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Updated on Monday, February 8 at 11:54 PM ET
The most recently received Mail is at the top.


Crab Plovers,©Tony Disley

8 Feb FW: eBird Report - Spanish Fort SE Quad , 2/8/10 [Tom Trenchard ]
9 Feb Re: LA Bird Numbers & Stats [James Bishop ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/8/10 [glenn ousset ]
8 Feb eBird Report - Soileau Quad , 2/8/10 [Malcolm Mark Swan ]
8 Feb White-winged Doves in Alexandria Quad , 2/8/10 [Huner Jay V ]
8 Feb Delcambre quad [Elias Landry ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/8/10 [janine robin ]
8 Feb FW: eBird Report - Martinville Quad , 2/6/10 [Tom Trenchard ]
8 Feb Doves [Roselie Overby ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Harrell Lake Quad , 2/8/10 [Stephen Pagans ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Breaux Bridge Quad , 2/8/10 [Bill Fontenot ]
8 Feb Glimpses into the Eagle's nest [Jane Patterson ]
8 Feb LA Bird Numbers & Stats [Veni Harlan ]
8 Feb FW: eBird Report - Des Allemands Quad , 2/7/10--WW Doves, bittern ["Purrington, Robert D" ]
8 Feb Un-i.d. flying object [miriam ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Forest Hill Quad , 2/5/10 [Steve Shively ]
8 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Woodworth W Quad , 2/7/10 [Steve Shively ]
7 Feb Re: TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish [jared wolfe ]
8 Feb eBird Report - Kernan Quad , 2/7/10 [Malcolm Mark Swan ]
7 Feb Re: TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish [Paul Conover ]
8 Feb eBird Report - Shoats Creek Quad , 2/6/10 [Malcolm Mark Swan ]
7 Feb TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish [Charles Lyon ]
8 Feb eBird Report - Merryville S Quad , 2/7/10 [Malcolm Mark Swan ]
7 Feb FW: eBird Report - Slidell Quad , 2/3/10 (St Tammany Parish) [Tom Trenchard ]
7 Feb FW: eBird Report - Bonita SW Quad , 2/7/10 [Roselie Overby ]
7 Feb White-throated Sparrows [Terry Davis ]
7 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Harrell Lake Quad , 2/7/10 [Stephen Pagans ]
7 Feb Re: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/7/10 [Nancy L Newfield ]
7 Feb Highlights from SW Louisiana (2/7/2010) [jared wolfe ]
7 Feb Lake Arthur Quad, 2/6/10 [Paul Conover ]
7 Feb Duson Quad, 2/7/10; Harris's Hawk [Paul Conover ]
7 Feb Branch Quad, 2/7/10 [Paul Conover ]
7 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/7/10 [David Muth ]
7 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/7/10 [janine robin ]
7 Feb Odd (?) Woodpecker Behavior [Huner Jay V ]
6 Feb FW: eBird Report - Martinville Quad , 2/4/10 - St. Tammany - Bronzed Cowbird [Tom Trenchard ]
6 Feb Re: Canada Goose in Wright, goose die-off [Paul Conover ]
6 Feb Canada Goose in Wright, goose die-off [Paul Conover ]
6 Feb Fw: eBird Report - West Monroe South Quad , 2/6/10 [Stephen Pagans ]
6 Feb Fw: eBird Report - West Monroe N Quad , 2/6/10 [Stephen Pagans ]
6 Feb Prospecting for Orphan Quad Birds - Latanier Quad , 2/6/10 [Huner Jay V ]
6 Feb FW: eBird Report - Des Allemands Quad , 2/6/10 [Phillip Wallace ]
6 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad 2/6/10,St tammany [janine robin ]
6 Feb Fwd: eBird Report - Denham Springs Quad , 2/6/10 [Bob & Karen Pierson ]
6 Feb Exotic Waterfowl at Kenner City Park [Michael Hilferty ]
6 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Baton Rouge W Quad , 2/5/10 [Michael Hilferty ]
5 Feb Re: Fw: eBird Report - Covington Quad , 2/5/10 [H M ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Covington Quad , 2/5/10 [H M ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/5/10, St Tammany Parish [janine robin ]
5 Feb Wilson's Snipe - Collinston West Quad , 2/5/10 [Stephen Pagans ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/5/10 [glenn ousset ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/4/10 [glenn ousset ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Logansport E. Quad , 2/5/10 Fem-type Spotted Towhee, 2 WEVI, 5 GRCA [Terry Davis ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Logansport E. Quad , 2/5/10 Fem-type Spotted Towhee, 2 WEVI, 5 GRCA [Terry Davis ]
5 Feb Fw: eBird Report - Waldheim Quad , 2/5/10 St Tammany [Cham & Mary Mehaffey ]
5 Feb new WBA stats and coverage maps ["James V. Remsen" ]
5 Feb Eagle Expo Morgan City ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
5 Feb Re: Possible coordination of winter bird atlasing in SW LA [David Muth ]
5 Feb Possible coordination of winter bird atlasing in SW LA ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
5 Feb Grand Isle-Port Fourchon area atlasing this weekend ["Steven W. Cardiff" ]
5 Feb Re: Sora [Heather Mancuso ]
5 Feb Wood Stork cont. [John Conover ]
5 Feb LA-Netiquette Plea [miriam ]
4 Feb FW: eBird Report - Triumph Quad , 2/2/10 [Tom Trenchard ]
4 Feb Vulture Diet [Hubert Hervey ]
4 Feb Fw: eBird Report - St. Tammany Quad , 2/3/10 ["Harvey L. Patten" ]
4 Feb extending WBA season by 1 day ["James V. Remsen" ]
4 Feb Re: Please, no political posts ["James V. Remsen" ]
4 Feb Re: Please, no political posts [Heather Mancuso ]
4 Feb Re: Please, no political posts ["Tifft, Michael" ]
4 Feb Re: VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE [jared wolfe ]
4 Feb Re: Please, no political posts [Joyce Bennett ]
4 Feb Please, no political posts [wendy rihner ]
4 Feb Re: Sora [Jonathan Clark ]
4 Feb Re: VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE [Aelita J Pinter ]
4 Feb Jena East quad 2/1/10 [Jonathan Clark ]

Subject: FW: eBird Report - Spanish Fort SE Quad , 2/8/10
From: Tom Trenchard <trench19 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 23:54:18 -0600
LaBirders,

 

Rather short list for Spanish Fort SE Quad, Orleans Parish.

Details below.

 

Tom T.

-----
Tom Trenchard
Penn Mill Lakes Subdivision
Covington/Lake Ramsey Area
Martinville Quad Compiler

=====================================

> Location: Spanish Fort SE Quad
> Observation date: 2/8/10
> Notes: Pratt Dr residence; clear and chilly to cool; light to moderate 
breeze. One observer for 3.5 hours, starting at 7:30AM, 1 acre (area count). 

> Number of species: 24
> 
> Double-crested Cormorant 3
> Great Blue Heron 1
> White Ibis 37
> Turkey Vulture 1
> Bald Eagle 1 in flight.
> Cooper's Hawk 1
> Red-shouldered Hawk 1
> Laughing Gull 3
> Ring-billed Gull 2
> Royal Tern 1
> Rock Pigeon 3
> Mourning Dove 8
> Monk Parakeet 1
> Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1
> Blue Jay 2
> American Crow 12
> Carolina Chickadee 1
> Northern Mockingbird 1
> European Starling 25
> Pine Warbler 1
> Chipping Sparrow 8
> House Finch 15
> American Goldfinch 7
> House Sparrow 4
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Re: LA Bird Numbers & Stats
From: James Bishop <bishopjmarcus AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Tue, 9 Feb 2010 07:49:47 +0300
Veni, the number of birds officially recorded in Louisiana approach
470.  When Lowey’s Louisiana Birds was first published in 1955, he
stated that Louisiana ranked fifth with 377 bird species.  So in the
past 55 years there have been about 93 birds added to the list, or
nearly 1.7 birds/year.  This includes species splits, amalgamations,
and new birds documented for the state.  Recent attempts to find a
single comparative lists of bird species numbers for different states
has not been successful.  There are lists of states where one can
obtain the list of birds of each, but it appears that one must enter
each state website and manually count the listed species.  States with
more bird species than Louisiana include Texas, California, Arizona,
New Mexico, Florida, and perhaps five others.

Jim Bishop
Kuwait
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/8/10
From: glenn ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 20:04:10 -0800
Glenn Ousset



1 observer, 4 hrs 5 min from 7:25am, 3.5 miles

Glenn Ousset



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net
Sent: Mon, February 8, 2010 9:18:06 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/8/10



Location:    Little Woods Quad
Observation date:    2/8/10
Notes:      Audubon La Nature Center and vicinity in eastern New Orleans.
Number of species:    57

Canada Goose    1    domestic
Mallard (Domestic type)    32
Lesser Scaup    25
Ruddy Duck    35
Double-crested Cormorant    86
Anhinga    14
Great Blue Heron    5
Great Egret    6
Snowy Egret    16
Cattle Egret    9
Black-crowned Night-Heron    11
White Ibis    10
Black Vulture    2
Turkey Vulture    4
Red-shouldered Hawk    3
Red-tailed Hawk    2
American Kestrel    2
Merlin    1
American Coot    3
Killdeer    1
Black-necked Stilt    6
Wilson's Snipe    61    wet field
Laughing Gull    54
Ring-billed Gull    85
Rock Pigeon    27
Mourning Dove    6
Monk Parakeet    2
Great Horned Owl    1
Belted Kingfisher    2
Red-bellied Woodpecker    2
Downy Woodpecker    3
Northern Flicker    2
Eastern Phoebe    3
Loggerhead Shrike    1
Blue Jay    5
American Crow    14
Carolina Chickadee    11
Carolina Wren    8
House Wren    3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher    1
American Robin    17
Gray Catbird    1
Northern Mockingbird    3
European Starling    55
Orange-crowned Warbler    3
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    19
Chipping Sparrow    20
Savannah Sparrow    4
Swamp Sparrow    6
White-throated Sparrow    5
White-crowned Sparrow    1
Northern Cardinal    14
Red-winged Blackbird    35
Common Grackle    1
Boat-tailed Grackle    14
American Goldfinch    3
House Sparrow    10

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


Subject: eBird Report - Soileau Quad , 2/8/10
From: Malcolm Mark Swan <owl AT MANYBIRDS.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 22:25:54 -0500
Highlight wasn't the adult Bald Eagle, the White-tailed Kite, Merlin, or
perched adult Sharp-shinned Hawk.  Rather it was a tight flock of 40
Cardinals, mostly males, at a patch of dumped corn.

