Saturday, April 28, 2012

Hawk Q & A with John Blakeman

Pale Male with pigeon - 9/5/2011
Photo courtesy of PaleMale.com

Yesterday a reader of this blog, Susan, sent me a question for hawk expert John Blakeman, our frequent question-answerer. Below is her question, followed by his answer:

Q. I've been wondering if we may be seeing evolution at work with regard to urban hawks and their eating preferences. PM prefers pigeons so he is less likely to be poisoned and likely to have more eyasses due to his long life. Some of his offspring may get a preference for pigeon and thus be more likely to survive and pass on the preference. Over time, the pigeon eaters would be more successful and the rat eaters would be less represented in the population. Even if there isn't a gene for pigeon eating (dietary preference), PMs offspring could prefer pigeon just because they were raised on pigeon rather than rat.

Certainly the rat-eating red tails have paid a high price this year and have been removed from the breeding population.

Your thoughts and/or Blakeman's thoughts would be appreciated.

Susan



A.
Susan, y
ou think like a biologist (or are one).

But no, there will be very little genetic selection for pigeon hunting, against rat predation, for the following reasons.

First, Red-tails hunt by sight, preying upon animals that appear to be vulnerable. They clearly do not select prey for taste, only for convenience.

Red-tails are big, and not so fast as typical bird-eating raptors such as Cooper's Hawks and Peregrine Falcons. Red-tails can take pigeons only with stealth, by clever stooping (diving) attacks on pigeons not paying attention on the ground or on nests. Otherwise, a pigeon can easily out fly a lumbering Red-tail.

NYC Red-tails are taking dumb and inattentive and young pigeons.

And they will continue to take rats, as those are their instinctive, preferred prey. Red-tails across their continent-wide range subsist on small rodents.

The eyasses in the nest will not gain a prey preference from an abundance of pigeons being brought there. The fledged eyasses will have to learn to hunt in the first summer, and they will be utterly unable to catch any pigeon then; the hawks aren't clever enough or fast enough to do that when just learning to hunt. They will concentrate on the easiest and most abundant prey, and in NYC it's Norway rats, far and away. Later, as experienced adults, they will learn to take pigeons.

But none of this gets genetically selected. There might seem to be a selective advantage for Red-tails eating primarily pigeons, and avoiding poisoned rats. But it would take many hundreds of generations for this to be expressed as a new, instinctive prey preference, if it ever could be.

The important matter is this. Red-tail populations can withstand rather large annual losses and yet remain viable. Reproduction exceeds deaths of reproducing adults. We just must accept the large losses of immatures.

--John Blakeman

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Great birds

Yellow-rumped Warbler
Photo by DAVID SPEISER www.lilibirds.com



Joe DiCostanzo [www.greatgullisland.org] reports on today's birds:


I was in the Ramble from 7 am to 11:30 am leading two AMNH groups. The weather was cool and overcast most of the time. Highlights for the two walks were:

Great Egret(Upper Lobe)
Black-crowned Night-Heron (the Lake)
Blue-headed Vireo (west of Azalea Pond)
Warbling Vireo (singing, Hernshead)
Barn Swallow (5, the Lake and Turtle Pond)
House Wren (singing in a number of places)
Golden-crowned Kinglet (Upper Lobe)
Ruby-crowneed Kinglet (1-5)
Yellow Warbler (heard at east end of Turtle Pond)
Black-throated Blue Warbler (west side of Tupelo Meadow)
Yellow-rumped Warbler (everywhere)
Palm Warbler (scattered individuals)
Black-and-white Warbler (scattered individuals)
Northern Waterthrush (Upper Lobe)
Eastern Towhee (calling birds all over Ramble)
Chipping Sparrow (Maintenance Meadow)
Swamp Sparrow (Azalea Pond)
Brown-headed Cowbird (various places)


Tuesday, April 24, 2012

VREEP!*

Great Crested Flycatcher -- Wikipedia [no attribution for photo]



David Barrett sends in a report of Starr Saphir's bird walk yesterday:

