To add an assistant, login to the online data entry
system and click the “list of assistants” box on the data entry
webpage. If your assistant does not wish their name printed in the
final atlas publication, you can choose to “keep name private”.
Alternatively, you can call or email the Atlas office and we will
add your assistant to your list. Unregistered assistants will not
receive an atlasser number, data forms or newsletters but, their
names will be listed in the final Atlas publication.
October 8, 2008 - Tax
receipts for Atlassers!
Nature NB and the NS Bird Society are offering charitable
tax receipts to their members for mileage and out-of-pocket expenses
related to Atlas activities. This support is greatly appreciated by atlassers, particularly in the face of rising fuel costs. To
download a travel claim form, please visit
www.naturenb.ca (NB) or,
http://nsbs.chebucto.org
(NS). This offer is only available to members of Nature NB and the
NS Bird Society (of course, it's not too late to join either organization).
The deadline for submitting claim forms is November 1 2008 (NS) and
November 30 2008 (NB).
Left: One
of the many roads traveled by atlassers (and other wildlife) in
2008, photo by Becky Stewart
October 8, 2008 – Data update
As
the leaves are changing colour, the temperatures are dropping, and
the migrants are leaving, more and more atlassers are finding time
to enter their breeding evidence data and catch up on their rare
bird forms. So far for 2008, volunteers have submitted 1,412
breeding evidence cards and 28,539 individual bird records! Don't
forget, you can follow the project's progress using the online data
summaries and we will continue to update the species and effort maps
every two weeks throughout the fall and winter. Also, a reminder to
atlassers submitting paper forms, to please do so by October 31,
2008. Anyone wishing assistance with online data entry, please
contact your Regional Coordinator or call the atlas office. Thanks
to everyone for your hard work!
Photo: Blackpoll Warbler in
fall plumage at the Atlantic Bird Observatory, photo by Becky
Stewart
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August 23, 2008 - If
birdwatching were an Olympic sport, Maritimers would have the gold!
As
the birds begin to head south for the winter, many atlassers are
heading to the computer to enter their results for 2008. Almost
every day data is entered for yet another square—thus far, the
online data show that nearly 900 squares received some survey
attention this year. In these squares, atlassers spent a total of
3,830 hours, found 200 species and recorded 25,600 individual bird
records. There were also many interesting (some amazing) sightings,
including: Lesser Scaup confirmed and Eurasian Wigeon recorded as a
probable breeder in NB; a White-winged Dove observed (X) in NS (this
is the second White-winged Dove sighting--the first was in Northern
NB in 2006); Yellow-billed Cuckoo detected in two squares; and
Solitary Sandpiper detected in one. A great deal of data has also
been entered for our more “common” Maritimes breeders, e.g., every
species of warbler was confirmed breeding this year, which means
that we are getting ever closer to our goal of painting a detailed
and accurate picture of breeding bird distribution in the three
Maritimes provinces. As well, atlassers have spent a good deal of
time tracking down many species at risk including Olive-sided
Flycatcher (recorded in 125 squares) and Chimney Swift (recorded in
30 squares). With all this activity, just imagine the final result!
Photo credit:
Belted Kingfisher by John Chardine
August 23, 2008 - Breeding Bird Atlases across the continent

The Prothonotary Warbler primarily breeds in the
deciduous swamp forests of the southeastern U.S. Photo: Ruth
Strohmer
Often times when we think about
the Maritimes Atlas, we think of our results in terms of the squares
or regions in which different species have been detected and we
compare our findings with those from the first Maritimes Atlas and
with neighbouring squares or regions. However, over the past thirty
years, Atlases have become an internationally recognized
conservation tool and are/have been carried out all over the world,
including Europe, Britain and the United States. The results of the
second Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas will not only contribute to our
understanding of the distribution of breeding birds in the
Maritimes, but also to our understanding of breeding bird
distributions throughout North America.
The Patuxent Wildlife Research Centre hosts the
North American
Breeding Bird Atlas Explorer. On the website you'll find maps
showing the status of both Canadian and American Atlases in, as well
as, a list of Atlas projects (both completed and in-progress) with
links to various Atlases' homepages. Using the site as a jump off
point you can find out if and where Mourning Warblers are breeding
in Massachusetts, or which species have been confirmed thus far in
New Mexico. Of course, the value of examining atlas data at various
geographical scales goes beyond our satisfying our own curiosity.
Combining the data from various Atlas projects has great
conservation value, as it allows us to look at bird-habitat
relationships at various geographic scales (and across borders), as
well as enables us to develop estimates of population change and
better understand species' range-wide distributional patterns.
August 18, 2008 - Sick
finches
Since the beginning of July, reports of sick finches have
become disturbingly prevalent on a number of different nature list
serves in the Maritime provinces. The problem seems to be more
common in New Brunswick (even though it was observed in the entire
Maritimes and elsewhere in Canada), and the species reported most
frequently affected is the Purple Finch. Both adults and newly
fledged young have been observed with crusty, inflamed eyes, some
with eyes so
swollen that they are almost shut. The symptoms observed are similar
to those caused by the bacterium Mycoplasma gallisepticum.