Then there were the anti-highlights.  Like walking an entire air-strip
back and forth without a single Sprague's.  Or finding only a single duck
and only 2 sandpipers in dozens and dozens of rice and crawfish fields. 
Or waiting at the field with the most harriers for a no-show Short-eared
Owl.

Location:     Soileau Quad
     Located a few miles E of Oberlin in Beauregard Parish
     straddles line between piney woods and rice country
Observation date:     2/8/10
Notes:      Observation type: Traveling Count
Observation date: 2/8/10
Distance covered: 24.0 mile(s)
Start time: 7:00 AM
Duration: 11 hour(s) 0 minute(s)
# of people in birding party: 1
Number of species:     68

Snow Goose     35
Northern Shoveler     1
Great Blue Heron     5
Great Egret     8
White Ibis     5
Black Vulture     7
Turkey Vulture     12
WHITE-TAILED KITE     1
BALD EAGLE     1
Northern Harrier     5
Sharp-shinned Hawk     1
Cooper's Hawk     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     4
American Kestrel     11
Merlin     1
Killdeer     87
Greater Yellowlegs     1
Lesser Yellowlegs     1
Ring-billed Gull     54
Eurasian Collared-Dove     3
Mourning Dove     3
Barred Owl     2
Belted Kingfisher     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     12
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     4
Downy Woodpecker     3
Hairy Woodpecker     1
Northern Flicker     5
Pileated Woodpecker     8
Eastern Phoebe     6
Loggerhead Shrike     8
White-eyed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     16
American Crow     14
Fish Crow     23
Carolina Chickadee     8
Tufted Titmouse     4
Carolina Wren     7
House Wren     4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     2
Eastern Bluebird     14
Hermit Thrush     4
American Robin     130
Gray Catbird     1
Northern Mockingbird     8
Brown Thrasher     1
European Starling     21
American Pipit     9
Orange-crowned Warbler     3
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     26
Pine Warbler     11
Common Yellowthroat     5
Eastern Towhee     2
Chipping Sparrow     20
Field Sparrow     1
Vesper Sparrow     1
Savannah Sparrow     90
Song Sparrow     11
Lincoln's Sparrow     2
Swamp Sparrow     12
White-throated Sparrow     25
Northern Cardinal     83
Red-winged Blackbird     1000
Eastern Meadowlark     12
Common Grackle     328
Brown-headed Cowbird     800
American Goldfinch     8
House Sparrow     9

This report was generated automatically by eBird
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: White-winged Doves in Alexandria Quad , 2/8/10
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 20:34:00 -0600
Nothing new to report from the quad today unless one of the cormorants proves 
to be a Neotropical Cormorant. Waiting for comment from specialists. Always 
nice to pick up some White-winged Doves. Simply could not find any creepers or 
Hermit Thrushes or wayward owls. Had no opportunities to do any distant quad 
surveys today. Also could not find any White-throated Sparrows. Only birds not 
found at the Lakes District site were Snowy Egret and Rock Pigeon. One small, 
single sparrow was probably a Savannah Sparrow. 


Other day birds outside the quad included: Muscovy, Mallard (feral), American 
Kestrel, American Crow, Tufted Titmouse, Orange-crowned Warbler, White-throated 
Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, Common Grackle,  Brown-headed Cowbird, and American 
Goldfinch. So, broke 40 for the day. Guess that 50 was possible if I had had 
the time to bird more. 


Jay Huner

Location: Alexandria Quad
Observation date: 2/8/10
Notes: Alexandria Quad. Rapides Parish. Mostly Lakes District but some effort 
along LA 165 in area between Horseshoe Bayou and Traffic Circle. 1 observer, 
Start 8:00 AM CST, 1 hr 50 min., 3.5 miles. 

Number of species: 36

Pied-billed Grebe 5
Double-crested Cormorant 2
Anhinga 1
Great Blue Heron 2
Great Egret 3
Snowy Egret 22
Red-shouldered Hawk 2
Red-tailed Hawk 2
Killdeer 4
Wilson's Snipe 18
Rock Pigeon 75
Eurasian Collared-Dove 4
White-winged Dove 4
Mourning Dove 11
Belted Kingfisher 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 6
Northern Flicker 7
Eastern Phoebe 1
Loggerhead Shrike 1
Blue Jay 22
Fish Crow 14
Carolina Chickadee 2
Carolina Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Eastern Bluebird 4
American Robin 13
Northern Mockingbird 12
European Starling 125
Cedar Waxwing 105
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 95
Chipping Sparrow 5
Song Sparrow 2
Swamp Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 22
Red-winged Blackbird 40
House Sparrow 80

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: Delcambre quad
From: Elias Landry <ejlandry AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 20:02:25 -0600
Having problems sending ebird reports to the listserve, so I'll just mention a 
few things. I did the McIlhenny Duck Pond near Avery Island Saturday and was 
surprised at the nearly total absents of waterfowl. Except for a small flock of 
teal and a few mallards and one lone Lesser Scaup, the pond was barren. 
Highlight was a male Ruby-crowned Kinglet displaying his red crest that nearly 
cover the top of his head. Kicked up about a dozen Snipe in an open field near 
the gate, along with a high number of Killdeer. Finished off the morning on 
Avery Island at Bird City in the Jungle Gardens. There were 26 Great Egrets on 
the nesting platforms. Perhaps the cold weather has delayed the nesting 
activity. Jus an fyi, I passed by the Jefferson Island rookery later that day, 
and there were no birds there at all. 


 

 

Elias Landry 

Avery Island 
 		 	   		  
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Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/8/10
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 19:14:11 -0600
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 7:08 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/8/10


>
>
> Location:     Folsom Quad
> Observation date:     2/8/10
> Notes:      Washington Parish section of quad.Hwy 450 n to Turkey 
> Creek(west entry) rd/Je'Le'Mein rd/Turkey Creek rd (east 
> exit).Overcast,60's/2.5hrs/8.7mi driving/walking/3 observers/Resident has 
> had a yellow-throated warbler all winter,but no show today.
> Number of species: 31 > > Mallard (Domestic type) 2 > Great Blue Heron 1 > Great Egret 1 > Turkey Vulture 1 > Red-shouldered Hawk 1 > Red-tailed Hawk 3 > Eurasian Collared-Dove 2 > Mourning Dove 11 > Belted Kingfisher 1 > Red-bellied Woodpecker 4 > Downy Woodpecker 2 > Northern Flicker 1 > Eastern Phoebe 3 > Blue Jay 12 > American Crow 4 > Carolina Chickadee 6 > Tufted Titmouse 3 > Carolina Wren 5 > Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2 > Eastern Bluebird 10 > American Robin 45 > Northern Mockingbird 6 > Orange-crowned Warbler 1 > Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 14 > Pine Warbler 3 > Eastern Towhee 4 > Chipping Sparrow 13 > Song Sparrow 2 > White-throated Sparrow 16 > Northern Cardinal 15 > Red-winged Blackbird 65 > American Goldfinch 16 > > This report was generated automatically by eBird > v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Martinville Quad , 2/6/10
From: Tom Trenchard <trench19 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 19:08:00 -0600
LaBirders,

 

Crescent Bird Club outing led by Joelle Finley was held Saturday, 2/6/10,

to stake out Henslow's Sparrows - Martinville Quad, St. Tammany Parish.

 

Details follow.

 

If anyone in the group did not get an eBird "share" please contact me

privately, as I didn't get everyone's email address or userID.

 

Thanks,

Tom T.



-----
Tom Trenchard
Penn Mill Lakes Subdivision
Covington/Lake Ramsey Area
Martinville Quad Compiler

===================================================================

> Location: Martinville Quad
> Observation date: 2/6/10
> Notes: Quad count: Lake Ramsey Preserve & Conservancy. Crescent Bird Club 
outing, Joelle Finley, guide. Partly cloudy and chilly; light breeze. In search 
of Henslow's Sparrow (successful). 22 observers for 3.5 hours starting at 
7:30AM, about 1 mile walking. 

> Number of species: 32
> 
> Canada Goose 2 feral.
> Double-crested Cormorant 4
> Great Egret 1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker 6
> Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 2
> Downy Woodpecker 2
> Northern Flicker 2
> Pileated Woodpecker 1
> Blue-headed Vireo 3
> Blue Jay 5
> American Crow 3
> Fish Crow 2
> Carolina Chickadee 5
> Tufted Titmouse 1
> Brown-headed Nuthatch 8
> Carolina Wren 4
> House Wren 1
> Sedge Wren 6
> Eastern Bluebird 4
> American Robin 30
> Northern Mockingbird 2
> Orange-crowned Warbler 1
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 45
> Pine Warbler 10
> Eastern Towhee 9
> Chipping Sparrow 6
> Henslow's Sparrow 2 group chase.
> Song Sparrow 1
> Swamp Sparrow 15
> White-throated Sparrow 7
> Northern Cardinal 4
> Red-winged Blackbird 15
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Doves
From: Roselie Overby <rosebird8791 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 18:30:31 -0600
I forgot to mention that 100 of the mourning doves that I saw in the Bonita
SW quad were resting on a broken rock driveway in front of grain storage
silos next to Merton-Bowie Rd.

Roselie Overby
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Harrell Lake Quad , 2/8/10
From: Stephen Pagans <slp_4-7 AT ATT.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 14:37:37 -0800
Location:    Harrell Lake Quad
Observation date:    2/8/10
Notes:    Weather was cloudy, cold and with occasional rain.  I started the 
survey at 10:12 am, went for 2 hr 40 min and covered 1.7 miles (1.2 walking) 
before being rained out.  The Snow Geese were flyovers. 

Number of species:    22

Snow Goose    20
Turkey Vulture    1
Red-bellied Woodpecker    1
Blue-headed Vireo    1
Blue Jay    5
American Crow    10
Carolina Chickadee    2
Carolina Wren    10
Winter Wren    1
Golden-crowned Kinglet    6
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    1
Eastern Bluebird    10
Hermit Thrush    14
Brown Thrasher    2
Orange-crowned Warbler    1
Pine Warbler    6
Eastern Towhee    1
Fox Sparrow    7
Song Sparrow    21
Swamp Sparrow    8
White-throated Sparrow    2
Northern Cardinal    8
blackbird sp.    12

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Breaux Bridge Quad , 2/8/10
From: Bill Fontenot <natrldlite AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 15:46:51 -0600
thought i'd do a little quadding in an attempt to locate my feet somewhere 
near the ground........alas, to no avail......actually, the presence of 4 
house finches at our feeder (uncommonly recorded wba species in this quad) 
this morning spurred me to count birds.......so i added in a run to the 
acadiana park nature station in an attempt to get a respectable 
list............again, to no avail.........i guess terry davis' february 
doldrums has crept in...........


