[TN-Bird] Hummingbird hiatus
- From: James Brooks <comeback@xxxxxxxx>
- To: Tenn Birds <tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2004 07:14:58 -0400
Dee Thompson's observation of a return of hummingbirds in mid-September
has also been noted in Bear Run, Jonesborough, TN.
For about two weeks from the beginning of September my feeders showed
absolutely no sign of activity and the mixture was beginning to get
cloudy when I noticed it was going down again. This was the first time
all summer I had put on the mis-named bee guards to keep the wasps away,
and also the time the jewelweed stopped blooming, so I assumed my local
birds had either migrated south or to higher elevation where the
jewelweed still blooms.
We have that elevational kink in our migration in East Tennessee.
This week I noticed the syrup began to decrease once again and quickly
made a new batch. I was rewarded by hummers coming by in numbers.
I am not optimistic of the fate of our local birds that migrated South
into the teeth of two inland hurricanes in a week, even those that were
still in the mountains when Ivan blew through. Folks in Alabama will
have other things on their mind than putting feeders out and I'm sure
most floral sources were flattened.
So the question is not only whether our local birds have returned, but
what effect will these storms have on hummingbird populations next year.
How quickly will floral sources revive in Florida? Will hummers sip
their way around the edge of the storm damage and reach the Gulf
somewhere in Mississippi or Louisiana instead and follow the route of
the Western birds through Mexico.
I've been thinking a lot about the trans-Gulf migration of the
Ruby-throated Hummingbird lately and wondering why I've never seen them
in the winter in Cuba, Jamaica, or in the Yucatan in my winter visits
there. Given the winter-long semi-tropical climate of Florida, why would
they need to undertake that extra journey? Bond reports them rarely in
Cuba and the Bahamas and casual in Hispaniola, Grand Cayman and Jamaica.
Peterson says they are found everywhere in winter in Mexico except the
Baja, and that they go as far south as Panama. Howell and Webb's massive
tome on Mexican birds is unsatisfactory in this and many other areas.
They illustrate Archilochus colubris, but do not describe it or any of
the other migrants hummers., ergo, no range map. We still don't have a
useful field guide to Mexican birds.
The question of the extent of a trans-Gulf migration is, I feel, still
open. There should be many more sightings in Cuba, for instance, than a
few strays. My feeling is that many winter in Florida, although I'd bow
to Howard Langridge on this, and some stray into the Gulf, but the bulk
of them migrate into Mexico by flying overland around the western edge
of the Gulf.
Of course I overlook the work of the Sargeants in Alabama in these idle
musings. We have much to learn about the peregrinations of the
Ruby-throated Hummingbird.
James Brooks
=================NOTES TO SUBSCRIBER=====================
The TN-Bird Net requires you to sign your messages with
first and last name, city (town) and state abbreviation.
-----------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------
To post to this mailing list, simply send email to:
tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-----------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, send email to:
tn-bird-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
TN-Bird Net is owned by the Tennessee Ornithological Society
Neither the society(TOS) nor its moderator(s)
endorse the views or opinions expressed
by the members of this discussion group.
Moderator: Wallace Coffey, Bristol, TN
wallace@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Visit the Tennessee Ornithological Society
web site at http://www.tnbirds.org
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Topographical Maps located at http://topozone.com/find.asp
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
========================================================
Other related posts:
- » [TN-Bird] Hummingbird hiatus