Cobirders,
when Ted beckons... you get a really long email...

So the question is:

   1. Why did this situation bring more birds to the Front Range?

*TL;DR* (Too long; didn't read) -- Super-short snarky answer just for Ted:
it was the wind!  The weather had a lot to do with it and which end of the
cold front Colorado ended up on helped dictate that flow of migrants.
Based on percentage of the total flow area behind the cold front compared
to the overall flow, it looked like a 30-40% chance that birds would end up
in the Front Range due to funneling or convergence.

*Full version:*

   - *Why did this weather situation bring more birds to the Front Range?*

Let's look through the computer models because it is sexier, and makes it
easier for everyone to understand because I can give you data everywhere on
the globe.  One could also do this with satellite imagery, but it is harder
to get you to see what I want to see, so I will work with the easier
option.

   -
   
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2018/10/14/0000Z/wind/surface/level/orthographic=-105,40,1706/loc=-105.000,40.000

That animation of a single time gives you the idea of what is going on that
made Colorado a hotspot for any migrants yesterday.  Any bird trying to
make its way to the southeast from Canada may have started out with good
intentions, but depending on which side of the flow it started from or
ended up in over time, it had a strong chance of ending up heading toward
the Front Range.  The cold front itself is the "blue" area with no wind
that curves from Lake Nipigon down through Iowa, Nebraska, then curving
into Colorado.  All of the airflow behind that cold front (to the north and
west) is what we want to focus on.  The flow had multiple possible end
points at that time: near Lake Nipigon, along the cold front just south of
Lake Superior, along the cold front in Iowa, or into the Colorado Front
Range.

The highest likelihood location for the birds to end up was actually along
the Front Range.  The percentage of the total area of that flow behind the
cold front that was showing a distinct convergence into the Front Range was
about 30-40% (guesstimated).  So any birds within that 30-40 percentage of
the total area had a strong likelihood of ending up in Colorado's Front
Range.  That means that birds ranging from Alberta through Montana, North
Dakota, Minnesota, and western Iowa and then everywhere southwest of that
behind the cold front, had a strong chance of ending up in the Colorado
Front Range.  The door was wide open so to speak.  The flow was broad
initially, then came crashing in on itself converging into a small area
(Colorado Front Range).  So think of this as your funnel for bird
convergence.  On the broad end, you put in any birds you'd like, then on
the other end, you get a stronger concentration of birds because the winds
they like to follow are forcing them together more over time.  Other places
are getting lower concentrations of migrants due to the divergence of the
birds from their area into our area.

This was only one snapshot of the winds at the surface though.  For a
period of about 12 hours, this was still the case around this.  Earlier it
was less convergent into the Front Range, but picked up, then maximized
around the time I showed you earlier, then tapered off a little.
Importantly though, the time I linked you to was right around sunset when
the snow started to pick up all along the Front Range.  This was a bonus
for birders, hindrance for the birds.  Both the sunset and the snowfall
made this more important for the birds to get to the ground, and then they
likely stayed the night to try their luck at adding some munchies in the
morning.

This is the time for American Golden-Plover migration.  It also happens
that the location this storm started from had a good chance of grabbing
some of those migrant AGPLs trying to make their way through the Central
Plains like they normally do.  However, as luck would have it, they ended
up on the wrong side of the flow behind that cold front.  They got stuck on
the Colorado Front Range side, and then we got lucky to see them here.  The
number of AGPLs that migrate through this corridor in a short period of
time is HUGE.  That also gives us a higher chance of getting them here in
CO.  I remember from my days in Illinois that this time of year would
produce fields upon fields of AGPLs numbering in the thousands easily.
They would take off in huge flocks and migrate quite broadly through the
area during the day.  You could easily go a day with seeing 20-40 flocks
numbering 500-1000 birds a piece.  It is kind of surprising that there
weren't more AGPL found along the Front Range when you think of it that
way.

Yes, you may say as a counterargument to my arguments about the wind that
birds have wings, and they don't have to follow the winds.  True.  They
don't have to follow the winds.  If you ended up on the wrong side of that
flow though (the west side closer to Montana or Alberta), the chances of
you covering enough ground to not end up in Colorado was pretty slim
without a LOT of extra effort to cross the flow.  Ask your pilot friends
which way they spend more fuel with a tail wind or with a cross wind and
you will get some idea of why they ended up here instead of Iowa like they
were "supposed" to.

Hope that helps.  This was my quick response.  If you want to hear more,
just ask and I will see what I can do to respond.  If you get to this email
soon after I sent it, you can see the same type of wind pattern play out in
the satellite imagery here:
https://www.ssec.wisc.edu/data/geo/#/animation?satellite=goes-west&end_datetime=latest&n_images=all&coverage=conus&channel=03&image_quality=gif&anim_method=javascript

This is real-time data though, so you won't be able to watch that loop for
too much longer as it purges the old stuff.

Hope that helps, Ted.  And I hope others gleaned some knowledge from this
as well.  It was a fun situation to analyze and even more fun to bird.

Bryan Guarente
Meteorologist/Instructional Designer
UCAR/The COMET Program
Boulder, CO


On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 10:42 AM Ted Floyd <tedfloy...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> Hey, everybody.
>
> American Golden-Plovers were reported from eleven (11) sites in Colorado
> yesterday, Sunday, Oct. 14. To put that in perspective, there were two (2)
> previous reports for Colorado in 2018: one (1) in Washington County, Sept.
> 4-8, and one (1) in Kiowa County, Sept. 18.
>
> The previous analysis is based on eBird data-mining.
>
> When one ponders such matters, one's thoughts turn instantly to Bryan
> Guarente. Bryan, what caused this? The snow, obviously. But why this
> particular snowfall? And why this particular species?
>
> Ted Floyd
> Lafayette, Boulder County
>
> P.s. Other than an American Golden-Plover, goodies yesterday in the
> general vicinity of Waneka Lake, Boulder County, included an Eastern
> Bluebird, hundreds of southbound Sandhill Cranes, two Hermit Thrushes, FOS
> Gray-headed and Pink-sided juncos, FOS Townsend's Solitaire, a Long-billed
> Dowitcher, Wilson's and Orange-crowned warblers, a getting-latish flock of
> 15 Lesser Goldfinches, and a Wood Duck.
>
> P.p.s. This Monday morning, Oct. 15, a quick stop at the Legion Park
> overlook revealed the Valmont Reservoir complex to be very birdy, harboring
> a Sanderling, a Semipalmated Plover, a couple dozen Mountain Bluebirds, and
> distant gulls, geese, and grebes galore. It would be very much worth the
> effort, I suspect, to walk in from Red Deer Drive and watch from the Open
> Space tract beyond the end of the road.
>
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