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Volume 48, No. 1

Published January 1, 2017

Issue description

Volume 48, number 1 of Western Birds, published 2017

Articles

  1. REVIEW OF THE AVIFAUNA OF THE TRES MARÍAS ISLANDS, MEXICO, INCLUDING NEW AND NOTEWORTHY RECORDS

    We summarize the bird species known from the Tres Marías Islands, off the coast of Nayarit, western Mexico, tabulating the sources for the occurrence of each species by island. We report records of 48 species new to the archipelago and/or specific islands on the basis of our field work since 2002 and a review of published literature, museum specimens, and others’ observations. These bring the number of species known from the Tres Marías Islands to 176, of which 5 represent introductions and about 46 others are known or likely to breed; about 24 of the 46 represent endemic subspecies. All resident species recorded historically still survive on at least one of the islands. In spite of our recent field work, the precise status of many species by island remains to be clarified.

  2. RANGES OF THE SUBSPECIES OF THE WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH IN CALIFORNIA

    There are significant discrepancies among the published descriptions of the ranges of California’s two subspecies of the White-breasted Nuthatch, Sitta carolinensis aculeata and S. c. tenuissima. To reevaluate the relationship between their ranges in the state, we recorded observations along the west edge of the range of S. c. tenuissima and the east edge of the range of S. c. aculeata, identifying birds to subspecies by diagnostic vocalizations. We made 457 observations in which the subspecies could be confirmed vocally. We found that the two subspecies are generally well separated in the north-central portions of the Sierra Nevada, with S. c. aculeata found well west of the crest and S. c. tenuissima east of the crest or at the higher elevations on the west side. The relatively wide band of dense fir (Abies spp.) and mixed conifer forest at the middle to lower elevations of the west side likely forms a barrier between them. In the southern Sierra and at the southern edge of the Cascades, the two subspecies come into close contact and we found evidence suggesting intergradation in the latter area.

  3. CONTRASTING HABITAT ASSOCIATIONS OF SAGEBRUSH-STEPPE SONGBIRDS IN THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST

    Sagebrush (Artemisia spp.) steppe is one of North America’s most imperiled ecosystems, as the result of many factors including grazing, development, fire, and invasion of exotic plants. Threats to sagebrush steppe are expected to increase because of climate change and further human development. Many songbirds use sagebrush steppe opportunistically, but a few obligate species are dependent on it. To quantify the habitat associations of three sagebrush obligates, the Sage Thrasher (Oreoscoptes montanus), Sagebrush Sparrow (Artemisiospiza nevadensis), and Brewer’s Sparrow (Spizella breweri), and nine other songbird species that use this habitat, we surveyed across a broad region of Idaho. At each of 104 sites, we selected three plots, one each in relatively poor, moderate, and good condition, defined qualitatively by the cover of native shrubs. We quantified bird abundance by point counts, described the habitat at these points by a line-intercept method, and at each plot calculated the fraction of a circle (radius 1 km) covered in shrubs or grassland. We compared two-scale occupancy models based on these data by the information-theoretic approach. According to the models, our qualitative assessment of habitat condition within a site distinguished birds’ use of relatively good habitat from their use of poor habitats only, not from those in moderate condition. Thus the sagebrush-obligate species may tolerate some local habitat degradation, at least up to some unidentified threshold. Occurrence of all three sagebrush obligates correlated well with one or more characteristics of sagebrush such as its cover, height, or heterogeneity in height. They differed in the Sage Thrasher being most sensitive to sagebrush cover, the Sagebrush Sparrow being found more often at lower elevations, and the Brewer’s Sparrow being less sensitive to ground cover. The nine other species evaluated were less or negatively associated with attributes of sagebrush. On the basis of these results, we suggest that the three sagebrush obligates are best conserved by promoting shrublands over a broad range of elevations, containing both sagebrush and other shrubs in patches of mixed height, and minimizing invasive annual grasses.

  4. PIED-BILLED GREBE PREDATION ON A COMMON YELLOWTHROAT

    The Pied-billed Grebe (Podilymbus podiceps) is an opportunistic forager preying on a wide variety of aquatic organisms, including annelids, crustaceans, insects, mollusks, fishes, amphibians, and a snake (e.g., Wetmore 1924, Muller and Storer 1999, Storer 2000, Fjeldså 2004). In addition to live prey, it ingests copious quantities of its own feathers (Wetmore 1924). In this note we report the first observation of a Pied-billed Grebe preying upon a bird.