Considering the conditions — temperatures in the high 40's to low 50's, and overcast skies after a day of rain — today turned out to be surprisingly birdy morning in the Central Park Ramble. I decided to stay in until the afternoon, but Starr went about her appointed rounds and had these highlights: Black-crowned Night Heron Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (female) Great Crested Flycatcher (near Azalea Pond) Blue-headed Vireo (4) Red-eyed Vireo Northern Rough-winged Swallow (2, Lake) Barn Swallow (2, Lake) House Wren (3, all singing males) Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Brown Thrasher (2) Blue-winged Warbler (male, Lower Lobe, great views) Yellow-rumped Warbler (70) Palm Warbler (7) Northern Waterthrush (west end of Gill) Eastern Towhee (15) www.starrtrips.wordpress.com

* Vreep is a transliteration of the Great Crested Flycatcher's call. This happens to be one of my favorite birds...

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Excitement in the North and a PS


Prothonotary Warbler --Central Park, 4/17/05
Photo by DAVID SPEISER www.Lilibirds.com


David Barrett, who runs Starr Saphir's website, writes:

Marie, there was much excitement in the North End yesterday, and I thought you would enjoy the story:


David Barrett

Here is the entry for that exciting day:

As her Saturday walk was beginning, Starr saw a Common Raven being harassed by some Blue Jays south of the Great Hill. The Raven turned on the Jays, and then headed south into the Park. Prior to December 2011, eBird shows no recorded observations of the Common Raven in Central Park for most years. Since then, it has been noted only a handful of times.

This auspicious start carried through the rest of the morning. After learning of reliable reports of Orange-crowned Warbler, Worm-eating Warbler, and Prothonotary Warbler in the Wildflower Meadow area initially found by Tom Perlman, Chris Cooper, and Jacob Drucker, Starr brought her group directly from the Pool. Over a half-hour of searching ensued, as many other birders responded to the earlier alerts. They saw plenty of Yellow-rumped Warblers in the surrounding trees, along with someChipping Sparrows. They also heard Eastern Towhee and Carolina Wren. But the warblers they sought were nowhere to be found.

After hearing some trilling coming from the very large fenced-in tree atop the meadow, Starr soon re-sighted the Orange-crowned Warbler and most in her group got good views. The bird reappeared again about ten minutes later.

The group did not have long to rest, however, as a call soon came in from the Loch that the female Prothonotary Warbler had also been re-found. All moved quickly down the path and within minutes were treated to excellent close views of the strikingly elegant bird. Starr quickly described the location of the bird as it moved about without pointing at it (as pointing frequently spurs songbirds to fly away), and her running commentary helped group members and other birders alike stay focused on the Prothonotary, which surely was for many (if not most of those assembled) a life Central Park bird. Without question it was our best bird of the day.

The excitement, however, was far from over, as an 8:25AM text message alert said that Doug Kurz was seeing a Blue Grosbeak just 200 yards away by the 102nd Street transverse road. Your webmaster (and others) ran up the hill to get it, and after some fleeting views it appeared to fly to the so-called Grassy Knoll, where we were rewarded with good views of it on the ground. As Starr and her group were making their way up the Wildflower Meadow toward it, Starr finally got the elusive Worm-eating Warbler by the large fenced-in tree. Meanwhile, the Blue Grosbeak flew, but later, toward the end of the day's walk, Starr re-found it to cap off a truly incredible day.

Starr also had the first reported Black-throated Blue Warbler of the season in Central Park. Other noteworthy sightings, which were also firsts of the year for her group included a Great Blue Heronflyover; an Eastern Wood-Pewee on the Great Hill; a Warbling Vireo near the Green Bench; a Yellow Warbler; and a Black-and-white Warbler.

Altogether the group added 11 new birds to the season list. The total came to 53 species for the day, of which there were 9 warblers.


P.S. Tom Fiore notes that over 100 species of birds were seen in the borough of Manhattan [on land and in water] on 4/21/12