While this bacterium has long been known to affect domestic turkeys
and chickens, it has only been detected in wild birds since the
early 1990s, particularly species that frequent feeders. The disease
is now commonly known as “House Finch Eye Disease” but is often
reported in other finch species, including the Purple Finch.
Additional reports of sick finches, however, describing Purple
Finches as appearing “very weak and suffering from laboured
breathing”, may be symptomatic of a different pathogen altogether. A
number of dead Purple Finches have been sent to provincial
diagnostic laboratories for necropsy, in an attempt to learn the
cause of death. Dr. Jim Goltz, a pathologist at the New Brunswick
Veterinary Laboratory in Fredericton, has stated that, “The few dead
finches that have made it to diagnostic laboratories have all been
emaciated, something one would not expect at this time of year, as
it should be a time of plenty. The ones that I received had a number
of problems in addition to the emaciation, but none had
Salmonellosis. Some of the lesions that I found were inflammation of
the crop and esophagus (possibly due to Trichomoniasis, a protozoan
parasite), inflammation of the liver, pneumonia, vascular thrombosis
(blockage) in the lung, etc.”
Salmonellosis outbreaks in passerines are caused by infection with
Salmonella spp. bacteria, and can occur during periods of hot
summer weather when birds may be stressed or when they congregate
for food and water. Parasites like Trichomoniasis may also be spread
via concentrations of birds at feeders, where infected birds come
into contact with healthy birds. Cleaning your feeder regularly with
a 1:10 mixture of bleach and water will reduce the spread of these
types of diseases in wild bird populations. In the meantime,
wildlife pathologists continue
to investigate what may be causing so many finches to become sick.
Photo credit:
Female Purple Finch with a swollen eye at Mary's Point, NB by David
Christie
August 4, 2008 -
There's still good atlassing to be had!

American Goldfinch, photo by John
Chardine
Believe it or not,
there are still lots of birds breeding out there! However, please
beware, there are also many birds that have finished breeding and
are now preparing to migrate, or, are already migrating. So what
does this mean for atlassing? You can definitely still atlas but, be
sure to exercise more caution than you would in early July. At this
time of year it is probably best to avoid using “H” and “S” codes
because a bird in any habitat, showing no additional signs of
breeding could easily be “passing through” the square. As well for
some species, like White-throated Sparrow, juveniles are now testing
their singing abilities and will continue to “practice” as they
migrate. The best approach to atlassing in early August is to look
for higher levels of breeding evidence like carrying food or fledged
young accompanied by their parents. By focusing on obtaining higher
levels of breeding evidence you can be assured that the birds you
are looking at are in fact breeding in that area.
It
is also a good idea to take a quick look at the
breeding date information available
online. Certain species, like Cedar Waxwing and American Goldfinch,
typically begin breeding mid-summer thus right now is actually one
of the best times to atlas for those species. Also, many species of
thrush and sparrow will breed more than once in a season (I had a
White-throated Sparrow carrying nesting material on July 24) so
don't rule out the possibility of confirming species on their second
or third nesting attempt. Other species, like most warblers, are
finished (or nearly finished) breeding. In short, if you would like
to continue atlassing—go for it and if you aren't sure as to whether
a particular observation is actually evidence of breeding, check in
with the Atlas office or your Regional Coordinator.
August 4, 2008 – The data keep pouring in!
An
amazing amount of data has already been entered online for 2008 and
every day it seems that more and more data are being submitted. Thus
far this year, atlassers have submitted a total of 1,118 breeding
evidence cards for 791 squares, have spent 3,291 hours atlassing and
have submitted data for 2,272 point counts in 260 squares…WOW! In
addition, atlassers have been working hard to document locations and
habitats for the four newly-listed species at risk (Chimney Swift,
Common Nighthawk, Olive-sided Flycatcher and Canada
Warbler)--sightings of these species have already been documented in
over 100 squares. And that's just the tip of the iceberg because
there is still a lot of data that hasn't come in yet.
If you haven't submitted your data yet, don't panic, there's still
lots of time and many people are busy getting their last bit of
atlassing in before our summer breeders are gone. For those
submitting paper forms, please send them to your Regional
Coordinators by October 31, 2008 and for those entering data online,
please logon before January 31, 2009.
Photo: Ruby-throated
Hummingbird by John Chardine
August 4, 2008 – “Maritimes Atlas Coffee" is flying off the
shelves
In
June of 2008, Just Us! Coffee Roasters Co-op launched a new line of
coffee — Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas Coffee — and 10% of all
proceeds go directly to the Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas project.
Based out of Wolfville, NS, Just Us! is Canada's first fair trade
coffee roaster, and their coffee products are organic and
bird-friendly. Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas Coffee has proved to be
quite popular and Just Us! is in the process of producing more
Maritimes Coffee labels in order to meet the demand.
Thank-you to all our atlassers who have
been promoting the project to their friends and neighbours--your
efforts have definitely paid off!
Maritimes Breeding
Bird Atlas Coffee will continue to be on sale until the fall and can
be purchased by phone 1-888-668-8436 or from any of the Just Us!
