BIRD STUDY GROUP The Lakes District is a convenient place to bird and sometimes traps migrant songbirds. The only neotrops I found today were White-eyed Vireos and a single Eastern Kingbird. Jay Huner ----- Forwarded Message ----- From: piku1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To: jvh0660@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Fri, 04 Apr 2014 14:28:45 -0500 (CDT) Subject: Re: eBird Report - Alexandria--The Lakes District, Apr 4, 2014 ---- do-not-reply@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > Alexandria--The Lakes District, Rapides, US-LA > Apr 4, 2014 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM > Protocol: Traveling > 2.0 mile(s) > Comments: Area east and south of West Side Library off Ansley Blvd mostly > along Diversion Canal on north side of development. > 37 species (+1 other taxa) > > Canada Goose 2 > Wood Duck 6 > Mallard (Domestic type) 4 > Pied-billed Grebe 7 > Double-crested Cormorant 17 > Great Egret 1 > Snowy Egret 1 > Cattle Egret 10 > Green Heron 1 > Turkey Vulture 2 > Red-tailed Hawk 1 > Killdeer 3 > Wilson's Snipe 3 > Eurasian Collared-Dove 2 > White-winged Dove 1 > Mourning Dove 2 > Red-bellied Woodpecker 2 > Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1 > Pileated Woodpecker 1 > Eastern Kingbird 1 > Loggerhead Shrike 1 > White-eyed Vireo 7 > Blue Jay 3 > Fish Crow 2 > Northern Rough-winged Swallow 3 > Purple Martin 7 > Barn Swallow 3 > Eastern Bluebird 2 > American Robin 4 > Brown Thrasher 2 > Northern Mockingbird 25 > European Starling 9 > Yellow-rumped Warbler 8 > White-throated Sparrow 4 > Northern Cardinal 15 > Red-winged Blackbird 15 > Common Grackle 2 > House Sparrow 1 > > View this checklist online at > http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S17740060 > > This report was generated automatically by eBird v3 (http://ebird.org)