Fri 12 Sept 2014
All,
Eliese Ronke joined me today for the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey. Eliese recently arrived at the USF&WS Cape Romain offices as an SCA (Student Conservation Association?) volunteer intern. She'll be working at Cape Romain NWR through November and hopefully will be joining us again for the survey.
Coastal Expeditions (CEX) once again graciously gave us their best services in getting us out to the islandand back. Many thanks to both Captain Dan and First Mate/Naturalist Olivia Wilson. Their new Carolina Skiff is a really nice ride! CEX has a very busy weekend ahead of themselves with a sunrise beach drop to Bulls Islandtomorrow morning, their usual Saturday Bulls Island ferry runs, and their quarterly Cape Island lighthouse charter from McClellanville to the Cape Romain lighthouse on Sunday. All this will be going on while one of their own gets married Saturday! Congratulations, Gates Roll!
We tallied 47 target species on today's survey and 59 species overall. Our eBird checklist is appended, below. Avian highlights include: 1 American Bittern, 3 Reddish Egrets, 7 Piping Plovers (none with apparent leg bands or flags), 268 Marbled Godwits (I sure hope that I didn't miss Long-billed Curlews resting in plain sight but with their bills tucked on their backs, but I looked as closely as I could at each.), 2 Pectoral Sandpipers, all three peeps (We actually had 1 Western Sandpiper plus 1 Semipalmated Sandpiper plus 1 Least Sandpiper in one, close, scope view in excellent light.), 1 Great Black-backed Gull, 40 Caspian Terns, 102 Common Terns, 1 Bonaparte's Gull, and 13 Roseate Spoonbills.
Avian misses (and near-misses) include: Double-crested Cormorant (2), Least Bittern, Glossy Ibis, Mottled Duck, Black-necked Stilt (1), and Least Tern (1).
Non-avian sightings included: Atlantic bottle-nosed dolphin; American alligator (no surprise there); one small, unidentified snake; and butterflies and dragonflies. The mosquitoes and deer flies were the most numerous I've had this summer, though I still abstained from using repellent on my exposed skin. We missed seeing any fox squirrels.
We spoke briefly with two SC DNR law enforcement officers who, along with colleagues flying low and wide over Bulls Bay, were on the lookout for shrimp baiters out before today's noon starting time of the shrimp baiting season.
Much to my great and pleasant surprise, the breached dike at Upper Summerhouse Pond (USP) has been repaired! They've removed the damaged trunk and completely filled in the breached site. I understand from CEX's Olivia that they are installing a new trunk further out and around Summerhouse Road (that I didn't actually see today). The residual water in USP is, from two or three weeks of tidal influence, undoubtedly saline and remains very low. I don't know if there is any current salt water influence at the site of the new trunk going in, but likely not much if any. I don't know what their plan (or hope?) for restoring a brackish (or fresh?) water salinity in the impoundment is, but they've really surprised and impressed me with their repair efforts so far, especially with both low funding and so few employees. I was so convinced that USP would be under tidal influence for months, but they showed me otherwise!
Looking ahead at both the tidal calendar and my own calendar suggests the following dates for our nextsurvey:
Thursday 25 Sept 2014 high tide forecast 5.7 ft at 9:04 AM
Monday 29 Sept 2014 high tide forecast 5.7 ft at 11:39 AM
I'll be leading field trips out to Bulls Island on both Friday and Saturday 26 and 27 Sept 2014 for the Carolina Bird Club's fall meeting in Charleston, so I'll not be able to complete the survey either of those two days. Furthermore, I'm completely disinclined to ask anyone to haul me out there on any Sunday. Though the tide on Thursday will be somewhat earlier in the day than usual for our survey, that seems the most likely date, but stay tuned.
I'm cross posting this to Carolinabirds for those CBCers coming to Bulls in two weeks. Looking forward to those outings!
Regards,
David McLean
Charleston, SC
Cape Romain NWR--Bulls Island, Charleston, US-SC
Sep 12, 2014 8:35 AM - 4:35 PM
Protocol: Traveling
16.499 mile(s)
Comments: Conducting the ongoing Bulls Island waterfowl/shorebird survey. Effort: 4.15 mi (one way) and 1 hr by ferry plus 10.1 mi and 2 hr by vehicle plus 2.75 mi and 5 hr by foot. Weather: sunny and very warm to hot, humid; temps 79 F to 91 F; AM winds SW <5 mph, PM winds shifting to S at <10 mph. High tide was forecast to be 6.2 ft at 10:57 AM. The breached dike at Upper Summerhouse Pond from approximately 3 weeks ago has been repaired but without a trunk; a new trunk is being installed further out Summerhouse Road. <br />Submitted from BirdLog NA for iOS, version 1.6.3
59 species (+1 other taxa)
Wood Duck 1
Blue-winged Teal 1
Pied-billed Grebe 5
Wood Stork 4
Double-crested Cormorant 2
Anhinga 4
American White Pelican 40
Brown Pelican 195 Many on Bulls Bay sand bar off North Beach, many on front beach at Jack's Creek, and scattered others.
American Bittern 1 Large bittern seen on wing. Distinctly too large and lacking cinnamon-colored back to be Least Bittern. Elongated/pointy neck-and-bill. Flushed from beside dike, flew short distance into grass and disappeared.
Great Blue Heron 5
Great Egret 21
Snowy Egret 42
Little Blue Heron 1
Tricolored Heron 7
Reddish Egret 3
Green Heron 3
Black-crowned Night-Heron 10
White Ibis 7
Roseate Spoonbill 13 Accurate count. 5 in oceanfront marsh at Jack's Creek plus 8 in Upper Summerhouse Pond. All distinctly PINK and with spoon-shaped bills.
Turkey Vulture 8
Osprey 2
Clapper Rail (Atlantic Coast) 6 Saw 1, heard the others.
Common Gallinule 28
American Coot 2 Rail, white bill.
Black-necked Stilt 1
American Oystercatcher 2
Grey Plover 38
Semipalmated Plover 315 Estimated 30 on North Beach, fairly accurate count of 285 in oceanfront marsh at Jack's Creek.
Piping Plover 7 No apparent leg bands or flags.
Spotted Sandpiper 2
Greater Yellowlegs 3
Willet 83 Most resting on private dock just North of the dock at Garris Landing.
Marbled Godwit 268 A fairly accurate count. Many resting with bill tucked onto back; all showing bill were scrutinized for possible Long-billed Curlew, but no LBCU seen.
Ruddy Turnstone 11
Sanderling 16
Least Sandpiper 1
Pectoral Sandpiper 2
Semipalmated Sandpiper 1
Western Sandpiper 12
peep sp. 40 Either WESA or SESA but too distant to be more specific. .
Short-billed Dowitcher 75
Bonaparte's Gull 1 Small gull (compared directly to very nearby Laughing Gulls), white head plumage, dark plumage spot behind eye, light back plumage, dark primaries folded over equal-length tail, dark legs.
Laughing Gull 120
Great Black-backed Gull 1
Least Tern 1
Caspian Tern 40
Black Tern 300 Most in the oceanfront marsh at Jack's Creek.
Common Tern 102 Good scope views of both resting and flying COTE. Dark primaries easily seen on folded wings and in flight; most resting showed dark carpel smudge.
Forster's Tern 37
Royal Tern 133
Sandwich Tern 8
Black Skimmer 100
Mourning Dove 2
Belted Kingfisher 2
Carolina Chickadee 1
Northern Mockingbird 1
Northern Cardinal 4
Bobolink 1
Red-winged Blackbird 2
Boat-tailed Grackle 30
View this checklist online at http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S19813437
This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)
No comments:
Post a Comment