Last year I completed my very first “year review”, and I
have been looking forward to completing this years! 2016 was a year that was full of unexpected
adventures and a backyard full of birds.
My year list for 2016 reached a total of 216 species and
included 33 new lifer species bringing my life list up to 266 species. It
doesn’t feel like too many species considering the vast number of species that
are out there, however considering I haven’t birded for many years or much
outside of where I live, and I haven’t been much of an assertive birder (or
twitcher), it isn’t too shabby! A few of
these species will have links to the original blogs that I wrote about them if
you are interested in reading more.
The first bird of the year was a Black-capped Chickadee, not
too unusual for living in Peterborough.
A month or so into the new year I picked up my first lifer of the year
(and #235), Red Crossbills, while hiking at Petroglyphs Provincial Park. A visit home to Chatham supplied me with my
next lifer of the year, a Lapland Longspur!
Little did I know I would get to see them on their wintering AND
breeding ground this year! Back in Parry Sound I got my third lifer of the
year, a Pine Siskin at our feeder.
The next wave of lifers came during my next visit home in
the spring. My father kept trying to
describe to me a bird that was visiting the backyard for about a week. Finally
I was able to spot it and was surprised to see a Blue-headed Vireo! Then came Palm Warbler (#239), Willet (#240),
Cape May Warbler (#241), and Lincoln’s Sparrow (#242) during a day trip to the
Leamington area.
Cape May Warbler |
Prothonotary Warbler at Rondeau Provincial park |
I then snuck in two more lifers before heading off to do
some field work up north. These were a
Virginia Rail at Killbear Provincial Park and my first time seeing Piping
Plovers at Darlington Provincial Park (the first pair to nest their in over 80
years!).
Adult Piping Plover on nest inside its protective enclosure |
Then 2016 brought an experience I wasn’t quite expecting,
the chance to help with some field work in Nunavut! This amazing experience brought me a handful
of life birds that included: Northern Wheatear, Thick-billed Murre, King Eider,
Common Eider, Cackling Goose, and Pacific Loon. It also brought me many flora lifers and a few mammal lifers such as polar bears, walrus, and caribou (which I will be blogging about next!).
I then went on another amazing adventure to Washington, D.C.
to present at an international conference (the North American Ornithology
Conference). What an amazing experience it was to talk to other ornithologists
and fledgling scientists, learn about other projects (both large and small) occurring
across the continent, and making connections with amazing people I still keep
in contact with months later. This conference also gave me a huge respect for
the role that social media can play in science and science communication. I met many people who held blogs, youtube
pages, and very active twitter accounts and use these to spread messages of
science communication in a fun and engaging way, which I something that I hope
to become more involved with in the 2017 year.
This trip brought me a number of other lifers. It was also the first time I had been to this
part of the USA and road tripped home for the sole purpose of birding. We picked up lifers such as: Mississippi
Kite, Brown-headed Nuthatch, Blue Grosbeak, Laughing Gull, Royal Tern, Least
Tern, American Oystercatcher, Clapper Rail, Brown Pelican, Glossy Ibis, Little
Blue Heron, and Tri-coloured Heron (Blogs still to come on this!). During this trip we also managed to find a tiny Fence Lizard!
The last two lifers of the year took place in Parry
Sound. The first at our bird feeder,
Evening Grosbeak, and the second during the annual Burk’s Falls Christmas BirdCount, a Gray Jay!
I hope that 2017 will be an equally as adventurous and birdy year. I can't wait to see what my first lifer will be and hope that the first thing I accomplish will be this Master's Degree! Hopefully once that is under wraps I will be able to spend more time reading more blogs, engaging in citizen science and science communication, and....get a job! Thank you to everyone who has made my 2016 memorable, whether I have gone out and birded with you, banded with you, tweeted on twitter with you, spoke to you at the NAOC or up in the Arctic, was inspired by your own blogs, exchanged greetings or advice while out birding....thank you! I cannot wait to see what 2017 has in store for myself and for every else.
Below, is my final year list (pending I don't see anything tomorrow!) with just a few of my favourite photos from the year.