Cafes (located at Grand Prez, Wolfville, Halifax Barrington Street
and Halifax Spring Garden).
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July 21, 2008 - Dawn Chorus
replaced by a Choir of Beggars
As adult birds are singing less
(though there are still many out there singing), their voices are
being replaced by a younger generation--the fledglings. Now is one
of the best times to get out there and confirm breeding for various
passerine species by observing their fledged young "FY". How can you
detect fledglings? You can often hear the young begging,
making a "jit-jit"-like sound (somewhat like little typewriters),
from just inside the forest or shrubbery or whatever habitat you may
be in. If you pish, chances are, a parent will pop out as well.
Identifying fledged young can be tricky, but with a bit of patience
most can be identified. Some, like the Chestnut-sided Warbler and
Dark-eyed Juncos, have their own plumage pattern
that differs from the adults, while others, like the Least
Flycatcher, closely resemble the adult birds. A quick perusal of a
field guide to look for differences (or lack of differences) between
juveniles and adults prior to going in the field, may be helpful. As
well, fledglings typically retain their "fleshy" beak for some time
after leaving the nest and their feathers often have a "fluffy"
appearance (owing to a looser feather structure). Fledglings may
have some trouble flying; only going short distances and often crash
into bushes rather than landing on them. If you find a fledgling but
are not sure what species you are looking at (some young sparrows
and warblers can be difficult to identify) just wait to see what
adult comes in to feed it. There should be plenty of
fledglings out there, just waiting to be found, this week and next.
Photo: Fledged young
American Robin by
Ivy Austin
July 8, 2008 - (Incredible)
Progress to date!
Already,
people have begun entering their data online (don't feel bad if you
haven't, you are far from alone). However, from what has been
entered online already it is obvious that Maritimes atlassers are
hard at work!! Already more than 14,000 individual bird records have
been submitted to the online system, along with 1702 point counts
and data for 582 squares. Amazing—and that's just what's online.
From atlassers everywhere, we at the Atlas office have been hearing
stories about people finding new species in their square and
confirming others. As far as we can tell, year three is shaping up
to be our best year yet. THANK-YOU everyone for all your hard
work and keep having fun out there!
Photo: Swamp Sparrow by
John Chardine
July 8, 2008 - The
breeding season is in full swing!
The
peak of the breeding season is here and while many passerines are
still singing up a storm, more and more, birds are being seen
carrying food either to the nest or recently fledged young. This is
the best time of year to work on bumping some of those “possibles”
up to “probable” or “confirmed”. But where to start? One of
the best ways to bump up breeding evidence is to retrace the steps
you may have taken in June. For example, if you detected a species
singing in a particular spot a week or two ago, make a return trip
to see if that particular bird still hanging around. I f it is, you
can change the breeding evidence code to a ‘T” (territory). If you
didn't have a chance to get out in June--don't worry, there are
other ways to increase breeding evidence. At this time of the
year, although some species sing less often, there are other ways to
detect them. Try “pishing” and you may be surprised at what pops out
with food in its mouth (often warblers, thrushes and vireos will
respond to "pishing" this time of year). Now is also a great
time to look for woodpecker nests--listen for the young begging from
inside the tree (they are often quite loud) and then wait to see
what species comes in to feed them.
Photo: Yellow Warbler by
Christopher Clunas
July 2, 2008 - The Atlas in
the media
There's a small article on the
front page of the Telegraph Journal about the Atlas in today's paper
(July 2nd, 2008). Ivy Austin (MBBA's Assistant Coordinator)
and Roy LaPointe (Region's 4 Regional Coordinator) were interviewed
for that article. To read that article,
click here. A second article came out last week (June
25th, 2008) in the Sackville Tribune-Post on page 18. Sandy
Burnett (an atlasser from Sackville, NB) was interviewed for that
article.
And on the radio of Radio-Canada
(French station), tomorrow morning (July 3rd, 2008), they'll talk
about the Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas. Ivy Austin was
interviewed for that story coverage.
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June 16, 2008 - News from
Becky
Kyle Wellband and I departed for the field on May 30, 2008. Since
that time, we've only had two rain days (this is one of them and I
am currently typing from the public library in Edmundston). We've
been lucky enough to get a lot of atlassing done and have been able
to point count nearly every day (we've completed point counts in 16
squares so far and hope to get a lot more done by the July 3rd
deadline). There have
been many highlights along the way--far too many to list them all
here but I'll mention a few. Kyle has developed a true talent for
finding White-throated Sparrow nests and has already found three
nests--two with eggs and one with young. We've also found a Spotted
Sandpiper nest with four eggs, a Hermit Thrush nest with eggs and a
few Eastern Phoebe, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker and Hairy Woodpecker
nests as well. We've also found Cliff Swallow colonies (one right in
the parking lot of Irving's Deersdale camp) and also a likely
Chimney Swift breeding and roosting site (a big hollow tree in the
middle of the bog with more than 10 Chimney Swifts flying above in
Region 8). We've seen Ovenbird, Magnolia Warbler, Swainson's Thrush
and Black-throated Green all carrying nest building material and
have had Lincoln's Sparrow, Song Sparrow, Blue-headed Vireo and
American Robin all carrying food. Also, as we go, we keep learning
more and more about birds and their habitat preferences. For
example, until now both Kyle and I have thought of Black-throated
Blue Warblers as being a "hardwood species", but, we've changed our
minds since we've found several dozen in mixed forest types of all
ages. Other favorite sightings include: Scarlet Tanager, Pine
Warbler, Canada Warbler, Rusty Blackbird, Sharp-shinned Hawk and
Cape May Warbler. Needless to say, we're having a great time!! (I
can't wait until this rain stops so we can get back out there). I
hope all of you are having a great time atlassing too and please
feel free to share any adventures (or mis-adventures) with everyone
on the Atlas listserv.