----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Monday, February 08, 2010 3:41 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Breaux Bridge Quad , 2/8/10


>
>
> Location:     Breaux Bridge Quad
> Observation date:     2/8/10
> Notes:      overcast; 62F; wind SSW 15mph
> Number of species:     24
>
> Turkey Vulture     1
> Red-shouldered Hawk     4
> American Kestrel     1
> Rock Pigeon     2
> Mourning Dove     3
> Ruby-throated Hummingbird     1
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Eastern Phoebe     1
> Blue Jay     5
> American Crow     5
> Fish Crow     2
> crow sp.     2
> Carolina Chickadee     3
> Carolina Wren     3
> American Robin     3
> Northern Mockingbird     1
> Cedar Waxwing     4
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     3
> White-throated Sparrow     8
> Northern Cardinal     15
> Common Grackle     7
> Brown-headed Cowbird     2
> House Finch     4
> American Goldfinch     24
> House Sparrow     6
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)



-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 




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07:35:00
Subject: Glimpses into the Eagle's nest
From: Jane Patterson <cocamila AT COX.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 13:20:17 -0500
For those who might be interested, I put together a composite video of 
clips taken while watching the Bald Eagle nest yesterday located near 
Ramah/Maringuoin and Sherburne NWR South Farm in Iberville parish .  The 
single chick seems to be about 3-4 weeks old.

http://www.vimeo.com/9292235

--Jane Patterson
Baton Rouge, LA
Subject: LA Bird Numbers & Stats
From: Veni Harlan <veniharlan AT MAC.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 11:52:55 -0600
I've been reading with interest everyone's sightings. Fascinating! I  
wonder if I could ask this group a few questions?

According to a LA Wildlife and Fisheries article 
(http://www.wlf.louisiana.gov/experience/ecotourism/birding 

), "over 400 different kinds of birds have been recorded in Louisiana"  
and that "Our state is one of the richest states in terms of bird  
diversity."

Is this # accurate today? Where do we fall in terms of diversity  
amongst all states? high, low, average?

I am just trying to get a big picture of LA bird population and where  
we stand.

I also would appreciate knowing if ornithologists divide populations  
between resident and migratory, and if there are any accurate figures  
on migratory numbers?

If this is inappropriate for this list, just lmk.

Thank you!!

Veni Harlan
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Des Allemands Quad , 2/7/10--WW Doves, bittern
From: "Purrington, Robert D" <danny AT TULANE.EDU>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 10:52:06 -0600
 

Three hours in des Allemandes.  Of interest were White-winged Doves and
an American Bittern.

Dan Purrington


Location:     Des Allemands Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Number of species:     45

Pied-billed Grebe     2
Brown Pelican     7
Double-crested Cormorant     3
American Bittern     1
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     10
Snowy Egret     5
Cattle Egret     2
White Ibis     301
Turkey Vulture     2
Osprey     1
Northern Harrier     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     3
Red-tailed Hawk     1
American Kestrel     4
Virginia Rail     1
Common Moorhen     3
American Coot     1
Killdeer     1
Laughing Gull     7
Ring-billed Gull     2
White-winged Dove     7
Mourning Dove     20
Belted Kingfisher     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     3
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     2
Pileated Woodpecker     1
Eastern Phoebe     6
Loggerhead Shrike     1
Blue-headed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     2
American Crow     20
Carolina Chickadee     2
Carolina Wren     4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     5
American Robin     30
Northern Mockingbird     10
European Starling     1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     11
Northern Cardinal     6
Red-winged Blackbird     85
Eastern Meadowlark     1
Common Grackle     90
Boat-tailed Grackle     20
American Goldfinch     3

This report was generated automatically by eBird
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Un-i.d. flying object
From: miriam <athena_9 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 09:03:07 -0600
Labird
 
Perhaps some of you hardcores can help.  Last night I heard a strange
grunting, squealing noise, looked out the window, and spotted not our
resident Great Horned Owl, but a rather corpulent, winged, curly-tailed
shape soaring over the pines.  And though the weather is currently sunny
this Monday morning, my daughter in Little Rock woke up to an inch of snow
and sleet and says it's all headed our way.
 
So it appears WWL's Jim Henderson is correct.  Perhaps our fortunes are
changing.
 
Pigs are flying, hell is freezing over, and the Saints have won the
Superbowl!
 
MiriamLDavey
BatonRougeLA
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Forest Hill Quad , 2/5/10
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 08:31:53 -0600
2.3 party hours, 8.8 miles.

Steve Shively, Wildlife Biologist
Calcasieu Ranger District, Kisatchie National Forest
9912 Hwy 28 West
Boyce, LA  71409
318-793-9427 office
318-452-0584 cell
318-793-9430 (fax)
steveshively AT fs.fed.us

----- Forwarded by Steve Shively/R8/USDAFS on 02/08/2010 08:31 AM -----

do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
02/08/2010 08:24 AM

To
steveshively AT fs.fed.us
cc

Subject
eBird Report - Forest Hill Quad , 2/5/10








Location:     Forest Hill Quad
Observation date:     2/5/10
Notes:      West of Forest Hill.
Number of species:     34

Turkey Vulture     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     1
Mourning Dove     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     5
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     3
Red-cockaded Woodpecker     7
Northern Flicker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     1
Eastern Phoebe     6
Blue-headed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     40
American Crow     15
Carolina Chickadee     16
Tufted Titmouse     19
Brown-headed Nuthatch     15
Carolina Wren     18
House Wren     2
Winter Wren     2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     16
Hermit Thrush     11
Gray Catbird     1
Northern Mockingbird     1
Orange-crowned Warbler     1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     10
Pine Warbler     25
Eastern Towhee     13
Chipping Sparrow     10
Field Sparrow     5
Fox Sparrow     1
Song Sparrow     10
White-throated Sparrow     120
Dark-eyed Junco     10
Northern Cardinal     47
American Goldfinch     15

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Woodworth W Quad , 2/7/10
From: Steve Shively <steveshively AT FS.FED.US>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 08:30:58 -0600
I was just thinking how I had seen zero pine siskins, purple finches, or 
golden crowned kinglets this year compared to the bonanza of last year 
when I looked out the window and saw a pair of purple finches on my 
feeder. Later saw a lone pine siskin on the ground beneath in a crowd of 
goldfinches. Still no golden crowns.

Steve Shively, Wildlife Biologist
Calcasieu Ranger District, Kisatchie National Forest
9912 Hwy 28 West
Boyce, LA  71409
318-793-9427 office
318-452-0584 cell
318-793-9430 (fax)
steveshively AT fs.fed.us

----- Forwarded by Steve Shively/R8/USDAFS on 02/08/2010 08:28 AM -----

do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
02/08/2010 08:28 AM

To
steveshively AT fs.fed.us
cc

Subject
eBird Report - Woodworth W Quad , 2/7/10








Location:     Woodworth W Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Notes:      Feeder watch at my house.
Number of species:     13

Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
Eastern Phoebe     1
Blue Jay     1
American Crow     6
Carolina Chickadee     1
Tufted Titmouse     2
Eastern Bluebird     5
Northern Mockingbird     2
White-throated Sparrow     2
Northern Cardinal     8
Purple Finch     2
Pine Siskin     1
American Goldfinch     50

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Re: TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish
From: jared wolfe <jdwolfe80 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 22:56:47 -0800
Excellent synopsis of Trumpeter Swans in Louisiana, their natural history, and 
importance of this record. I learned a lot from this thread. 


Concerning the discussion about the age of the Louisiana Trumpeter Swans: 
Trumpeter Swans will remain in juvenile plumage (brown head and neck) until 
they initiate their post-juvenile (preformative molt) away from the breeding 
grounds at which time brown juvenile plumage is replaced with gray. This molt 
begins sometime between August - October and concludes sometime between January 
- March. Adult Trumpeter Swans migrate to 'molting grounds' in order to 
initiate post-nuptial molts (aka definitive prebasic molts; note that Swans and 
Geese have no prealternate molt like Ducks) prior to returning to wintering 
grounds... I do not know if juvs also migrate to 'molting grounds' or undergo 
the post-juvenile molt on the wintering grounds; however, based on Charlie's 
statement that young can remain with parents through their first winter, I 
assume young will at least initiate molt on the molting grounds with their 
parents. This is not semantics because ageing is 

 dependent on recognizing which plumage the birds are in. 

In any case, if one of these individuals hatched last breeding season (SY) then 
we would expect a grayish wash to the back and neck. According to Peter Pyle, 
the upper mandible should retain pink at least until August of their second 
year. Interestingly, SY/TY (second cycle) birds can retain scattered post-juv 
(formative) gray plumage, especially in the rump. Therefore, if plumage aspect 
is white with an all black bill in February, we know it is an ASY individual 
(at least second cycle). If the back, neck and rump are grayish and the bill 
has retained pink in February, we know it would be a SY individual (first 
cycle). And finally, if the body has scattered gray (especially the rump), but 
the back, with an all black bill (potentially a tiny amount of retained pink) 
in February, we know it is probably a TY individual (second cycle) or possibly 
a SY (first cycle) individual that has maturated quickly. Note there are no HY 
scenarios for Swans in February 

 because that would indicate a bird was hatched sometime after January 1, 2010.

Therefore, from Charlie's description, I would venture a guess that these are 
potentially third-year (TY) individuals (within their second molt-cycle) with 
an unusual amount of gray in the neck and body or they are SY individuals with 
an unusual amount of black in the bill (?!). The only real way to know for sure 
is to get a close look at the wear and shape of the formative feathers and 
rectrices. 


Happy birding,

Jared Wolfe
Baton Rouge


----- Original Message ----
From: Charles Lyon 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Sun, February 7, 2010 11:17:26 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] TRUMPETER SWANS  2-6-10 Ouachita Parish

LA-birders,

I made the trip over to Ouachita Parish yesterday 2-6-10 to view and attempt
to video the "probable" TRUMPETER SWANS first discovered by Rocky and
Jennifer Smith on their property on Saturday January 30,2010. Their home as
well as their flooded pecan orchard is located here. They are located on the
east side of Hwy 143, in a flood zone area just north of the merger of Bayou
D'Arbonne into the Ouachita River.