1. Black-capped
Chickadee
2. White-breasted Nuthatch
3. Ring-billed Gull
4. American Tree Sparrow
5. Canada Goose
Pine Siskin and American Goldfinch at our feeder in Parry Sound |
6. Rock Pigeon
7. Dark-eyed Junco
8. American Goldfinch
9. Downy Woodpecker
10 American Crow
11. European Starling
12. Blue Jay
13. Common Goldeneye
14. Mallard
Common Redpoll at feeder |
16. Greater Scaup
17. House Sparrow
18. Wild Turkey
20. Red-breasted Nuthatch
21. Common Raven
22. Common Redpoll
Wild Turkey in Parry Sound |
24. Wood Duck
25. Herring Gull
26. Bufflehead
27. Mute Swan
28. Long-tailed Duck
29. Gadwall
30. Red-breasted Merganser
31. Lesser Scaup
Great Black-backed Gull |
32. American Robin
33. Red-tailed Hawk
34. American Kestrel
35. House Finch
36. Tundra Swans
37. Bald Eagle
38. Northern Harrier
39. Canvasback
40. Redhead
41. Snow Goose
42. Snow Bunting
43. Horned Lark
44. Lapland Longspur (LIFER #236)
Lapland Longspur during the winter |
Lapland Longspur on breeding grounds |
45. Mourning Dove
46. Sharp-shinned Hawk
47. American Coot
49. Coopers Hawk
50. American Black Duck
Skating American Coot |
52. Killdeer
53. Red-winged Blackbird
54. Turkey Vulture
55. American Wigeon
56. Song Sparrow
57. Golden-crowned Kinglet
58. Pied-billed Grebe
Great Blue Herons nesting |
59. Common Grackle
60. Ring-necked Duck
61. Hooded Merganser
62. Trumpeter Swan
63. Red-necked Grebe
64. Eastern Phoebe
65. Cedar Waxwing
66. Tree Swallow
67. Pileated Woodpecker
68. Chipping Sparrow
69. Northern Cardinal
70. Great Blue Heron
71. Northern Flicker (Yellow-shafted)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet |
72. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
73. Barred Owl
74. American Woodcock
75. Osprey
76. Purple Finch
77. Ruby-crowned Kinglet
79. Greater Yellowlegs
80. Green-winged Teal
81. Pine Siskin (LIFER #237)
82. White-throated Sparrow
83. Brown Thrasher
Yellow-rumped Warbler while banding in Leamington |
84. Sandhill Crane
85. Fox Sparrow
86. Broad-winged Hawk
87. Yellow-rumped Warbler
Rusty Blackbirds in Parry Sound |
89. Double-crested Cormorant
90. Hairy Woodpecker
91. Brown-headed Cowbird
92. American Bittern
93. Common Loon
94. Winter Wren
95. Pine Warbler
96. Rusty Blackbirds
98. Chimney Swift
99. Yellow Warbler
100. Blue-headed Vireo (LIFER #238)
101. Warbling Vireo
102. Nashville Warbler
103. Blackburnian Warbler
Blackburnian and Canada Warbler in Leamington |
104. Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher
105. Barn Swallow
106. Bank Swallow
107. Purple Martin
108. House Wren
109. Palm Warbler (LIFER #239)
Eastern Bluebird at Rondeau PP |
110. Northern Parula
111. American Redstart
112. Eastern Bluebird
113. Gray Catbird
114. Rose-breasted Grosbeak
115. Baltimore Oriole
116. White-crowned Sparrow
117. Black-and-white Warbler
118. Common Yellowthroat
119. Great Horned Owl
120. Black-bellied Plover
Willets in Wheatley |
122. Swamp Sparrow
123. Northern Waterthrush
124. Canada Warbler
125. Willet (LIFER #240)
126. Ruby-throated
Hummingbird
127. Carolina Wren
128. Orchard Oriole
129. Chestnut-sided Warbler
130. Bay-breasted Warbler