White-throated Sparrow, photo by
Denis Doucet
June 17, 2008 - Trip to Cape
Breton, NS (by Ivy Austin)
Last weekend (June 13th to June
16th) I was invited by Patrick 'Fritz' McEvoy, the RC of region 26,
to come participate to a birding workshop held in Cape North, NS.
I left very early Friday morning so that I could stop in region 21
to do some point counts in a priority square that I planned to do
this summer. I met Fritz later that day after a long drive in
this beautiful region that is region 26. The workshop went
really well and it was followed by a birding trip nearby. We
had a good mixed group of people who looked interested in the Atlas.
Sunday, me and Fritz did some point counts and 'atlassed' in his
square and before leaving Monday morning we managed to finish the 15
point counts in Fritz's square. We saw a lot of birds, some
confirmed like the Fox Sparrow (who was carrying food), 2 Great Blue
Heron nests on the cliff of an island off White Point along with
nesting Black Guillemots, Great Black-backed Gulls, Herring Gulls
and Black-legged Kittiwakes and a pair of Common Eider were seen
with 2 young at the same location. We also saw some
Olive-sided Flycatchers (A), Eastern Kingbirds, Canada Warbler, some
Mourning Warblers (S), a Leach's Storm-Petrel on a coastal point
count close to St. Paul's Island and many more. Thank you Fritz
for everything, I had a great time visiting your corner of Cape
Breton!
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May 28, 2008 - Point Count
period extended from May 29th to July 3rd!
The
Atlas' Technical committee met on Monday, May 26, 2008 and made a
decision to extend the point count period for three days on either
side of June (the typical point counting month). The intention of
the extended period is to allow volunteers living in areas where
birds begin to breed earlier (i.e., southern NS) to begin point
counts earlier, and those living where birds begin breeding later
(i.e., Northern NB and Cape Breton) a bit of extra time at the end
of the month. This extension will mean that we will need to be a bit
more aware of bird activity (recognizing migrants vs. those who are
there to stay) but will allow us a greater window of time to get the
work done.
Red-winged Blackbird calling, photo by John Chardine
May 28, 2008 - Revised Guide to Atlassing for Species at Risk is
Available!
In
2007 and 2008, the status of four species – Common Nighthawk,
Chimney Swift, Olive-sided Flycatcher and Canada Warbler – was
assessed by COSEWIC (the Committee on the Status of Endangered
Wildlife in Canada). COSEWIC designated all four of these species as
“threatened”, meaning that these species are in decline and may be
at risk of disappearing if nothing is done to reverse the factors
leading to their extirpation or extinction. For each of these
species, new and updated breeding records, identification of key
habitat locations and characteristics, and an assessment of their
Maritimes status, are required steps to develop a conservation
plan. To assist in the gathering of this important information, we
are asking atlassers to fill in rare bird forms when these species
are detected. The information you gather will be used by Canadian
Wildlife Service Species at Risk biologists to identify critical
habitat for each of these species (information gathered by atlassers
is already being used to help identify critical habitat for the
Least Bittern).
To help increase your detections of these four newly listed species,
a revised edition of the Atlasser's guide to “Atlassing for Species
at Risk in the Maritime Provinces” has been created and is available
online under "Atlasser Material".
May 28, 2008 - Completing your square – focus for 2008
At
this point, most atlassers have somewhere between 5 and 15 survey
hours for their square and are now beginning to think about how to
“complete” their square (a square is considered complete when it has
20 survey hours and approximately 95% of expected species detected).
Your square summary sheet will tell you what species were found in
your square during the first Atlas. Here are some things to consider
when you are trying to complete your square: Have all habitat types
been covered? Are there any groups of species that are
underrepresented (e.g., crepuscular species)? How many species have
been confirmed? Depending on your answers to these questions
completing your square may require spending more time in certain
habitat-types, visiting your square at different times during the
day or, visiting your square later in July to look for species
carrying food. If you have well over twenty hours in your square and
are hungry for more atlassing, please talk to your regional
coordinator about taking on another square.
Photo credit:
Black-capped Chickadee excavating, photo by John Chardine
May 28, 2008 - Atlas Effort Maps have a New Face!
To give atlassers a better idea of which squares are complete and
which squares require additional survey effort, the
effort maps have
been changed to more precisely represent the amount of survey effort
that has been spent in each square. Now, yellow squares represent
squares with less than 10 survey hours, light green squares
represent squares with 10 to 19 survey hours and dark green squares
are those with more than 20 survey hours.