The pair of swans were first reported to LABIRD as Mute Swans on 1-31-10 by
Matt Pardue. Gypsy Hanks then reported on 2-1-10 that she obtained pictures
and calls of the birds and felt these were probable Trumpeter Swans but "no
definites". She didn't rule out the possibility of these being Tundra swans,
but was quite sure they were not Mute swans. Kelby Ouchley who also saw the
swans stated on 2-1-10 that he was quite sure they were Trumpeter Swans.
Steve Pagans then reported seeing the swan pair on 2-2-10, and felt "pretty
comfortable with the identification of them as Trumpeter Swans."

Steve was kind enough to get me permission to get on the Smith property with
him and Joan Brown Saturday 2-6-10. He had already forwarded me an excellent
photo he took of the swans, but I have not seen Gypsy's photos. I spent much
of Saturday looking for the swan pair and managed to get three brief
sightings. The first was just after 7:30 am upon our arrival, the next just
after noon, and the last at about 3:30 pm.

Just after I set up my scope at 7:30am, the swans which were about 100 yards
from me, flew before I could get my video set...very frustrating. They flew
about 50 yards to the north of me, giving their diagnostic trumpeting calls
however. Around noon they appeared on the west side of Hwy 143 and I managed
to get flight video,but they were silent. Finally at 3:30 I heard them
giving soft trumpet contact calls to each other in the brush in the wetland
area on the west side of Hwy 143, and I was able to obtain excellent audio
of them before they took flight. I then got some flight video of them
through the trees. These birds were exceptionally skittish to the point of
being neurotic, and have a strong fear of humans, or at least this human.

With my views through the scope I could see an all black bills with no trace
of yellow eye lores, and a wide black masks to the eyes in both birds. The
crowns were flat and the bills straight, with no hint of the rounded head
look and concave bill that is seen in Tundra Swans. When the birds took
flight the flat head and bill profile combined with the long neck look
(Trumpeters have longer necks than Tundra) said TRUMPETER SWAN. When they
started calling in flight, they then said TRUMPETER SWAN! I am 100% certain
these are TRUMPETER SWANS.

I am not sure however if these are hatch year birds, and I think they may be
second year birds. The first reason is the calls, which in juveniles are
higher pitched, and these seemed adult like to me. Perhaps juvenile trumps
acquire adult voices in the late winter of their first year...someone with
more knowledge than I can help with this. The second reason is that usually
juvs travel with adults in their first winter of life, and are not forced
from their parents breeding territory until the next year. Also I think
Trumpeter Swans carry some juvenile gray plumage into their second winter.
These two birds do have some gray feathering to the head, neck, back and
wing coverts, but I think this can be seen in second year birds. Again true
swan experts can help me here.

I do have a great deal of experience with both species of swans, but I sure
don't see them with great frequency any more. I did live in North Carolina
while at UNC, and spent a lot of time with Tundra Swans. I've seen trumps in
the west, but I visit Trumpeter Swans yearly in the St. Louis area at the
Riverlands Environmental Demonstration Area in St. Charles. My son is the
biggest St Louis Cardinal fan south of Missouri, and we go there every year
in January for Winter Warm Up. The challenge and fun is to pick out the
occasional Tundra Swan mixed in with the mass of Trumpeter Swans. After a
while it is not that hard. There really is a"jizz" difference and the old
timers will understand what I mean. These two birds immediately jumped out
as Trumpeter Swans.

Now to go onto the second issue, which I really don't feel should be an
issue, and that is of origin. These two individuals were clearly wild. They
would not let me get closer than 100 yards from them, and had no neck
collars, bands, or feather deformities. They were not any of the releases
from Holla Bend NWR in Arkansas, but possibly they could have come from the
wild population that has been wintering at Magness Lake near Heber Springs.
This area is about 200 miles due north of West Monroe as the swan flies. I
think the first few Trumpeter Swans showed up here in the early 1990's, but
there are now somewhere around 120 or more. Ark birders can educate us
further on this.

These birds may have very well come from even further north. Just prior to
these birds arrival in Ouachita Parish, a severe winter storm dumped six
inches of snow into southern Missouri, and a great deal of shallow water
froze over.

Trumpeter Swan re-introduction programs which started around 1985 in many
upper mid-west states as well as Ontario have been highly successful. The
Minnesota population alone is now over 2000 birds which is a far cry from
the 69 in the entire lower 48 states in the 1930's. In Michigan as well as
Minnesota the birds are doing so well that they are no longer listed as
endangered but have been down listed to threatened. They are not even listed
as at risk in Ontario. It was just a matter of time before wild TRUMPETER
SWANS returned to their historic wintering range in Louisiana, and I believe
these two birds should be given the honor of being the first new pioneers.

I am no longer on the LA Bird Records Committee, but in my opinion , this is
one case in which the committee should act fairly quickly in placing this
species back on the modern day state list. For those who are interested,
read Lowery's account on Trumpeter Swans. You may have to find an "old
timer" since the book is long out of print. There is not even a definitive
record or specimen for the state, but we know that by virtue of their
historical winter range, they once occurred here. The last year it was
stated a Trumpeter Swan was seen in Louisiana was 1915, but there is no
solid evidence. Here is some solid evidence of their return.

My reason for urging more rapid acceptance of this record relates to
conservation issues. The current greatest weak link in regards to Trumpeter
Swan recovery lies with restoration/management of appropriate winter habitat
for the swans. Trumpeter Swans are "social" migrants and not "hardwire"
migrants such as our neotropicalpasserines. These reestablished populations
haven't established historical migration patterns yet, but they certainly
need the habitat in Louisiana for it to happen. The backwater and oxbow
areas of the Mississippi and Ouachita Rivers are the perfect place for it to
happen. At present large numbers congregate in small areas to our north,
which places them at greater risk for disease as well as some other
catastrophe.  It's a great opportunity for Louisiana. These Trumpeter Swans
are long overdue.

Charlie Lyon 
Shreveport, LA



      
Subject: eBird Report - Kernan Quad , 2/7/10
From: Malcolm Mark Swan <owl AT MANYBIRDS.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 00:55:50 -0500
I thought this would be my most boring mercenary quad, dominated by
regrowth pine plantations and scattered home sites.  One highlight was the
combination of the Henslow's Sparrows, Sedge Wrens (both found early in
the day), and Am Woodcocks along a short stretch of gravel road through a
wet clearcut regrowth (pines about 4 feet tall) with standing water,
evening cricket frogs, broomsedge, and matted sedges and grasses.  A
woodcock was peenting there as I was leaving the quad.  So I got out of
the car for a half-hour (around 6 pm), walked the road for 100 yards and
proceeded to hear one after another courting bird peenting and twittering
in the sky.

Another highlight was the big, long-established cattle pasture at the
north side of the quad.  Very low but very green pasture grass and much
standing water amidst the vegeation (no open water).  Numbers of several
birds were biased by this field: the chatty flock of flying Fish Crows
(observed nowhere else), the Killdeer, the yellowlegs, the robins,
waxwings (flying), B-h Cowbirds, grackles, and Brewer's Blackbirds.

Location:     Kernan Quad
     which is a kinglet's beak NE of De Quincy in Beauregard Parish
Observation date:     2/7/10
Observation type: Traveling Count
Observation date: 2/7/10
Distance covered: 42.0 mile(s)
Start time: 6:45 AM
Duration: 10 hour(s) 0 minute(s)
# of people in birding party: 1 (MMS)
Number of species:     61

Wood Duck     1
Wild Turkey     2
Great Egret     1
Black Vulture     4
Turkey Vulture     7
Red-shouldered Hawk     12
Red-tailed Hawk     2
American Kestrel     4
Killdeer     108
Greater Yellowlegs     1
American Woodcock     5
Eurasian Collared-Dove     2
Mourning Dove     15
Red-headed Woodpecker     2
Red-bellied Woodpecker     13
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     6
Downy Woodpecker     5
Hairy Woodpecker     2
Northern Flicker     3
Pileated Woodpecker     4
Eastern Phoebe     8
Loggerhead Shrike     4
White-eyed Vireo     1
Blue-headed Vireo     2
Blue Jay     13
American Crow     21
Fish Crow     70
Carolina Chickadee     15
Tufted Titmouse     13
Brown-headed Nuthatch     5
Carolina Wren     13
House Wren     5
Winter Wren     2
Sedge Wren     4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     9
Eastern Bluebird     22
Hermit Thrush     13
American Robin     227
Gray Catbird     3
Northern Mockingbird     9
Brown Thrasher     1
European Starling     6
Cedar Waxwing     14
Orange-crowned Warbler     4
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     110
Pine Warbler     23
Eastern Towhee     3
Chipping Sparrow     3
Field Sparrow     1
Savannah Sparrow     1
Henslow's Sparrow     4
Song Sparrow     9
Swamp Sparrow     8
White-throated Sparrow     12
Dark-eyed Junco     5
Northern Cardinal     18
Eastern Meadowlark     8
Brewer's Blackbird     20
Common Grackle     3
Brown-headed Cowbird     130
American Goldfinch     8

This report was generated automatically by eBird
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Re: TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 23:34:23 -0600
Charlie, Labird,
	I've been expecting Trumpeters to reach us, and I'm delighted they 
finally have. I wonder how many recent swan records might have been 
Trumpeters that were passed off as the more expected Tundra. Trumpeters 
have been turning up in the SE for years, and other states accept 
records of unbanded birds probably from successfully reintroduced 
populations.
	I don't speak for the LBRC, but you can bet this record has my 
attention. I don't think I'm alone among LBRC members in sharing your 
views. The record for Trumpeter that inclusion of the species on the 
state list Lowery mentions is supported by a picture, which can be found 
in Bent. This historical record will be voted on in the future, as there 
is some question about the species in the photo.
	I hope the current birds are the first of many to come. I have very 
little experience with swans, but the experience I have was truly amazing.
	

Wide awake and in pleasant shock in Lafayette,
Paul Conover




Charles Lyon wrote:

> 
> I am no longer on the LA Bird Records Committee, but in my opinion , this is
> one case in which the committee should act fairly quickly in placing this
> species back on the modern day state list. For those who are interested,
> read Lowery's account on Trumpeter Swans. You may have to find an "old
> timer" since the book is long out of print. There is not even a definitive
> record or specimen for the state, but we know that by virtue of their
> historical winter range, they once occurred here. The last year it was
> stated a Trumpeter Swan was seen in Louisiana was 1915, but there is no
> solid evidence. Here is some solid evidence of their return.
> 
Subject: eBird Report - Shoats Creek Quad , 2/6/10
From: Malcolm Mark Swan <owl AT MANYBIRDS.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 00:31:01 -0500
6 Catbirds and 220 Yellow-rumps because I rustled lots of wax myrtle
thickets.  The highlight was a single roadside spot with broomsedge under
short pine, which yielded 1 Henslow's Sparrow, 1 Bachman's Sparrow, 2
Sedge Wrens, and 15 Field Sparrows (the latter all in one binocular view -
usually I see just 1 Field in a flock of Chippies).  High water flooded
bottomland hardwoods and lots of pine too.  The morning began in the high
30's, breezy, sunny - and went up to about 60.

