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Volume 34, No. 2

Published April 1, 2003

Issue description

Volume 34, number 2 of Western Birds, published 2003

Articles

  1. THE OCCURRENCE AND SEASONAL DISTRIBUTION OF MIGRATORY BIRDS ON SOUTHEAST FARALLON ISLAND, 1968-1999

    Daily monitoring of migrating birds at Southeast Farallon Island, initiated in 1968, has continued uninterrupted. The number of species recorded on this 44-hectare island reached 403 in 2002. Ten species of waterbird, in descending order of abundance—the Sooty Shearwater, Brown Pelican, Red and Red-necked Phalaropes, Pacific Loon, Buller’s Shearwater, Bonaparte’s Gull, Black-legged Kittiwake, and Heermann’s and Glaucous-winged Gulls—averaged over 500 individuals recorded annually.

    Nine species of landbird, in descending order of abundance—the European Starling, White-crowned and Golden-crowned Sparrows, Yellow-rumped Warbler, Savannah Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Wilson’s Warbler, and American Pipit—averaged over 125 individuals annually.

    Since migrants on the island were last summarized through 1989, one notable change has been an increase in skuas, jaegers, Arctic and Elegant Terns, and Sabine’s Gulls, perhaps reflecting an increase in Pacific Sardines in surrounding waters. Increases in the Brown Booby and Black-vented Shearwater may also be evidence of warmer late-summer and fall water temperatures in the past 10 years. On the other hand, the occurrence of most species of ducks decreased dramatically during the 1990s, perhaps reflecting decreased population sizes and/or an increased wintering population of Peregrine Falcons at the Farallon Islands.

  2. THE GENERIC DISTINCTION OF PIED WOODPECKERS

    The ten species of New World four-toed woodpeckers (scalaris, nuttallii, pubescens, villosus, stricklandi, arizonae, borealis, albolarvatus, lignarius, and mixtus) and the two boreal three-toed species (arcticus and tridactylus), currently combined in the genus Picoides, differ, in addition to the number of toes, in modifications of the skull, ribs, the belly of the pubo-ischio-femoralis muscle, head plumage, and behavior. I recommend that the generic name Dryobates be reinstated for the New World four-toed woodpeckers.

  3. EVIDENCE FOR NORTHERN WATERTHRUSHES BREEDING IN SOUTHEAST WYOMING

    The Northern Waterthrush (Seiurus noveboracensis) is an uncommon but regular visitor to Wyoming during migration and has been documented across much of the state (Dorn and Dorn 1999; Luce et al. 1999). It is suspected to breed at least occasionally in Teton County in northwestern Wyoming (Dorn and Dorn 1999; Luce et al. 1999).

    In southeastern Wyoming, 20 miles west of the city of Laramie along the Little Laramie River, 11 individuals were captured during three seasons of bird banding for a MAPS (Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship) study.

  4. THE WESTERN BLUEBIRD AS HOST FOR THE BROWN-HEADED COWBIRD: A NEW RECORD FROM CALIFORNIA

    Nest records for North America suggest that brood parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) on cavity-nesting species is relatively rare. Indeed, a summary by Friedmann and Kiff (1985) indicated that cavity nesters constitute only 8% of known hosts of the cowbird. Of these, only the Prothonotary Warbler (Protonotaria citrea) was considered to be a major host.

    In bluebirds (Sialia spp.), all cavity nesters, documented incidences of cowbird parasitism are extremely rare (Gowaty and Plissner 1998). Most involve the Eastern Bluebird (S. sialis). Power and Lombardo (1996) reported only four cases of cowbird parasitism of the Mountain Bluebird (S. currucoides), with no accounts of cowbirds raised to fledging.

  5. BOOK REVIEW: Monterey Birds

    Monterey County—a large coastal county in central California—is famous for its agreeable climate, varied landscape, and a bird list of 482 species, about 78% of California’s total and nearly 50% of all species recorded in the United States. It has hosted several first state records (e.g., of the Long-toed Stint) and even some first North American records (e.g., of Stejneger’s Petrel).

    This book is a fully updated and expanded version of Roberson’s out-of-print 1985 first edition of Monterey Birds, which summarized the status and distribution of this county’s ample avifauna. All species are now treated more thoroughly, including 54 that have been recorded in the county since the first edition was published, and the result is a book twice the size of the first edition (536 pages vs. 266 pages). The format is essentially unchanged and follows that of most regional “when and where” bird books, with individual species accounts as its core.

  6. FEATURED PHOTO: A LEUCISTIC WILLET IN CALIFORNIA

    For several weeks in June 2002, a largely white-plumaged Willet (Catoptrophorus semipalmatus) was observed at the Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve, Orange County, California. During this time, numerous observers saw the bird as it foraged at the reserve and occasionally on the oceanfront at the adjacent Bolsa Chica State Beach. Mike Bowles obtained the photograph shown on this issue’s back cover, which made possible a closer study of this interesting bird.