May 28, 2008 - Maritimes Atlas
Coffee goes on sale June 1, 2008
As
of June 1st, 2008, look for the yellow Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas
label on Just Us! coffee. This coffee is shade-grown in
Mexico, in areas where many of our summer breeders spend the winter,
and 10% of all proceeds will go to the Atlas project. Visit one of
four Just Us! Cafes (Grand Prez, Wolfville, Halifax Barrington
Street and Halifax Spring Garden) to pick up your Maritimes Atlas
coffee or call 1-888-668-8436 to order. For more information on
shade-grown coffee and its benefits to birds, check out this our
article on coffee and birds in the Atlas
news archives. For more information about Just Us! visit their
website.
May 26, 2008 - The Atlassing
season is well underway!

American Robin with nesting material, photo by John
Chardine
Already 108 species have been
reported to the Atlas database for 2008. Thirty-four species have
been entered as confirmed breeders including: Wood Duck, Hooded
Merganser, Red-tailed Hawk, American Kestrel, American Woodcock,
Northern Saw-whet Owl, Barred Owl, Hairy Woodpecker, Common
Yellowthroat and Red-winged
Blackbird (to name just a few…). So if you haven't had a chance to
get started yet, now is the time to head out to your square. Still
be cautious with those warblers, many are still migrating through
and are singing as they travel. For warblers and other passerines,
check that the birds are in the right breeding habitat, as well as,
their breeding dates (but remember these are just a guideline and
will vary between regions). One of the best ways to be sure you
aren't looking at a species that is just “passing through” is to
watch for behaviour that indicates a higher evidence of breeding or,
return to the same spot a second time in a least a week from now. At
Amherst Point, there's a Cape May Warbler who has been singing from
the top of the same conifer for more than two and a half weeks so,
I'm pretty sure he is there to stay, even though many others are
still just passing through. Good luck and have fun!
May 26, 2008 - Preparing for
2008...it is going to be great!
The primary atlassing season (June and July) is almost upon us and, across the Maritimes, atlassers are preparing to go out in the
field. The Atlas Coordinators have travelled to several regions,
including Edmundston, Wolfville and White Point to give talks at
naturalist clubs and many Regional Coordinators are already
organizing square bashes in their respective regions. Breeding Evidence forms for 2008
have been sent out and should be on your doorstep shortly (if they
haven't already arrived). For those atlassers planning to do point
counts, please tell your Regional Coordinator where you'll be
working so we can avoid any duplication of effort. Click
here for a
list of squares where Atlas staff will be doing point counts this
summer (and don't hesitate to tell us if you had already planned on
doing point counts in that area).
As you begin to prepare for the coming season, there are many online
resources that you can use to help focus your survey effort
including square summary sheets (these provide you with a list of
what has been found so far during the current atlas and what species
were found during the first atlas) and regional checklists (that
will give you a list of all species that are considered Maritimes
rare as well as regionally rare). Happy birding!
Photo credit: Atlassing
near Edmundston, photo by Ivy Austin
May 26, 2008 - “Tricks” to
identify birds by their songs
For those just beginning to “bird by ear”, it may be helpful to know
some of the “tricks” that many birders use to help them identify
(and remember) the songs of different bird species. Click
here for a a table
of several bird species and the phrases that are typically
associated with their song—i.e., they deliver their song with a
similar rhythm or cadence to the phrases. Keep in mind that the
songs listed below are each species' most “typical” songs and that
songs can vary between regions and individuals. Also included in the
table is the habitat-type (s) within which you are more likely to
find each species. Habitat can often be an important clue to
identifying the bird that you are hearing.
Photo credit:
Chestnut-sided Warbler, photo by Jim Stevenson
May 1,
2008 - Just Us! Coffee and the Maritimes Atlas have
joined forces
In May of 2008, Just Us! Coffee Roasters Co-op is launching a new
line of coffee — Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas Coffee — and 10% of
all proceeds will go directly to the Maritimes Breeding Bird Atlas
project. Based out of Wolfville, NS, Just Us!
is Canada's first fair trade coffee roaster, promoting trading
relationships based on respect, empowerment and fairness. Just
Us! coffee is organic and bird-friendly. Maritimes Breeding Bird
Atlas Coffee comes from shade-grown coffee plantations in the
highlands of south-central Mexico.
As
you may already know, many of the birds that breed here in the
Maritimes travel south to Mexico and Central and South America for
the winter. Of all the agricultural systems in the tropics,
shade-grown coffee plantations host some of the highest numbers of
migratory birds (some upwards of 120 species). Shade-grown
coffee's multi-layered vegetation structure provides food and cover
for many over wintering bird species (birds feed on flower and fruit
crops, as well as, insects in the shaded overstory). Maritimes birds
that frequent shade-grown coffee plantations include: Yellow-bellied
Flycatcher, Blue-headed Vireo, Red-eyed Vireo, Swainson's Thrush,
Tennessee Warbler, Black-throated Green Warbler, Northern Parula and
Baltimore Oriole (just to name a few, click
here for the names of a few
more).