Location:     Shoats Creek Quad
   -- which is W of De Quincy, inc. Sabine River (not visited)
Observation date:     2/6/10
Observation type: Traveling Count
Observation date: 2/6/10
Distance covered: 23.0 mile(s)
Start time: 8:00 AM
Duration: 10 hour(s) 0 minute(s)
# of people in birding party: 1 (MMS)
Number of species:     67

Wood Duck     2
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     1
Black Vulture     2
Turkey Vulture     5
Northern Harrier     1
Cooper's Hawk     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     5
American Kestrel     3
Killdeer     6
Rock Pigeon     3
Mourning Dove     5
Eastern Screech-Owl     1
Barred Owl     1
Red-headed Woodpecker     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     20
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     5
Downy Woodpecker     2
Hairy Woodpecker     2
Northern Flicker     2
Pileated Woodpecker     4
Eastern Phoebe     5
Loggerhead Shrike     1
White-eyed Vireo     3
Blue-headed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     3
American Crow     22
Fish Crow     1
Tree Swallow     20
Carolina Chickadee     17
Tufted Titmouse     11
Brown-headed Nuthatch     3
Brown Creeper     1
Carolina Wren     15
House Wren     8
Winter Wren     1
Sedge Wren     2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     15
Eastern Bluebird     17
Hermit Thrush     9
American Robin     35
Gray Catbird     6
Northern Mockingbird     7
Brown Thrasher     5
European Starling     1
Cedar Waxwing     6
Orange-crowned Warbler     5
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     220
Pine Warbler     9
Eastern Towhee     4
Bachman's Sparrow     1
Chipping Sparrow     3
Field Sparrow     16
Vesper Sparrow     1
Savannah Sparrow     8
Henslow's Sparrow     1
Song Sparrow     7
Lincoln's Sparrow     4
Swamp Sparrow     14
White-throated Sparrow     20
Dark-eyed Junco     2
Northern Cardinal     22
Red-winged Blackbird     87
Eastern Meadowlark     6
Common Grackle     1
Brown-headed Cowbird     1
American Goldfinch     11

This report was generated automatically by eBird
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: TRUMPETER SWANS 2-6-10 Ouachita Parish
From: Charles Lyon <lyon5516 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 23:17:26 -0600
LA-birders,

I made the trip over to Ouachita Parish yesterday 2-6-10 to view and attempt
to video the "probable" TRUMPETER SWANS first discovered by Rocky and
Jennifer Smith on their property on Saturday January 30,2010. Their home as
well as their flooded pecan orchard is located here. They are located on the
east side of Hwy 143, in a flood zone area just north of the merger of Bayou
D'Arbonne into the Ouachita River.

The pair of swans were first reported to LABIRD as Mute Swans on 1-31-10 by
Matt Pardue. Gypsy Hanks then reported on 2-1-10 that she obtained pictures
and calls of the birds and felt these were probable Trumpeter Swans but "no
definites". She didn't rule out the possibility of these being Tundra swans,
but was quite sure they were not Mute swans. Kelby Ouchley who also saw the
swans stated on 2-1-10 that he was quite sure they were Trumpeter Swans.
Steve Pagans then reported seeing the swan pair on 2-2-10, and felt "pretty
comfortable with the identification of them as Trumpeter Swans."

Steve was kind enough to get me permission to get on the Smith property with
him and Joan Brown Saturday 2-6-10. He had already forwarded me an excellent
photo he took of the swans, but I have not seen Gypsy's photos. I spent much
of Saturday looking for the swan pair and managed to get three brief
sightings. The first was just after 7:30 am upon our arrival, the next just
after noon, and the last at about 3:30 pm.

Just after I set up my scope at 7:30am, the swans which were about 100 yards
from me, flew before I could get my video set...very frustrating. They flew
about 50 yards to the north of me, giving their diagnostic trumpeting calls
however. Around noon they appeared on the west side of Hwy 143 and I managed
to get flight video,but they were silent. Finally at 3:30 I heard them
giving soft trumpet contact calls to each other in the brush in the wetland
area on the west side of Hwy 143, and I was able to obtain excellent audio
of them before they took flight. I then got some flight video of them
through the trees. These birds were exceptionally skittish to the point of
being neurotic, and have a strong fear of humans, or at least this human.

With my views through the scope I could see an all black bills with no trace
of yellow eye lores, and a wide black masks to the eyes in both birds. The
crowns were flat and the bills straight, with no hint of the rounded head
look and concave bill that is seen in Tundra Swans. When the birds took
flight the flat head and bill profile combined with the long neck look
(Trumpeters have longer necks than Tundra) said TRUMPETER SWAN. When they
started calling in flight, they then said TRUMPETER SWAN! I am 100% certain
these are TRUMPETER SWANS.

I am not sure however if these are hatch year birds, and I think they may be
second year birds. The first reason is the calls, which in juveniles are
higher pitched, and these seemed adult like to me. Perhaps juvenile trumps
acquire adult voices in the late winter of their first year...someone with
more knowledge than I can help with this. The second reason is that usually
juvs travel with adults in their first winter of life, and are not forced
from their parents breeding territory until the next year. Also I think
Trumpeter Swans carry some juvenile gray plumage into their second winter.
These two birds do have some gray feathering to the head, neck, back and
wing coverts, but I think this can be seen in second year birds. Again true
swan experts can help me here.

I do have a great deal of experience with both species of swans, but I sure
don't see them with great frequency any more. I did live in North Carolina
while at UNC, and spent a lot of time with Tundra Swans. I've seen trumps in
the west, but I visit Trumpeter Swans yearly in the St. Louis area at the
Riverlands Environmental Demonstration Area in St. Charles. My son is the
biggest St Louis Cardinal fan south of Missouri, and we go there every year
in January for Winter Warm Up. The challenge and fun is to pick out the
occasional Tundra Swan mixed in with the mass of Trumpeter Swans. After a
while it is not that hard. There really is a"jizz" difference and the old
timers will understand what I mean. These two birds immediately jumped out
as Trumpeter Swans.

Now to go onto the second issue, which I really don't feel should be an
issue, and that is of origin. These two individuals were clearly wild. They
would not let me get closer than 100 yards from them, and had no neck
collars, bands, or feather deformities. They were not any of the releases
from Holla Bend NWR in Arkansas, but possibly they could have come from the
wild population that has been wintering at Magness Lake near Heber Springs.
This area is about 200 miles due north of West Monroe as the swan flies. I
think the first few Trumpeter Swans showed up here in the early 1990's, but
there are now somewhere around 120 or more. Ark birders can educate us
further on this.

These birds may have very well come from even further north. Just prior to
these birds arrival in Ouachita Parish, a severe winter storm dumped six
inches of snow into southern Missouri, and a great deal of shallow water
froze over.

Trumpeter Swan re-introduction programs which started around 1985 in many
upper mid-west states as well as Ontario have been highly successful. The
Minnesota population alone is now over 2000 birds which is a far cry from
the 69 in the entire lower 48 states in the 1930's. In Michigan as well as
Minnesota the birds are doing so well that they are no longer listed as
endangered but have been down listed to threatened. They are not even listed
as at risk in Ontario. It was just a matter of time before wild TRUMPETER
SWANS returned to their historic wintering range in Louisiana, and I believe
these two birds should be given the honor of being the first new pioneers.

I am no longer on the LA Bird Records Committee, but in my opinion , this is
one case in which the committee should act fairly quickly in placing this
species back on the modern day state list. For those who are interested,
read Lowery's account on Trumpeter Swans. You may have to find an "old
timer" since the book is long out of print. There is not even a definitive
record or specimen for the state, but we know that by virtue of their
historical winter range, they once occurred here. The last year it was
stated a Trumpeter Swan was seen in Louisiana was 1915, but there is no
solid evidence. Here is some solid evidence of their return.

My reason for urging more rapid acceptance of this record relates to
conservation issues. The current greatest weak link in regards to Trumpeter
Swan recovery lies with restoration/management of appropriate winter habitat
for the swans. Trumpeter Swans are "social" migrants and not "hardwire"
migrants such as our neotropical passerines. These reestablished populations
haven't established historical migration patterns yet, but they certainly
need the habitat in Louisiana for it to happen. The backwater and oxbow
areas of the Mississippi and Ouachita Rivers are the perfect place for it to
happen. At present large numbers congregate in small areas to our north,
which places them at greater risk for disease as well as some other
catastrophe.  It's a great opportunity for Louisiana. These Trumpeter Swans
are long overdue.

Charlie Lyon 
Shreveport, LA
Subject: eBird Report - Merryville S Quad , 2/7/10
From: Malcolm Mark Swan <owl AT MANYBIRDS.COM>
Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 00:16:14 -0500
Just reporting on my second trip and 10th hour at this quad

Location:     Merryville S Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Observation type: Traveling Count
Observation date: 2/7/10
Distance covered: 3.0 mile(s)
Start time: 4:45 PM
Duration: 1 hour(s) 0 minute(s)
# of people in birding party: 1 (MMS)
Number of species:     22

Wood Duck     4
Turkey Vulture     2
Red-shouldered Hawk     2
Red-headed Woodpecker     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     1
Downy Woodpecker     1
Northern Flicker     1
Pileated Woodpecker     2
Eastern Phoebe     1
Carolina Chickadee     6
Carolina Wren     4
Winter Wren     1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     2
American Robin     5
Brown Thrasher     2
Cedar Waxwing     5
Orange-crowned Warbler     1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     7
White-throated Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal     2
American Goldfinch     2
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Slidell Quad , 2/3/10 (St Tammany Parish)
From: Tom Trenchard <trench19 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 22:53:50 -0600
LaBirders,

 

Glenn Ousset and I covered the Slidell Quad recently.

Highlights include Black-chinned Hummingbird and

Winter Wren.  Details follow.

 

Tom T.

