We have one station running up here in Maine but interestingly although
it picked up good numbers (600+ calls) on the night of the 10th, it
picked up more calls on the 7th (752) and also 600+ calls on the 2nd.

 

Jeff Wells

 

From: bounce-6309122-9874...@list.cornell.edu
[mailto:bounce-6309122-9874...@list.cornell.edu] On Behalf Of Mike
Powers
Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2010 11:06 PM
To: Benjamin Van Doren
Cc: David La Puma; Bill Evans; NFC-L@cornell.edu
Subject: Re: [nfc-l] reflections on a monumental nocturnal migration

 

Hi all,

Ditto (almost) to what Benjamin wrote: we (Andrew Farnsworth, Anne
Klingensmith, and I) have several microphones out in the Ithaca area
hope to analyze the night of the 10th shortly.  We're looking forward to
comparisons with the various recording stations around the northeast!

Earlier this evening it was quite active in the southern tier of NY,
with a good flight of thrushes:  mostly Veery followed by Swainson's
Thrush with a couple of Gray-cheeked as well.

Cheers,
Mike

--
Mike Powers
Horseheads, NY



On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 9:21 PM, Benjamin Van Doren
<nimajn...@gmail.com> wrote:

Bill & David -

 

Andrew Farnsworth and I have 6 ARUs deployed within the greater NY metro
area, so we too have recordings for that night. Can't wait to see what
they hold (though everything may not be extracted and classified for few
months). I was listening for about an hour on the night of the 10th and
heard many more flight calls than I've ever heard from my house, so the
flight should be interesting to quantify (and interesting to compare to
the Cape May mics).

 

Good listening, watching, and predicting, everyone!

 

Benjamin Van Doren

White Plains, NY

 

On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 8:17 PM, David La Puma <woodcree...@gmail.com>
wrote:

Awesome, Bill. 

Might I add that tonight should be an excellent flight for the same
region; the largest since the Sept 10-11 flight. If you find me tomorrow
in the early AM, I'll have a Rogue Northwestern Ale freshly chilled.

Cheers- and good listening!

David

ps. we have data from several mics around Cape May for that night- so we
should talk about comparing our analysis once we bring in the
recordings.


________________________

David A. La Puma
Postdoctoral Associate
New Jersey Audubon Society
600 Route 47 North
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210
Office: 609.861.1608 x33
Fax:    609.861.1651

Websites: 
http://www.woodcreeper.com
http://badbirdz2.wordpress.com

Photos: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/woodcreeper









On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 4:05 PM, Bill Evans <wrev...@clarityconnect.com>
wrote:

Nfcers,

I begin by stating simply that if anyone ever substantiates a future
nocturnal vertebrate migration over interior northeastern US (in the
first two weeks of September) bigger than what occurred the night of Sep
10-11, 2010.....I will buy fine ale for the whole nfc listserv
membership at a pub of consensual choice somewhere on the planet. So,
for those who have an ear to hear and an eye to see in this manner, take
note of future fall migrations over northeastern US in case of cashing
in on my offer. I wager, given the rarity of such large nocturnal
migrations in the past 20 years, and the crushing inertia of human
civilisation, that a flight the density and breadth of Sep 10-11 2010
will not happen again in our lives across interior northeastern USA.  If
so, I will be singing "kumbaya" in reverance.

As I recall, it was about a week in advance that I began preparations to
surf the then subtley-evident behemoth wave. Allocation of spousal
attention was reduced; the kids welfare rationalized circularly by my
pending documentary actions. We walk a thin line of sanity in this
nocturnal migration preoccupation, especially so during wartime and
amidst other human tragedies on our nerve within a keystroke. But we
prevail in the bigger picture, imprinting earth with our natural history
activities, respectfully & nonetheless.

The pulse of migration over central New York State on the night of Sep
10-11 rocked the relative historic framework. My initial calculations
were off
(http://www.birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NFCL.html#1283970775), but you
only lose in such events when you miss them. The flight happened two
nights later than I thought, and Catharus fuscescens y Wilsonia pusilla
flight calling turned out to be normal for the time of year, instead of
the higher numbers and proportions I had guessed. But the number of
migrants aloft burst forth with full remnant ebullience. That density
was nature-born and the species composition a delightfully telling
ancient echo. The flight is now just a memory for a few of us, but
indicative records remain:

Radar reflectivity and velocity images from the night are available for
download for another 24 hours or so at:
http://www.rap.ucar.edu/weather/radar/.  Specifically, the NEXRAD
records from Albany, Watertown, Binghamton, and Buffalo, NY along with
State College, PA show sign of sustained 28+ dBZ biological reflectivity
crossing the breadth of interior NY (Albany to Buffalo) and moving
southward across central PA.

The link below leads to a thermal image video I made during a period of
peak passage in the flight (11:15-12:00 EDT) from 610 m asl at the
Connecticut Hill Wildlife Management Area (15 km east of Ithaca, NY,
US). The flight activity shown in the video likely represents the lower
portion of 28+ dBz radar reflectivity that was occurring on this clear
sky night -- targets were noted passing at a rate >100 per 5 minute
period. This thermal video was made with a rented FLIR P65 camera with a
23-degree lens. The camera was pointed vertically toward the sky and
positioned so that birds heading from the NNE toward the SSW would
appear heading in straight line vertical motion from the bottom to the
top of the screen of view. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wpv4OVYDz0

Anne Klingensmith & family operated an acoustic monitoring station in
Alfred, NY during the flight from 8PM to 6AM. Anne indicated to me that
the Old Bird tseep detector extracted more than 1000 flight calls of
warblers and sparrows during the ten hours. This is one of the highest
clear night tseep call totals ever documented by this station, which has
been in operation for 20 fall migration seasons. This calling is
estimated to be largely from birds migrating within 300 m of the ground.
Anne carried out a preliminary species analysis and reported 15 Wilson's
Warbler flight calls among the 1000+ tseep notes (~1.5%). The acoustic
data from this Alfred, NY station are planned to be put online at
Oldbird.org in the near future.

I ran an acoustic monitoring station for five hours from 9PM-2AM at my
house near Ithaca, NY (~500 m asl), which is not the best location in
the area to record flight calls during such relatively high altitude
migration events. I logged 219 tseep notes of which 5 were from Wilson's
Warblers (~2.3%). I also ran the Old Bird Thrush detector and in
spectrographic analysis using GlassOFire I noted the following species'
flight calls: Swainsons Thrush 38, Rose-breasted Grosbeak 28, Veery 14,
Gray-cheeked Thrush 0, and about 30 unknown thrush type flight calls.
This composition is typical for Sep 10 in central NY except that I would
have expected a few Gray-cheekeds in the mix.

In signing off I reiterate that for the diligently tuned I offer a
chance, albeit I think a very small one, for free beer & a joyous
occasion.

Regards and best wishes for the remainder of the fall 2010 migration
season,

Bill E 



--

NFC-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_WELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_RULES

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nfc-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NFCL.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NFC-L

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

 





-- 
Benjamin
-------------------------------
nimajn...@gmail.com

 


--

NFC-L List Info:
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_WELCOME
http://www.NortheastBirding.com/NFC_RULES

ARCHIVES:
1) http://www.mail-archive.com/nfc-l@cornell.edu/maillist.html
2) http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/NFCL.html
3) http://www.surfbirds.com/birdingmail/Group/NFC-L

Please submit your observations to eBird:
http://ebird.org/content/ebird/

--

Reply via email to