Birders,

The two obvious adult Tundra Swans, one with extensive yellow on the bill and 
the other with a small yellow tear drop, are the likely parents of the 
immature. This family group acts as a unit and they are rarely separated by 
very much space. One adult has extensive yellow on the bill, the other more of 
a small tear drop. The immature is dusky and has a pale spot on the bill that 
hasn't yet turned yellow. It has V-shaped forehead feathering, demonstrating 
the weakness of this field mark on immature birds.


The fourth bird is another adult, and is the head-scratcher. It spends more 
time by itself, often traveling over to the Valmont lakes. It is the individual 
recently photographed by Kyle Medina over at Sawhill Ponds (refer to his 
COBirds post from this morning "Swan- Sawhill Pond 2/24/17"). It is maybe 
slightly larger than the other swans, and the neck looks a little more sinuous 
and the back maybe more rounded. These features give it a resemblance to a 
Trumpeter. It currently has some heavy staining on the head and neck, which 
helps pick it out from a crowd, but is not something that's useful for ID. The 
thing is that it does have a pale spot on the bill in front of the eye- not 
bright yellow like the other Tundras, but more of an off white. The forehead 
feathering is also U-shaped, as in an adult Tundra. The legs are dark black, 
which might help rule out a "white morph" Trumpeter as described in David 
Sibley's blog post linked below. There's a good chance it's a Trumpeter x 
Tundra. Steve Mlodinow has extensive experience with both species and their 
crosses, so he might have more to chime in on that hypothesis.


A handy link to Kyle's photo: http://tinyurl.com/hpe7det

Some good reading: 
http://www.sibleyguides.com/2011/07/trumpeter-swans-with-yellow-loral-spots/

[http://www.sibleyguides.com/wp-content/uploads/Cygnus_olor_MuteSwan_clean_thumb-218x300.jpg]<http://www.sibleyguides.com/2011/07/trumpeter-swans-with-yellow-loral-spots/>

Trumpeter Swans with yellow loral spots - Sibley 
Guides<http://www.sibleyguides.com/2011/07/trumpeter-swans-with-yellow-loral-spots/>
www.sibleyguides.com
Related posts and pages: Trumpeter Swans, yellow bill spots, and leucism In a 
previous post I’ve talked about Trumpeter Swans with yellow bill spots as a...




Thanks,


Christian Nunes

Longmont, CO


<http://aka.ms/weboutlook>


________________________________
From: mesozoic.cephalo...@gmail.com <mesozoic.cephalo...@gmail.com> on behalf 
of Marie Hoerner <mhoer...@uchicago.edu>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2017 4:28 PM
To: snowy.owl...@gmail.com; Cobirds
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Swan #4 at Cottonwood Marsh

I had not gotten the chance yet to post about this, but I saw four swans there 
last night.  Three were Tundra Swans (2 adults and a 1st year), and the fourth 
I thought was a Trumpeter based on the complete lack of yellow in the lores and 
what seemed to be larger size (although they are hard to tell apart because of 
individual variability in the lores and I'm no expert when it comes to swans).  
It is nice to have confirmation since I was rather uncertain.

Marie Hoerner
Aurora, CO

On Sun, Feb 26, 2017 at 8:28 AM, snowy.owlets 
<snowy.owl...@gmail.com<mailto:snowy.owl...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Everyone,

A fourth swan has just come in. It looks and sounds like a Trumpeter.

Mark Miller
Longmont, CO



Sent via the Samsung Galaxy S® 5 ACTIVE™, an AT&T 4G LTE smartphone

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Ph.D. Candidate
Department of Geophysical Sciences
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