 

-----

Tom Trenchard

Penn Mill Lakes Subdivision

Covington/Lake Ramsey Area

Martinville Quad Compiler

 

 

 

========================

> Location: Slidell Quad
> Observation date: 2/3/10
> Notes: Quad count. Partly cloudy and chilly; light breeze (variable). Mixed 
woods, marsh, residential. Two observers (Glenn Ousset, Tom Trenchard) starting 
at 6:30AM for 7.5 hours, 23.2 miles (22.2 driving; 1.0 walking). Bayou Paquet 
Rd, Thompson Rd, Gause Blvd W, Northshore Blvd, Airport Rd, Camp Villere Rd, 
Home Estate Dr; 
Oakmont Subdivision - St Andrews St, Oakmont Dr, Riviera Dr; Chateau Dr; Belaire Subdivision/Royal Golf Club - Belaire Blvd, Royal Dr; Meadows Blvd; Redwood St, Sunset Dr; Northshore Mall; Oriole St; Bayou Liberty Rd, Old Bayou Liberty Rd; West St, Salmen St, Vincent Rd, Sloat Rd, East St; Palm Lake Subdivision - Palm Dr, Oleander Dr, N. Palm Dr, Bonfouca Dr, Canulette Rd. > Number of species: 59 > > Canada Goose 6 feral. > Mallard (Domestic type) 28 > Brown Pelican 5 > Double-crested Cormorant 4 > Great Egret 8 > Snowy Egret 3 > Little Blue Heron 2 > Turkey Vulture 2 > Cooper's Hawk 1 > Red-shouldered Hawk 2 > Red-tailed Hawk 2 > American Kestrel 1 > Killdeer 7 > Laughing Gull 43 > Ring-billed Gull 60 > Eurasian Collared-Dove 4 > Mourning Dove 26 > Black-chinned Hummingbird 1 Oriole St residence; prev banded/ID'd by L. Beall. > Belted Kingfisher 1 > Red-bellied Woodpecker 20 > Downy Woodpecker 5 > Northern Flicker 2 > Pileated Woodpecker 1 > Eastern Phoebe 7 > Loggerhead Shrike 3 > Blue-headed Vireo 1 > Blue Jay 40 > American Crow 55 > Tree Swallow 2 > Carolina Chickadee 21 > Tufted Titmouse 8 > Brown-headed Nuthatch 2 > Carolina Wren 18 > House Wren 5 > Winter Wren 1 Camp Villere Rd & Home Estate Dr ditch. > Ruby-crowned Kinglet 8 > Eastern Bluebird 24 > American Robin 105 > Gray Catbird 7 > Northern Mockingbird 28 > European Starling 35 > Cedar Waxwing 50 > Orange-crowned Warbler 1 > Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 168 > Pine Warbler 6 > Palm Warbler (Western) 5 > Palm Warbler (Yellow) 7 > Common Yellowthroat 1 > Eastern Towhee 5 > Chipping Sparrow 10 > Savannah Sparrow 9 > Song Sparrow 8 > Swamp Sparrow 5 > White-throated Sparrow 4 > Dark-eyed Junco 11 > Northern Cardinal 30 > Red-winged Blackbird 176 > Common Grackle 2 > American Goldfinch 90 > House Sparrow 4 > > This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) _________________________________________________________________ Hotmail: Free, trusted and rich email service. http://clk.atdmt.com/GBL/go/201469228/direct/01/
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Bonita SW Quad , 2/7/10
From: Roselie Overby <rosebird8791 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 22:24:36 -0600
After seeing geese and blackbirds in large numbers in this quad (Bonita SW,
Morehouse Parish) when I passed through it on Sat on my way to LNPS meeting,
I thought I'd do a quick run which turned into 3+ hrs.  Best bird--a
BLUE-GRAY GNATCATCHER.  It was in brush on Green Lane across from the
flooded field where I found coots, gadwall and ring-necks.  I almost didn't
continue on the dirt road but was glad I did.  I also had a blue-headed
vireo nearby along with a field of snow geese.  I could not find a Ross's in
the huge flock.  I also saw many snows flying over near Little Missouri Loop
which was too rutted for me to drive on.  A VESPER SPARROW was another good
bird.  One large flock of blackbirds yielded only red-wings and cowbirds as
far as I could tell with the lousy light.  I found the rusty blackbirds at
another spot on the edge of the water (Bonne Idee).  
Roselie Overby


Location:     Bonita SW Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Notes:      1 person driving 18 mi, 3 hr. 10 min LA Hwy 2 to Bowie-Merton to
Bud to Green Lane back to Hwy 2.  Cold 40 to 42 F, heavy overcast.
Number of species:     50

Snow Goose     4000
Wood Duck     5
Gadwall     26
Ring-necked Duck     20
Double-crested Cormorant     9
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     1
Turkey Vulture     1
Northern Harrier     3
Sharp-shinned Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk     8
American Coot     50
Killdeer     6
Wilson's Snipe     1
Eurasian Collared-Dove     3
Mourning Dove     130
Belted Kingfisher     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     5
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     1
Northern Flicker     2
Eastern Phoebe     2
Loggerhead Shrike     4
Blue-headed Vireo     1
Blue Jay     11
American Crow     6
Carolina Chickadee     6
Tufted Titmouse     2
Carolina Wren     4
Golden-crowned Kinglet     3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     1
American Robin     1
Northern Mockingbird     1
Brown Thrasher     1
European Starling     3
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     12
Eastern Towhee     1
Vesper Sparrow     1
Savannah Sparrow     120
Song Sparrow     4
White-throated Sparrow     20
White-crowned Sparrow     9
Dark-eyed Junco     4
Northern Cardinal     20
Red-winged Blackbird     450
Eastern Meadowlark     35
Rusty Blackbird     10
Common Grackle     1
Brown-headed Cowbird     200
House Sparrow     5

This report was generated automatically by eBird
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com 
Version: 9.0.733 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2674 - Release Date: 02/07/10
13:35:00
Subject: White-throated Sparrows
From: Terry Davis <trdavis22 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 18:53:35 -0800
Labirders,  Walked out on the balcony about 10 minutes ago after an awesome 
play to hear the local gp. of WTSP  pinkin loudly. Not positive, but I'm almost 
100% sure they were saying "Porter"...................... WHO DAT! 


Terry 



Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Harrell Lake Quad , 2/7/10
From: Stephen Pagans <slp_4-7 AT ATT.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 18:03:48 -0800
Location:    Harrell Lake Quad, Union Parish
Observation date:    2/7/10
Notes:    Weather was cold, breezy and cloudy.  I started this survey at 12:48, 
went for 2 hr. 55 min and walked 1.3 miles. 

Number of species:    26

Wood Duck    3
Double-crested Cormorant    7
Turkey Vulture    3
Red-bellied Woodpecker    2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker    1
Downy Woodpecker    1
Northern Flicker    3
Pileated Woodpecker    1
Blue-headed Vireo    1
Blue Jay    7
American Crow    7
Fish Crow    2
Carolina Chickadee    3
Tufted Titmouse    4
Carolina Wren    2
Winter Wren    2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    3
Hermit Thrush    20
Gray Catbird    1
Brown Thrasher    10
Pine Warbler    2
Eastern Towhee    5
Song Sparrow    1
White-throated Sparrow    2
Northern Cardinal    4
American Goldfinch    1

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Subject: Re: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/7/10
From: Nancy L Newfield <nancy AT CASACOLIBRI.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 17:36:25 -0600
Janine,

At 01:18 PM 2/7/2010, janine robin wrote:

>>Location:     Folsom Quad  St Tammany Parish
>>Observation date:     2/7/10 My 
>>backyard/Blackwell Lane, very tip of north St Tammany Parish
>>Notes:      Noticed the Rufous Hummer at 
>>6:40,first one ever in my yard.So,started a 
>>list since I was looking at birds from my 
>>window.Managed to get a picture of the FM 
>>Rufous so I could get Linda Beall to verify for 
>>me. 1hr/2observers/yard only/6:30 to 7:30 AM.

Rufous Hummingbirds are on the move.  In River 
Ridge yesterday, I caught an adult male that had 
been banded in southern Alabama in September and 
he has remained on site until about 2 weeks ago.

NLN

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Nancy L Newfield
  Casa Colibrí
  Metairie, Louisiana USA
  nancy AT casacolibri.net
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Subject: Highlights from SW Louisiana (2/7/2010)
From: jared wolfe <jdwolfe80 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 14:35:00 -0800
Hello Louisiana Birders,

Yesterday (2/7/2010) Glen Seehoulzer, Mike Harvey and I undertook a fairly 
extensive birding trip beginning on the 99 off of I-10. Here is a brief 
narrative including highlights: 


Shorebird flocks in several rice fields off of 99 were impressive, we counted 
12 STILT SANDPIPERS. There was a single PEREGRINE FALCON hunting a flock 
comprised of ~ 900 Long-billed Dowitchers, 40 Dunlin, a few Western Sandpiper, 
and a few Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs. We spent a few hours walking through 
over grown fields and flushed 8 LE CONTE’S SPARROWS; we also flushed 6 
WILSON’S SNIPE. We got brief glimpses of a MERLIN and a COOPER'S HAWK flying 
through the area. We also explored one short-grassy and seemingly abandoned 
field looking for Sprague’s Pipits until a farmer asked what we were doing in 
his field… having just arrived in Louisiana, I was unaware private property 
does not need to be marked as such... thankfully the farmer was understanding 
and told us “he was not going to call the law.†Therefore, being 
law-abiding and formerly-naïve citizens, our invasive search for pipits came 
to a premature conclusion… without any luck. 


Next, we explored LacassineNWR. In amongst several Lesser Scaup we had a 
candidate for a female GREATER SCAUP. This particular bird was situated next to 
several Lesser Scaup and was noticeably larger, with a Greater Scaup-like head 
morphology (slopping to a gently rounded-head which peaked above the eye when 
relaxed), the bill was more wide and larger relative to adjacent Lesser Scaup, 
with a more extensive white cheek patch. We had great looks at a KING RAIL 
responding to playbacks and found a group of ~150 BLACK-BELLIED WHISTLING DUCKS 
and a single Little Blue Heron. The 4†Alligator relaxing in the shallows was 
also exciting. Immediately outside the refuge we had 2 BALD EAGLES in a large 
snag. 


On the coast, in Oak Grove, we identified a few new birds for the day including 
Chipping Sparrow, Blue-headed Vireo, Brown Thrasher, Golden-crowned Kinglet and 
Hairy Woodpecker. 


