Kestrel Haven Saw-whet report for fall 2013:
We attempted netting of Northern Saw-whet Owls on 31 nights between 26 Sep and 
20
Nov working between one and 6 hours each night. Using standard 12 meter mist 
nets
our measure of efficiency was 6 birds per 100 net hours effort. More birds and 
more
hours in 2012 gave us 8/100NH MOE. We had 253 owls last year compared to 2013's 
37!
That's roughly 87% fewer.

This year weather was not in our favor nor was the number of migrants coming 
south
via this flyway. Nightly radar imagery revealed huge movement in the central 
flyway
and the Atlantic Coastal flyway whereas our inland Atlantic flyway showed 
little to
no movement. Prevailing winds also contributed to some unusual recoveries of 
same
season banded owls. While in the Adirondacks, we missed a few nights in the
beginning of October which turned out to be the most profitable for the Finger 
Lakes
in terms of numbers of owls per night!

We had three of our birds recovered at other sites. One from 2012 in Sullivan 
Cty,
NY and another in the same area 12 days after being banded this October. The
movement to the SSE was indeed strange and new to our birds that have mostly 
tended
SSW in previous years. We recovered two birds previously banded in PA in 2010 
and
2012. Both were Scott Weidensaul's and the older became a known ATY. The flyway 
has
established a strong link between our site, PePtBO in Ontario and Scott's Small
Valley site in PA.

While we had some that we suspected by molt to be TY or ATY there has been 
enough
confusion in reported molts of known age birds to limit our calls to ASY or ATY 
in
cases of unusual molts. Direct TY and ATY calls have to be treated as suspect 
until
we as a community know much more.Photography and detailed description of known 
age
molt limits for these birds will be helpful.

In 2012 the owls were 25% adult and this year it was 78% indicating a low 
production
year in the breeding grounds. Sixty-eight per cent of this year's owls were 
female,
12 % were male and 20% were recorded as unknown sex. Of the adults, 47% were 
SY, 28%
ASY and 1% AHY.

Eighty-seven per cent fewer owls makes for more sleepy nights but doesn't alter 
the
honor, awe and joy of handling these wonderful creatures for a few minutes of 
their
lives.
-- 
John and Sue Gregoire
Field Ornithologists
Kestrel Haven Avian Migration Observatory
5373 Fitzgerald Road
Burdett,NY 14818-9626
 Website: http://www.empacc.net/~kestrelhaven/
"Conserve and Create Habitat"




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