Indeed, there was an obvious migration movement underway Sunday as evidenced 
not only by the Snow Geese but by a very impressive movement of robins along 
the south shore, numbering hundreds, starting at dawn and continuing throughout 
the day.  As a postscript, in the course of my successful search for the CBC 
lapspur at Robert Moses yesterday, I encountered two additional Snow Geese near 
the water tower.

Bob  Grover


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Shaibal Mitra
Sent: Monday, December 19, 2016 10:54 AM
To: NYSBIRDS ([email protected]) <[email protected]>
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Captree CBC, Preliminary Results

The Captree CBC was conducted on Sunday, 18 Dec 2016, for the 55th time.

Fifty participants covered this circle in southwestern Suffolk County, Long 
Island, finding a provisional total of 113 species. The weather was better than 
we expected, coverage was excellent, and the compilation dinner at Villa Monaco 
in West Islip was festive and well-attended-we offer our thanks to Great South 
Bay Audubon Society for generously contributing to the cost of this celebration.

Geese were a major focus in several territories, and diligent searching yielded 
a Greater White-fronted Goose in the Gardiner sector, a Cackling Goose in the 
East sector, and a locally unusual tally of 28 Snow Geese, in three 
territories, including high-flying migrants. This is a species we often miss 
and usually detect in small numbers, so these numbers are unusual for us, but 
consistent with observations on other CBCs this weekend (see especially Steve 
Chorvas' write-up of the Mohonk Lake/Ashokan Reservoir CBC:

http://birding.aba.org/message.php?mesid=1219062&MLID=NY01&MLNM=New%20York

Our long-staying Barnacle Goose was not seen on count day but was present at 
Belmont Lake at least through Friday.

Belmont produced the only Wood Ducks (4), Fire Island the only Common Eiders 
(3) and Common Goldeneyes (3), and Connetquot the only Common Mergansers 
(8)-all more or less routine highlights. In contrast, just one single Lesser 
Scaup was found-far fewer than expected.

Horned Grebe was missed for just the third time in 55 years, a disappointing 
outcome but one that didn't surprise me after my experience on the Montauk CBC 
on Saturday, where this species was remarkably scarce.  Even more distressing 
was the absence of Bonaparte's Gull, also missed for just the third time. Still 
remembered by many of us as an abundant and characteristic feature of the Fire 
Island Inlet area, this species has been slipping away from us, as have 
Canvasback (5th miss) and Northern Pintail (6th miss). But neither dire trends 
nor bad weather can explain an across the board dip on Hermit Thrush (4th 
miss). There will be an investigation.

In addition to highlights already mentioned, the Connetquot team saved 
Black-crowned Night-Heron, Bald Eagle, and American Woodcock; Fire Island saved 
Greater Yellowlegs, Ruddy Turnstone (8th count record), Lesser Black-backed 
Gull (7th count record), and Lapland Longspur; the Jones Island party saved 
American Oystercatcher (5th count record), Pine Warbler, and Boat-tailed 
Grackle (42, for just the 6th count record); Gardiner saved Lesser Scaup, 
Killdeer, and Monk Parakeet (23, for just the 8th count record, all recent); 
Seatuck saved Brown Thrasher; Heckscher saved Ruby-crowned Kinglet (2); and 
East saved Eastern Phoebe and Marsh Wren (2). Spoiled saves are the bane of 
competitive participants but the joy of compilers; the best of these yesterday 
were four (!) Orange-crowned Warblers, found by Seatuck, Heckscher, and East; 
three Chipping Sparrows, found by Connetquot and East; and three Rusty 
Blackbirds, found by Belmont and Connetquot.

Special praise is deserved by the team covering the North territory, a heavily 
developed interior area with markedly less habitat diversity than the other 
eight sectors. North not only saved American Kestrel (2) and Palm Warbler but 
also found a Great Horned Owl, one of two on the count. More broadly, Pat and I 
extend our thanks to all our teams for their valiant efforts yesterday, braving 
thunder, lightning, and intense rain before dawn and ominous, tornado-like 
squalls in the evening. We are impressed that no fewer than five parties found 
six Eastern Screech and two Great Horned Owls under these circumstances.

Shai Mitra & Patricia Lindsay
Bay Shore
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