From Oak Grove we drove to Holly Beach where a SEASIDE SPARROW responded to our 
playback. We had quality looks at a dancing REDDISH EGRET, Tricolored Heron and 
Roseate Spoonbill which were all in the scope with a single look. We got 
glimpses of a Clapper Rail swimming across a marsh. On the beach, we found two 
PIPING PLOVERS mixed in with Black-bellied Plovers, Least Sandpipers, Dunlin, 
Willet, two SEMIPALMATED PLOVERS and a few Western Sandpipers. Another 
PEREGRINE FALCON was flying above the beach. There were several Royal Terns 
associating with Caspian Terns, and many Laughing, Ring-billed and a few 
Herring Gulls. At sunset, we concluded our trip at the marsh next to the jetty 
where a NELSON’S SHARP-TAILED SPARROW responded to our playback and provided 
quality looks. At dusk ~125 BLACK SKIMMERS were flying up the channel to roost 
and we had audibly detected ~3 Marsh Wrens and ~4 Clapper Rails. 


In total we had 106 species, which was not bad considering we did not focus on 
finding many common species (Chickadees, Goldfinches, House Fiches, Downy 
Woodpecker etc.). 


Epilogue: Post-birding festivities included the parade in Lafayette and eating 
frog-legs and Gator at Pat’s in Henderson. Viva Louisiana and Happy birding, 


Jared Wolfe


      
Subject: Lake Arthur Quad, 2/6/10
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 14:20:04 -0600
Labird,
	Yesterday Dave Patton and I split up in the Lake Arthur Quad and each 
put in about 4 hours. My additions bring the total for the quad to 103 
species; Dave's will add more to it. There are still some expected birds 
to add.
	The Lake Arthur quad surrounds the town of Lake Arthur, and is nicely 
halved into N and S by a big bridge. I did the southern half, which 
includes the hunting clubs off of Hwy 717. The only odd birds I came up 
with were 4 Bronzed Cowbirds, a species which has been making inroads in 
the rice country.


Paul Conover
Lafayette



Location:     Lake Arthur Quad
Observation date:     2/6/10
Number of species:     72

Greater White-fronted Goose     180
Snow Goose     200
Cackling Goose     57
American Wigeon     2
Mallard     2
Northern Shoveler     4
Northern Pintail     210
Green-winged Teal     12
Neotropic Cormorant     1
Double-crested Cormorant     2
Anhinga     1
Great Blue Heron     5
Great Egret     60
Snowy Egret     5
Little Blue Heron     1
Black-crowned Night-Heron     2
White Ibis     20
White-faced Ibis     150
Turkey Vulture     3
Northern Harrier     17
Red-shouldered Hawk     1
Red-tailed Hawk     21
American Kestrel     8
Black-bellied Plover     1
Killdeer     120
Greater Yellowlegs     15
Long-billed Dowitcher     20
Wilson's Snipe     1
Laughing Gull     20
Ring-billed Gull     40
Gull-billed Tern     1
Eurasian Collared-Dove     2
Mourning Dove     25
Inca Dove     2
Red-bellied Woodpecker     4
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     9
Downy Woodpecker     3
Northern Flicker     1
Eastern Phoebe     12
Loggerhead Shrike     9
White-eyed Vireo     1
Blue-headed Vireo     4
Blue Jay     4
Carolina Chickadee     6
Carolina Wren     8
House Wren     6
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     14
Hermit Thrush     6
American Robin     45
Northern Mockingbird     12
Brown Thrasher     1
European Starling     10
Cedar Waxwing     40
Orange-crowned Warbler     10
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     55
Pine Warbler     10
Common Yellowthroat     8
Field Sparrow     1
Savannah Sparrow     220
Song Sparrow     11
Lincoln's Sparrow     1
Swamp Sparrow     14
White-throated Sparrow     16
Northern Cardinal     35
Red-winged Blackbird     5000
Eastern Meadowlark     45
Brewer's Blackbird     1
Common Grackle     60
Boat-tailed Grackle     120
Bronzed Cowbird     4
Brown-headed Cowbird     75
American Goldfinch     1
Subject: Duson Quad, 2/7/10; Harris's Hawk
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 14:14:47 -0600
Labird,
	On my way to the Branch Quad I was surprised to see the recently 
invisible Harris's Hawk at its "usual" spot on Hwy 90, so I birded the 
quad for a while (=1:28). This is the first time the Harris's Hawk has 
been recorded for the Duson Quad; it had been AWOL since early January. 
I believe Duson is now at 128 species.

Paul Conover
Lafayette



Location:     Duson Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Notes:      Harris's Hawk on Hwy 90 about 1 mile W of Rayne outskirts.
Number of species:     43

Mottled Duck     1
Great Blue Heron     8
Great Egret     20
Snowy Egret     1
Cattle Egret     3
White Ibis     70
White-faced Ibis     3
Harris's Hawk     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     3
Red-tailed Hawk     8
American Kestrel     3
Lesser Yellowlegs     1
Long-billed Dowitcher     2
Ring-billed Gull     50
Rock Pigeon     2
Eurasian Collared-Dove     2
Inca Dove     4
Barred Owl     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     2
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     2
Northern Flicker     1
Eastern Phoebe     3
Loggerhead Shrike     1
Blue Jay     2
crow sp.     2
Tree Swallow     60
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     2
Eastern Bluebird     3
American Robin     10
Northern Mockingbird     4
European Starling     10
American Pipit     30
Cedar Waxwing     4
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     15
Pine Warbler     4
Chipping Sparrow     3
Savannah Sparrow     45
Song Sparrow     2
Swamp Sparrow     1
White-throated Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal     12
Red-winged Blackbird     60
Great-tailed Grackle     8
House Sparrow     6
Subject: Branch Quad, 2/7/10
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 14:06:51 -0600
Labird,
	Branch is N of Rayne in Acadia Parish.

Paul Conover
Lafayette



Location:     Branch Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Notes:      Up hwy 35, W on Branch Hwy. 
Rusty Blackbirds (2m 4f) on Cedar Road next to cemetery--responded to Screech Owl call. Number of species: 55 Great Blue Heron 8 Great Egret 70 Snowy Egret 2 Cattle Egret 1 White Ibis 4 White-faced Ibis 20 Turkey Vulture 4 Sharp-shinned Hawk 1 Red-shouldered Hawk 6 Red-tailed Hawk 12 American Kestrel 3 Killdeer 80 Greater Yellowlegs 12 Lesser Yellowlegs 2 Long-billed Dowitcher 40 Ring-billed Gull 40 Herring Gull 1 Eurasian Collared-Dove 2 Mourning Dove 1 Belted Kingfisher 2 Eastern Phoebe 5 Loggerhead Shrike 1 White-eyed Vireo 2 Blue Jay 4 American Crow 8 Tree Swallow 25 Carolina Chickadee 2 Carolina Wren 6 House Wren 5 Sedge Wren 1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet 10 Eastern Bluebird 3 Hermit Thrush 6 American Robin 20 Gray Catbird 1 Northern Mockingbird 8 Brown Thrasher 1 European Starling 15 American Pipit 40 Cedar Waxwing 10 Orange-crowned Warbler 4 Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 35 Pine Warbler 1 Common Yellowthroat 2 Chipping Sparrow 15 Savannah Sparrow 120 Song Sparrow 4 Swamp Sparrow 2 White-throated Sparrow 6 Northern Cardinal 18 Red-winged Blackbird 10000 Rusty Blackbird 6 Common Grackle 50 Brown-headed Cowbird 200 House Sparrow 5 This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/7/10
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 13:43:28 -0600
Went out this morning locally to pick some low hanging fruit for the Little 
Woods quad in New Orleans, which includes much of Bayou Sauvage NWR. Got 
previously unrecorded King and Virginia rails, Sedge and Marsh wrens. I also 
found the Inca Doves at Little Woods, where now apparently resident. Best 
bird was the Bell's Vireo in the same spot where found on the New Orleans 
CBC and once again in early January. This time I got some video and a couple 
of digital photos. Not much, but enough. I believe this brings Little Woods 
to 149, with a number of easy birds to pick up.

David Muth
New Orleans

----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 1:34 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Little Woods Quad , 2/7/10




Location:     Little Woods Quad
Observation date:     2/7/10
Notes:      LWBA, DPM, 4 ph, 8 pm, 1 on foot; Orleans Par., Little Woods and 
levee, Michoud interchange area I-10.
Number of species:     72

Wood Duck     2
Gadwall     45
American Wigeon     2
Mallard     12     wild on refuge
Mottled Duck     9
Blue-winged Teal     60
Northern Shoveler     55
Green-winged Teal     2
Ring-necked Duck     10
Lesser Scaup     2
Pied-billed Grebe     2
Double-crested Cormorant     6
Great Blue Heron     1
Great Egret     11
Snowy Egret     1
Little Blue Heron     1
Cattle Egret     3
White Ibis     55
Black Vulture     4
Turkey Vulture     8
Cooper's Hawk     1
Red-shouldered Hawk     3
Red-tailed Hawk     4
American Kestrel     1
King Rail     5     Michoud interchange, v.t.
Virginia Rail     2
Sora     6
Common Moorhen     20
American Coot     80
Killdeer     2
Wilson's Snipe     1
Laughing Gull     15
Ring-billed Gull     30
Caspian Tern     1
Rock Pigeon     25
Eurasian Collared-Dove     8
White-winged Dove     20
Mourning Dove     55
Inca Dove     2     Little Woods
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     2
Downy Woodpecker     5
Northern Flicker     2
Eastern Phoebe     9
Loggerhead Shrike     2
Bell's Vireo     1     V.T. and photo; stakeout since CBC
Blue Jay     12
American Crow     15
Carolina Chickadee     8
Carolina Wren     5
House Wren     4
Sedge Wren     5
Marsh Wren     11
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     8
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher     2
American Robin     1
Gray Catbird     4
Northern Mockingbird     11
Brown Thrasher     1
European Starling     100
Cedar Waxwing     75
Orange-crowned Warbler     9
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     15
Common Yellowthroat     13
Savannah Sparrow     6
Song Sparrow     11
Swamp Sparrow     45
White-throated Sparrow     2
Northern Cardinal     16
Red-winged Blackbird     30
Eastern Meadowlark     2
Boat-tailed Grackle     35
House Sparrow     15

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/7/10
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 13:18:07 -0600
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Sunday, February 07, 2010 1:04 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/7/10


>
>
> Location:     Folsom Quad  St Tammany Parish
> Observation date:     2/7/10 My backyard/Blackwell Lane, very tip of north 
> St Tammany Parish
> Notes:      Noticed the Rufous Hummer at 6:40,first one ever in my 
> yard.So,started a list since I was looking at birds from my window.Managed 
> to get a picture of the FM Rufous so I could get Linda Beall to verify for 
> me. 1hr/2observers/yard only/6:30 to 7:30 AM.
> Number of species:     21
>
> Canada Goose     7
> Mourning Dove     9
> Rufous Hummingbird     1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     3
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Northern Flicker     1
> Blue Jay     2
> American Crow     4
> Carolina Chickadee     2
> Tufted Titmouse     3
> Carolina Wren     2
> American Robin     2
> Cedar Waxwing     10
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     2
> Pine Warbler     6
> Chipping Sparrow     8
> White-throated Sparrow     7
> Northern Cardinal     20
> Red-winged Blackbird     14
> House Finch     4
> Purple/House Finch     1
> American Goldfinch     80
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Odd (?) Woodpecker Behavior
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2010 09:35:34 -0600
This morning I found three Pileated Woodpeckers and a Yellow Hammer (AKA 
Northern Flicker) hanging like acrobats from limber branches in a neighbor's 
crepe myrtle bush/tree. They were clearly feeding on seed pods. As many 
gardners know, many crepe myrtles are hybrids and do not generate seeds. 
Sort of interesting watching those big birds hanging upside down swinging 
from those very limber branches. 