So
for all those birders who begin their day with a cup (or several
cups) of coffee, please consider brewing your pot with Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas coffee. Maritimes
Breeding Bird Atlas Coffee will be available by mid-May.
Just Us! Coffee can be purchased by
phone 1-888-668-8436 or from any of the Just Us! Cafes (located at
Grand Prez, Wolfville, Halifax Barrington Street and Halifax Spring
Garden). Just Us! is also sold at several local stores and co-ops
across the Maritimes.
Photo credit:
Baltimore Oriole photo by Jim Stevenson
May 1, 2008
–
Upcoming Nova Scotia Bird Society Meeting is
all about Atlassing!
This
year the Nova Scotia Bird Society is hosting their annual “out-of
area” Bird Society meeting at the White Point Beach Resort near
Liverpool on May 24th and 25th, 2008. The meeting will be geared
toward Atlas participants, as well as all those who may be
interested in becoming Atlas participants. All are welcome!
We'll kick off the weekend meeting with a Saturday evening workshop
covering various “atlas” topics including how to complete your
square and how to track down some of those more elusive species.
Atlas Coordinators, Becky Stewart and Ivy Austin, along with local
Regional Coordinators Peter Hope, James Hirtle, Donna Ensor and
Suzanne Borkowski will be on hand and ready to answer any atlassing
questions you may have. Sunday morning there will be a point count
demonstration followed by breakfast and a choice of field trips.
To book your room at the White Point Beach Resort for the night of
May 24th, call: 1-800-565-5068. (Be sure to say you're with the Nova
Scotia Bird Society to get a discounted rate of $120.00 for a double
room in the Lodge or $135.00 for a one-bedroom cottage on the
beach).
May 1, 2008 - Nova Scotia
Species at Risk Guide

Parks Canada, in collaboration with many other partners, has
recently produced an identification and information guide to species
at risk in Nova Scotia. Harold and Diane Clapp, two environmental
stewards, approached Parks with the idea for a species at risk field guide at the Kejimkujik volunteer
appreciation night back in 2006. The end product is a 100 page guide
that provides a detailed description of each of NS's 42 species at
risk (from the American Marten to Sweet Pepperbush, with Piping Plovers and Common Nighthawks in between), as well as,
habitat information, threats to survival and contacts to report
sightings. The guide is can be downloaded from
www.speciesatrisk.ca
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April 29, 2008 - Canada Warbler designated
as Threatened
This
past Friday, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife
in Canada designated the Canada Warbler as "threatened", which
means that the Canada Warbler is likely to become endangered if
factors affecting its population decline are not reversed.
Most of the Canada Warbler's breeding range (nearly 80%) occurs
in Canada. While regional trends vary, overall this species is
showing a significant long term decline. The reasons for the
decline are unclear, habitat degradation on both the wintering
and breeding grounds are potential causes. In the Maritimes
specifically, forest management practices aimed at thinning and
reducing the broad-leafed forest component may reduce the amount
of breeding habitat available to Canada Warblers.
In light of this new designation the Atlas is asking volunteers
to fill out a rare bird form for any Canada Warbler that they
may encounter this summer. The most important pieces of
information to gather are location coordinates (either from a
map or GPS) and a description of the habitat in which the Canada
Warbler was detected.
Although Canada Warbler breeding habitat can be somewhat
difficult to “peg”, they are primarily found in moist, mature-
to mid-aged mixed forest stands with a dense understory. As
well, Canada Warblers are usually associated with broad-leafed
trees and shrubs, although conifers are typically present.
Below, are two habitat photos I took where I found Canada
Warblers breeding in northern NB last year.


Two locations where Canada Warblers were found; in
the case of the second photo, there was a bog/open wetland directly
adjacent to this habitat; photos by Becky Stewart.
Photo credit:
Canada Warbler photo by Jerry DeBoer
April 29, 2008 - Regional Coordinators Meeting held in Memramcook,
NB
Twenty-five Regional Coordinators, along with Atlas staff and
several members of the Atlas Steering Committee got together in
Memramcook, New Brunswick to discuss Atlas progress to-date and
plans for the coming field season. Bernard Forsythe, an active atlas
volunteer and a “real pro” when it comes to raptors, was also there
to help work through some specific breeding evidence questions.
Regional Coordinators spent two days discussing a variety of
atlassing issues (including motivating atlassers, completing point
counts, plans for 2008, reviewing rare bird records and the online
system). RCs also managed to find time to track down a Barred Owl, a
Red-breasted Merganser, some Ruddy Ducks and a variety of other
species. The meeting proved itself to be a great opportunity for
information sharing between all of the regions. So atlassers
beware—your RCs are revved up and ready to go!

RCs discussing the finer points of the online system,
photo by Ivy Austin.
April 16, 2008 - The 48th
Annual Nest Record Scheme report is available!