  5. BLACK-CHINNED HUMMINGBIRD CAPTURED IN WEB OF THE SPIDER NEPHILA CLAVIPES IN MEXICO

    On 9 October 2011 at approximately 14:00 hours, we observed a female Black-chinned Hummingbird (Archilochus alexandri) caught in the web of a Golden Silk Spider (Nephila clavipes), 2 km from the Media Luna wellspring (21° 52′ 55″ N; 100° 02′ 27″ W, elevation 1005 m) in a protected natural area in the Sierra Madre Oriental of San Luis Potosí in central-eastern Mexico. The web was in a willow tree (Salix sp.) within secondary successional forest surrounded by farmland. The event was discovered opportunistically over five days of observing birds at the site.

  6. EXTREME HUMMINGBIRDS: THREE SPECIES NORTH OF THE 55TH PARALLEL

    The occurrence and distribution of the Ruby-throated (Archilochus colubris), Calliope (Selasphorus calliope), and Rufous hummingbirds (S. rufus) in British Columbia and Alberta north of the 55th parallel and east of the Rocky Mountains are poorly known. In 2011, we banded Ruby-throated Hummingbirds as far north as North Star, Alberta (56° 52′ N), and as far west as Charlie Lake, British Columbia (121° 00′ W). In both 2011 and 2014, we also banded Calliope Hummingbirds as far north as Charlie Lake, documenting overlap of the ranges of the Ruby-throated and Calliope hummingbirds in northeastern British Columbia in 2011. We confirmed breeding of the Calliope but not of the Ruby-throated or Rufous hummingbirds.

  7. BOOK REVIEW: Waterfowl of North America, Europe & Asia: An Identifiation Guide

    Waterfowl have captured the hearts and minds of birders for generations. Their approachability and preference for open habitats lend themselves to careful study. While drakes in breeding plumage are among the most colorful, distinctive birds out there, waterfowl otherwise account for some of the more vexing identification problems facing birders. It has been 29 years since a major, up-to-date treatment of waterfowl identification has been published. We’ve come a long way from Peter Scott’s A Coloured Key to the Wildfowl of the World (Wildfowl Trust), first published in 1957. Steve Madge and Hilary Burn’s Waterfowl: An Identification Guide to the Ducks, Geese and Swans of the World (Houghton Mifflin), published in 1988, is the last comprehensive treatment of holarctic waterfowl. Since then, much has been learned about the complexities of waterfowl molt, species limits, and the identification of hybrids. Most of this information has been published in various journal articles, regional guides, or texts dealing specifically with the topic of molt. So along has come Sébastien Reeber’s Waterfowl of North America, Europe & Asia. Originally published in 2015 as Canards, Cygnes et Oies d’Europe, d’Asie et d’Amerique du Nord in the author’s native French, the book has been translated and repurposed for a North American audience. While there is some Eurocentric feel to the text, this book is a tour de force and an essential reference for any serious student of waterfowl identification. It is not light reading, and might not be the best resource for someone just beginning to identify waterfowl. Making use of nearly 1400 references, it is dense and extremely well researched. The introductory material includes sections on taxonomy and systematics, avian topography, molts and plumages, aging and sexing, and hybridization. These are followed by 72 color plates containing some 920 illustrations, along with 85 small color maps. The main section treats detailed species accounts, along with over 650 color photographs.

  8. THANK YOU TO OUR SUPPORTERS

     The board of Western Field Ornithologists and the editorial team of Western Birds thank the following generous contributors who gave to WFO’s publication, scholarship, and general funds in 2016. The generosity of our members in sustaining WFO is an inspiration to us all

  9. CAROTENISM IN THE PURPLE FINCH

    On 18 January 2016, at the Wildhorse Golf Club in Davis, Yolo County, California, Robert Walsh and Samuel Lei encountered an adult male Purple Finch (Haemorhous purpureus) whose carotenoid-based plumage color was unexpectedly orange-yellow (back cover) rather than the typical raspberry red.