[va-richmond-general] Re: Powhatan Wildlife Management Area - 8/22/04

  • From: "Al Warfield" <warfield101@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 23 Aug 2004 07:42:21 -0400

Bob,

Nevermind, I answered my own question. Traill's is the old name for
Willow/Alder Flycatchers. See the link below.

http://www.ronausting.com/willowfl.htm

Al Warfield


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Reilly" <rjreilly@xxxxxxx>
To: <va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 6:47 PM
Subject: [va-richmond-general] Re: Powhatan Wildlife Management Area -
8/22/04


Michael,

Oops.  Change that Wilson's storm-petrel to a wild turkey and the tufted
puffin to a tufted titmouse!  The lookup-column I used to convert our AOU
alpha codes to a list of common names, generated for the email response,
erroneously assigned Wilson's storm-petrel to our code for a wild turkey and
the tufted puffin to our tufted titmouse.  Hope nobody rushed right out
there before reading this correction! Also believe it comes to 68 rather
than 67 species. My apologies.

Bob

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bob Reilly" <rjreilly@xxxxxxx>
To: <va-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 6:31 PM
Subject: [va-richmond-general] Re: Powhatan Wildlife Management Area -
8/22/04


> Michael,
>
> As part of the nationwide Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship
> Project run by the Institute for Bird Populations (Point Reyes, CA.), Mary
> Arginteanu, Larry Robinson, John Dillard and I along with several
dedicated
> volunteer assistants band out there regularly  from late May to early
> August. For 2003 and 2004, the alphabetical list of the 67 species either
> banded, heard, or seen at the site (i.e. within 100 meters of any of our
15
> nets which surround the middle of the three lakes) is as follows:
>
> Acadian Flycatcher
> American Crow
> American Goldfinch
> American Redstart
> Black-and-White Warbler
> Belted Kingfisher
> Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
> Brown-headed Cowbird
> Bicknell's Thrush
> Blue Grosbeak
> Blue Jay
> Black Vulture
> Brown Thrasher
> Carolina Chickadee
> Canada Goose
> Carolina Wren
> Canada Warbler
> Cedar Waxwing
> Chimney Swift
> Common Yellowthroat
> Downy Woodpecker
> Eastern Kingbird
> Eastern Towhee
> Eastern Phoebe
> Eastern Wood-Pewee
> Field Sparrow
> Great Blue Heron
> Great Crested Flycatcher
> Great Horned Owl
> Gray Catbird
> Green Heron
> Hairy Woodpecker
> Hooded Warbler
> Indigo Bunting
> Kentucky Warbler
> Louisiana Waterthrush
> Mallard
> Magnolia Warbler
> Mourning Dove
> Northern Bobwhite
> Northern Cardinal
> Northern Mockingbird
> Northern Parula
> Orchard Oriole
> Osprey
> Ovenbird
> Pine Warbler
> Pileated Woodpecker
> Prairie Warbler
> Purple Martin
> Red-bellied Woodpecker
> Red-eyed Vireo
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird
> Scarlet Tanager
> Summer Tanager
> Swainson's Thrush
> Traill's Flycatcher
> Tufted Puffin
> Turkey Vulture
> White-breasted Nuthatch
> White-eyed Vireo
> Worm-eating Warbler
> Wilson's Storm-Petrel
> Wood Thrush
> Yellow-breasted Chat
> Yellow-billed Cuckoo
> Yellow-shafted Flicker
> Yellow-throated Vireo
>
> Bob Reilly
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Michael Shapiro" <sc.tanager@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: "Richmond listserv" <VA-richmond-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2004 5:05 PM
> Subject: [va-richmond-general] Powhatan Wildlife Management Area - 8/22/04
>
>
> > A brief stop (about an hour/hour and a half) at the Powhatan WMA late
this
> morning/early this afternoon produced the following birds and butterflies:
> > BIRDS:
> > N. Cardinal
> > T. Titmouse
> > W-b Nuthatch
> > Yellow-eyed Vireo (very vocal. Immature, I think)
> > HOODED WARBLER - one male, singing, and possibly a female, as well. Got
> some good looks at the male.
> > C. Yellowthroat (female)
> > Yellow-billed Cuckoo - 2
> > Mo. Doves
> > R-e Vireo
> > C. Chickadee
> > Am. Crow
> > Am. Goldfinches
> > YELLOW-THROATED VIREO ('twas a red, white, and yellow day!) - saw and
> singing. Might also have seen one feeding young - do the males feed the
> young, as well?
> > B-g Gnatcatcher
> > T. Vultures
> > also found several Wild Turkey feathers
> >
> > BUTTERFLIES: (almost as many species of butterflies as birds!!)
> > Carolina Satyr - a lifer for me. They seemed to be all over
> > Gemmed Satyr - another lifer. Only saw one.
> > Red-spotted Purples - ubiquitous
> > possible Hackberry
> > Common Wood Nymph
> > Alfalfa
> > Pearl Crescent
> > Red Admiral
> > Meadow Fritillary
> > Black Swallowtail
> > Great Spangled Fritillary
> > Cloudless Sulphur
> >
> > Anyone ever go to this place on a regular basis? I heard someone does
> banding there.
> >
> > Michael Shapiro
> > northside
> > sc.tanager@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >
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