Alder Flycatcher in Nest, photo by Gord Belyea
In 2007 there was a huge increase
in the number of nest record cards submitted relative to years past,
in part this was due to online submissions of nest records by Atlas
participants. Red-winged Blackbirds topped the list with 188 nest
records submitted. Three Bicknell's Thursh nests were found in NB
(bringing the total number of nest records for Bicknell's Thrush in
NB to 4). Other very exciting finds include a Boreal Owl nest
in Cape Breton and a Brown thrasher nest in NB. I won't give any more of the details away. Check out project
coordinator Julie Paquet's annual report by clicking
here.
April 16, 2008 - Atlas staff visit the Miramichi Naturalists Club
Project
Coordinators, Becky Stewart and Ivy Austin, spent a very enjoyable
evening with the Miramichi Naturalists Club on Monday, April
14, 2008. Becky gave a presentation on the Maritimes Atlas that
covered: what the Atlas is all about, how it works, what the end
result will be, what's been done thus far, and how to use your
knowledge of bird habitat preferences to increase species detections
in your square. The talk was followed by a lively discussion about
atlas protocols and other methods for increasing species detections
such as using call playback and visiting your square at different
times during the day. Thank-you to all who participated!
April 1, 2008 - 2008 Spring Newsletter is online!
The 2008 spring newsletter is now available online and for those who
have requested it by mail it will be arriving at your door
shortly. This spring's newsletter includes articles on:
highlights of 2007; how to complete your atlas square;
potentially new breeding species for the Maritimes; how to atlas
for raptors; unusual Barn Swallow nesting locations; and much
more. Thank-you to all who contributed. If you would like
to write an article for a future newsletter or have story ideas
contact the Atlas office at
atlasmaritimes@gmail.com.
April 1 - 2008 Early Atlassing
has begun!

En route to set up raptor nest boxes, Photo by Amanda
Lowe
As the snow begins to melt (and hopefully
won't fall again) more and more breeding activity is being reported
for raptors and owls on various bird and nature listservs. The
sightings are too numerous to list them all here but I thought I'd
peak your interest with a few: a pair of Bald Eagles was seen “talon
grappling” during an aerial courtship display; a Northern Goshawk
was observed carrying nesting material; and several owl species have
been heard singing or on territory and/or are already nesting. Other
species that will begin breeding soon (or have already begun) include: several duck species (Mergansers,
American Black Duck, Wood Ducks), Red-tailed Hawk and American
Woodcock. For a complete list of early breeders check out the article entitled
“Early Season Atlassing” from last year's
Spring Newsletter or
the Breeding Dates information
sheet.
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March 30, 2008 - Islanders
prepare for the coming Atlas season
This past Saturday, March 29, 2008, 16 atlassers met for an
atlassing workshop in Charlottetown, PEI to prepare for the coming
atlas season. The workshop was hosted by Rosemary Curley, the
island's Regional Coordinator and Diane Griffin, dedicated Atlas
volunteer. This is the second workshop to take place on PEI this
month; the first was held in Summerside on March 15. Rosemary began
the session with a presentation, entitled "Atlassers rule; how to be
a good atlasser". As a group, volunteers discussed the finer points
of data collection including: filling out breeding evidence forms,
online data entry, colonial forms, point counts and when a square is
complete. Dwaine Oakley, also a dedicated Atlas volunteer, showed
the group the technological “gadgets” that he uses in the field to
help elicit responses from birds (portable cd player, iPod and
iMainGo, a portable speaker device). As well, Becky Stewart, project
Coordinator, gave a brief overview of the island's progress to date.
There was a slight break in discussion for a delicious homemade
lunch that included lasagne and apple cake. By the workshop's end,
most not-yet-surveyed priority squares were assigned and atlassers
were geared up and ready to go.
March 29, 2008 - Coordinator
speaks at Forestry Conference
Becky
Stewart, Atlas Coordinator, introduced the Atlas project to
foresters at joint meeting of NS Forest Technicians Association,
Canadian Institute of Forestry and the Registered Professional
Foresters Association of NS, held in Truro, NS, March 27 and 28,
2008. Becky's presentation focused on the effects of changing land
use practices on bird habitat and distribution, as well as, the
potential for the industry to utilize the Atlas project to develop
and provide context to its own monitoring programs. Other
presentations focussed on sustaining both the Acadian forest and the
industry itself.
Photo credit: Great
Horned Owl nestlings, photo by Richard Ster
March 14, 2008 -
Remembering Gareth

Gareth on top of Bald Peak, photo by Gareth
Akerman
It is with sadness that we
report the death of former BSC employee, Gareth Akerman. Gareth,
along with three other individuals, died in a plane crash near
West Palm Beach, Florida on March 13th, 2008. Gareth was on a
6-month contract with Florida Atlantic University, conducting
aerial surveys of wading bird colonies in the Lake Okeechobee
area.
Gareth worked for the MBBA in the summer of 2007;
surveying for breeding birds in some of the more remote regions
of northern New Brunswick. Gareth recently completed his
Master's research on the role of riparian forest and riparian
buffer strips in avian conservation in the Acadian forest.
Gareth also worked with the Bluenose Coastal Action Foundation
on the Roseate Tern Recovery Project and volunteered for several
other conservation initiatives. In addition, he was a world
traveler who taught English in Guatemala and planted trees in
western Canada.
