[wisb] Re: Smith's Longspurs

  • From: Chris W <little_blue_birdie@xxxxxxx>
  • To: schaufenbuel@xxxxxxxxxxx, idzikoj@xxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2014 10:55:12 -0500

Does Smith's actually pass through WI every year in small numbers? 
I was under the impression that any records in WI were considered overshoots 
due to strong south winds and that most years, they head west before ever 
reaching WI. 


--Chris W
Richland County

Sent from my Samsung Mobile



Schaufenbuel <schaufenbuel@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>
>To follow up on John's experience with calls it is worth walking long 
>stretches of possible Smith's Longspur habitat anywhere in WI. Habitat 
>consists usually of open patches of soil with  foxtail upon which the 
>bird seems to prefer feeding.  In the old days the bird seem to frequent 
>remnant wet prairie patches.
>
>Longspur page (calls): http://pjdeye.blogspot.com/2009/10/longspurs.html
>
>The point I want to add is listen for Chestnut-collared Longspur too.  
>Here is a link to the call which sounds like a begging baby Red-winged 
>Blackbird:
>
>http://birds.audubon.org/birds/chestnut-collared-longspur
>
>
>-- 
>Joe Schaufenbuel
>Stevens Point
>Portage Co., WI
>
>
>
>
>On 4/25/2014 9:29 AM, John Idzikowski wrote:
>> I have not followed every message in this thread so perhaps my comments are 
>> redundant. We have had Smith's in April and mid-September in the past at the 
>> Milwaukee Coast Guard Impoundment before it was destroyed by the last fill 
>> and engineering project in 2009. On all occasions the distinctive dry rattle 
>> call called our attention to its presence.
>>
>> http://www.xeno-canto.org/70077
>>
>> This call seems very diagnostic; I cannot confuse it with any other open 
>> field species one may encounter in Wisconsin. The small flocks we had 
>> frequented bare dirt with clumps of dried grasses. I hope that someone has 
>> taken a digital of the current site that could be posted. Knowing the 
>> distinctiveness of its habitat preferences and call allows one to plan for 
>> better hunting and perhaps less of a need for flushing as grassy clumps and 
>> furrows could be scoped once one suspects Smith's, but at the same time the 
>> flocks we had in Milwaukee would frequently self-flush.
>>
>> We do not know the exact passage range of Smith's through Wisconsin, but it 
>> seems to be more common as one goes west. Some range maps indicate that it 
>> does not pass through Wisconsin at all.
>>
>> John Idzikowski,
>> Milwaukee
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>>
>
>-- 
>Joe Schaufenbuel
>Stevens Point
>Portage Co., WI
>
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