131. Cape May Warbler (LIFER #241)
132. Bonaparte's Gull
133. Common Tern
134. Marsh Wren
135. Scarlet Tananger
136. Veery
137. Swainson's Thrush
138. Black-throated Blue Warbler
139. Magnolia Warbler
141. Eastern Kingbird
142. Red-headed Woodpecker
143. Prothonotary Warbler (LIFER #243)
144. White-winged Dove (LIFER #244)
145. Willow Flycatcher
146. Red-eyed Vireo
147. Wood Thrush
148. Hooded Warbler
149. Ovenbird
150. Mourning Warbler
151. Wilson's Warbler
152. Eastern Towhee
153. Spotted Sandpiper
154. Whimbrel
127. Carolina Wren
128. Orchard Oriole
129. Chestnut-sided Warbler
130. Bay-breasted Warbler
131. Cape May Warbler (LIFER #241)
Magnolia Warbler at Point Pelee Park |
132. Bonaparte's Gull
133. Common Tern
134. Marsh Wren
135. Scarlet Tananger
136. Veery
137. Swainson's Thrush
138. Black-throated Blue Warbler
139. Magnolia Warbler
141. Eastern Kingbird
142. Red-headed Woodpecker
143. Prothonotary Warbler (LIFER #243)
Hooded Warbler |
144. White-winged Dove (LIFER #244)
145. Willow Flycatcher
146. Red-eyed Vireo
147. Wood Thrush
148. Hooded Warbler
149. Ovenbird
150. Mourning Warbler
151. Wilson's Warbler
152. Eastern Towhee
153. Spotted Sandpiper
154. Whimbrel
Whimbrel on beach at Rondeau Provincial Park |
155. Caspian Tern
Piping Plover chick at Darlington Provincial Park |
156. Great Egret
157. Indigo Bunting
158. Hermit Thrush
159. Cliff Swallow
160. Northern Rough-winged Swallow
161. Field Sparrow
162. Black-billed Cuckoo
163. Bobolink
Northern Wheatear in Iqaluit |
165. Great Crested Flycatcher
166. Piping Plover (LIFER #246)
167. Red-throated Loon
168. Glaucous Gull
169. American Pipit
170. Northern Wheatear (LIFER #247)
171. Thick-billed Murre (LIFER #248)
172. King Eider (LIFER #249)
173. Peregrine Falcon
174. Cackling Goose (LIFER #250)
175. Semipalmated Plover
176. Common Eider (LIFER #251)
177. Semipalmated Sandpiper
178. Iceland Gull
179. Northern Pintail
Thick-billed Murre colony with Polar Bear swimming below |
180. Pacific Loon (LIFER #252)
181. Snowy Egret (LIFER #253)
Mississippi Kite |
182. Carolina Chickadee
183. Red-bellied Woodpecker
184. Tufted Titmouse
185. Green Heron
186. Mississippi Kite (LIFER #254)
187. Blue Grosbeak (LIFER #255)
188. Brown-headed Nuthatch (LIFER #256)
189. Laughing Gull (LIFER #257)
190. Lesser Black-backed Gull
191. Royal Tern (LIFER #258)
192. Forster's Tern
Snowy Egret |
193. Least Tern (LIFER #259)
194. Black Tern
195. Sanderling
196. Ruddy Turnstone
197. Lesser Yellowlegs
198. American Oystercatcher (LIFER #260)
199. Clapper Rail (LIFER #261)
200. Black Scoter
201. Brown Pelican (LIFER #262)
202. Northern Mockingbird
203. Glossy Ibis (LIFER #263)
204. Black Vulture
American Oystercatcher |
205. Short-billed Dowitcher
206. Little Blue Heron (LIFER #264)
207. Tricolored Heron (LIFER #265)
208. Least Bittern
209. Surf Scoter
210. Horned Grebe
211. Savannah Sparrow
212. Ruddy Duck
213. White-winged Scoter
214. Evening Grosbeak (LIFER #266)
215. Northern Shrike
216. Gray Jay (LIFER #267)
Surf Scoter at Killbear Provincial Park |
Cheers to a happy, healthy, adventurous, and birdy 2017 everyone!
Georgian Bay Sunset |