Gareth had a real knack for finding
Scarlet Tanagers, picking the perfect driving tune and making
others laugh. He was also an incredible field researcher, a
dedicated conservationist and a valued friend. He is greatly
missed by all who knew him.
March 5, 2008 -
Whoooo is in the woods?
The
time for owling is upon us and March and April can be the best
months to detect calling owls. Already Great-Horned Owls can be
heard "singing" and are occupying territories. There are likely
quite a few Great Horned Owls that already have nests with eggs
(NE) and by the end of March we're likely to find some nests
with young. The breeding season has also begun for Northern
Saw-Whets and Barred Owls (a couple have already been reported
for 2008).
What's the best way to Atlas for owls? The
first thing to do is to “scout out” appropriate owl habitat in
your square during the daylight hours (most basically--woodlots
with some larger trees). Great-horned Owls rarely build their
own nests and often use old crow or raven nests. Barred and
Northern Saw-whet owls are both cavity nesters, using cavities
left from fallen branches and woodpecker holes. While Northern
Saw-whets can generally be found in all forest and woodland
types, their densities are usually highest in coniferous areas.
Barred Owls are more often found in mature hardwoods or mixed
stands. Once you've found your owling locations, visit your
square at night, preferably with a friend and a couple of
thermoses of hot chocolate, spending about five to ten minutes
in each of your chosen locations. Using CDs of owl calls can be
very effective in eliciting a response from nearby owls (Barred
Owls can sometimes be quite slow to respond so they may require
a bit of patience). If you do use a taped owl call, please do so
judiciously and only to trigger an initial response. Revisit the
location at least a week later to increase the breeding evidence
to "T" territory.
If the roads in your square are
impassable at this time of year, you can go out mid-May to early
June to listen for family groups with recently fledged young
(FY).
Photo credit:
Northern Saw-whet Owl by Denis Doucet
Financial Support
for Atlassers
Bird Studies Canada Baillie Fund will
once again be providing support to volunteers willing to
organize trips and travel to remote or difficult to access areas
to survey in squares that might not otherwise be covered (e.g.,
islands that require boat rental, can only be accessed by canoe
or on foot, squares that require a 4-wheel drive vehicle and/or
are more than 150 km from the nearest town. In 2006 and 2007,
the Baillie Fund supported trips to St. Paul's Island, Moose
Island, Ile d'Haute, as well as atlassing ventures in Cape
Breton and Northern New Brunswick. So if you have a trip in mind
and would like some additional support, check out the
Support for Volunteers link on the
Atlas homepage for details on how to apply for funding. Trips
must be long enough (or repeated) to obtain full atlas coverage
(i.e., 20 survey hours and 95% of species detected). Requests
submitted to the Atlas office by May 9, 2008.
The Ontario Atlas is now available!
To
purchase your copy go to the Ontario Atlas website
www.birdsontario.org
or, call Nature Ontario at 1-800-440-2366. The cost is CA$92.50
+ GST, including shipping within Canada.
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February 2008
- Keep an eye out for early breeding finches!

Red Crossbill, photo by Bill Schmoker
Right now (late January through February) is when Red
and White-winged Crossbills are beginning to breed. Both
crossbills feed on seeds extracted from the cones of coniferous
trees and where and when they breed depends on the food supply.
Both of these species are more likely to be found breeding in
years with a large cone crop. As well, because they follow
their food supply, crossbills may not breed in the same area
year after year—thus, if these species were found breeding in
your atlas square during the first Atlas, they may not be there
this time around. The best way to find out if crossbills
are breeding in your area is to visit the “mature coniferous
areas” in your square and check out this year's cone crop. If
Crossbills are in the area, singing males can be very
conspicuous as they sing loud, long songs while flying circles
around tree tops where a female can usually be found. The
presence of less conspicuous, solitary males can also be a sign
of breeding as the females do all of the incubation.
During courtship and incubation males will often feed the
female. This can be a good way to find evidence of
breeding (a nest or nest tree) but the food will not be easily
observed as the male regurgitates the food for the female.
If you do see a male feed a female the correct breeding code to
use is 'D'. Atlassing for winter breeding Crossbills takes
a lot of effort and tolerance of cold and snow, but there are no
black flies and mosquitoes and being in the forest during winter
can be lots of fun.
There are many other species that also begin nesting long
before the “typical” Atlas season starts including several
species of raptors, owls, doves and ducks. Check out Scott
Makepeace's article in last year's spring newsletter for a list
of early breeders or click here
for a table of breeding dates for all Maritimes species.
Breeding Bird Atlases are now coast to coast!
This year the Maritimes won't be the only region searching
for breeding birds--the British Columbia Breeding Bird Atlas is
now underway! Already, more than 250 participants have
registered for the project and an Anna's Hummingbird was found
nest building (that was before nearly a foot of snow fell).
Check out the BC Breeding Bird Atlas website (www.birdatlas.bc.ca)
to find out the latest atlassing news from the west coast.
And if you happen to be traveling to BC this summer, don't
hesitate to contact the Atlas Office (cdicorrado@bsc-eoc.org)
for information on available squares.