Never really took time to notice woodpeckers in crepe myrtles. Here in NW 
Rapides Parish, I regularly see goldfinches working the seed pods in crepe 
myrtles during their cool-cold month stays.

Morning birds nothing to get excited about: Double-crested Cormorant, 
Mourning Dove, Inca Dove, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Downy Woodpecker, Northern 
Flicker, Pileated Woodpecker, Eastern Phoebe, Blue Jay, American Crow, Fish 
Crow, Carolina Chickadee, Tufted Titmouse, Carolina Wren, Eastern Bluebird, 
Northern Mockingbird, Pine Warbler, Chipping Sparrow, White-throated 
Sparrow, Northern Cardinal, and American Goldfinch.

Jay Huner

--
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Martinville Quad , 2/4/10 - St. Tammany - Bronzed Cowbird
From: Tom Trenchard <trench19 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 22:43:25 -0600
LaBirders,

 

I wasn't planning on a count this day, but when a Bronzed Cowbird showed up

at one of my feeders I decided to put in an hour.  Details follow.

 

Tom T.



-----
Tom Trenchard
Penn Mill Lakes Subdivision
Covington/Lake Ramsey Area
Martinville Quad Compiler


====================================


> 
> Location: Martinville Quad
> Observation date: 2/4/10
> Notes: Yard count due to 1st of season Bronzed Cowbird. Cloudy, cool, rainy, 
breeze none to light. 

> Number of species: 21
> 
> Canada Goose 2 feral.
> Snowy Egret 1
> Red-shouldered Hawk 1
> Killdeer 1
> Mourning Dove 8
> Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
> Blue Jay 4
> Carolina Chickadee 2
> Tufted Titmouse 1
> American Robin 1
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 2
> Pine Warbler 1
> Eastern Towhee 1
> Chipping Sparrow 30
> White-throated Sparrow 4
> Dark-eyed Junco 1
> Northern Cardinal 10
> Red-winged Blackbird 100
> Bronzed Cowbird 1 FOS.
> Brown-headed Cowbird 14
> American Goldfinch 40
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Re: Canada Goose in Wright, goose die-off
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 20:44:15 -0600
Labird,
	I should have noted that Canada Geese which are potentially of 
non-feral stock are Review List birds, and that Dave and I will submit 
documentation on it.


Paul Conover
Lafayette





Paul Conover wrote:
> Labird,
>     Dave Patton and I had a Canada Goose in a mind-bogglingly large 
> flock of Snow Geese NE of Wright today. The flock is located in the 
> square mile between Maree Michel, Meridian Line, and Tom Road, and Hwy 
> 712. This is quite a few miles from the nearest flock of feral Canadas, 
> in the Lake Arthur area, in an area where I've never seen any "Canadas" 
> except Cacklings before.
>         The Canada stood out once discovered. It was taller than the 
> Snows, and much larger and taller than the Cackling.
>     Otherwise the flock was pretty much solid Snows--or at least, what 
> we could see of it. I saw one Cackling which fortunately passed by the 
> Canada at one point allowing side by side comparison. Dave saw a small 
> number of Ross's.
>         We also encountered a lot of dead and dying Snow Geese in the 
> area. I thought at first that these were hunting casualties, but there 
> were many too many for that, perhaps 30-40. On the way back I stopped to 
> talk to my cousin, who he informed me that aflatoxin is believed to be 
> the cause of the die-off. I hadn't heard about that yet.
> 
> 
> Paul Conover
> Lafayette
> 
> 
Subject: Canada Goose in Wright, goose die-off
From: Paul Conover <zoiseaux AT COX.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 20:40:04 -0600
Labird,
	Dave Patton and I had a Canada Goose in a mind-bogglingly large flock 
of Snow Geese NE of Wright today. The flock is located in the square 
mile between Maree Michel, Meridian Line, and Tom Road, and Hwy 712. 
This is quite a few miles from the nearest flock of feral Canadas, in 
the Lake Arthur area, in an area where I've never seen any "Canadas" 
except Cacklings before.
         The Canada stood out once discovered. It was taller than the 
Snows, and much larger and taller than the Cackling.
	Otherwise the flock was pretty much solid Snows--or at least, what we 
could see of it. I saw one Cackling which fortunately passed by the 
Canada at one point allowing side by side comparison. Dave saw a small 
number of Ross's.
         We also encountered a lot of dead and dying Snow Geese in the 
area. I thought at first that these were hunting casualties, but there 
were many too many for that, perhaps 30-40. On the way back I stopped to 
talk to my cousin, who he informed me that aflatoxin is believed to be 
the cause of the die-off. I hadn't heard about that yet.


Paul Conover
Lafayette
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - West Monroe South Quad , 2/6/10
From: Stephen Pagans <slp_4-7 AT ATT.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 17:47:00 -0800
We took a break from chasing the Trumpeter Swans found north of West Monroe and 
the D'Arbonne Bayou to do the following short survey. 



Location:    West Monroe South Quad
Observation date:    2/6/10
Notes:    Weather was cloudy, breezy and cold.  Joan Brown, Charlie Lyon, and 
Steve Pagans started this suvey at 12:40 pm, went for 1 hr. 5 min. and covered 
0.5 miles. 

Number of species:    13

Turkey Vulture    1
American Kestrel    1
Killdeer    1
Blue Jay    4
American Crow    1
Sedge Wren    2
American Robin    1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    6
Savannah Sparrow    6
Henslow's Sparrow    1
Le Conte's Sparrow    3
Song Sparrow    3
Swamp Sparrow    4

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - West Monroe N Quad , 2/6/10
From: Stephen Pagans <slp_4-7 AT ATT.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 17:44:08 -0800
Location:    West Monroe N Quad
Observation date:    2/6/10
Notes:    Weather was cloudy and cold.  Joan Brown, Charlie Lyon and Steve 
Pagans started this survey at 8:55 am at the D'Arbonne NWR west side 
observation tower and went for 1.5 hours. 

Number of species:    40

Wood Duck    13
Gadwall    38
Mallard    8
Northern Pintail    36
Canvasback    15
Redhead    1  (first one seen on the refuge area this winter)
Ring-necked Duck    55
Lesser Scaup    10
Ruddy Duck    1
Pied-billed Grebe    1
Double-crested Cormorant    15
Turkey Vulture    4
Bald Eagle    1  (Mature)
Red-shouldered Hawk    1
Red-tailed Hawk    1
American Coot    4
Bonaparte's Gull    5
Ring-billed Gull    1
Forster's Tern    10
Red-bellied Woodpecker    3
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker    2
Downy Woodpecker    1
Hairy Woodpecker    1
Northern Flicker    2
Pileated Woodpecker    2
Eastern Phoebe    2
Blue Jay    3
American Crow    3
Fish Crow    5
crow sp.    2
Carolina Chickadee    3
Tufted Titmouse    3
Brown Creeper    1
Carolina Wren    3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    4
Hermit Thrush    1
American Robin    1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    1
White-throated Sparrow    12
Northern Cardinal    6
American Goldfinch    4

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Subject: Prospecting for Orphan Quad Birds - Latanier Quad , 2/6/10
From: Huner Jay V <jvh0660 AT LOUISIANA.EDU>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 19:32:20 -0600
 A really long day with a late start in the quad but, last two day birds were 
Wood Duck and Hairy Woodpecker to bring the quad totals to about 8 hr 30 min. 
and 64 birds. The ducks were within 30 yards of a well traveled road but the 
slough was very well hidden with trees and brush. In fact, a low beaver dam 
created the slough by daming the grown up drainage ditch! 


Guess I shouldn't be surprised by picking up Gray Catbird in appropriate 
habitat. So far in 2010, I've found 3 and 1 catbirds in the Afeman Quad and now 
1 in the Latanier Quad. 


Simply cannot find any Brewer's or Rusty Blackbirds anywhere! Red-winged 
Blackbirds dominate all the flocks I've found - at least 95% of the birds 
present whether in flocks of 50-100 or the huge megaflocks. 


Subject: Fwd: eBird Report - Latanier Quad , 2/6/10

Location: Latanier Quad
Observation date: 2/6/10
Notes: Latanier Quad entirely in Rapides Parish. General area of Latanier and 
Poland, Lock & Dam No. 2 on Red River. West of river. LA 457 [south of 
Alexandria]. 1 observer, start 9:00 AM CST, 5 hr 20 min., distance 19.4 miles. 

Number of species: 57

Wood Duck 7
Lesser Scaup 1
Double-crested Cormorant 43
Great Blue Heron 4
Great Egret 6
Black Vulture 2
Turkey Vulture 32
Northern Harrier 1
Red-tailed Hawk 5
American Kestrel 10
Killdeer 122
Spotted Sandpiper 1
Least Sandpiper 11
Rock Pigeon 3
Mourning Dove 23
Belted Kingfisher 1
Red-bellied Woodpecker 23
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 4
Downy Woodpecker 4
Hairy Woodpecker 1
Northern Flicker 12
Pileated Woodpecker 2
Eastern Phoebe 5
Loggerhead Shrike 5
Blue Jay 34
American Crow 45
Fish Crow 2
Carolina Chickadee 3
Tufted Titmouse 4
Carolina Wren 6
House Wren 3
Golden-crowned Kinglet 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 10
Eastern Bluebird 18
American Robin 135
Gray Catbird 1
Northern Mockingbird 21
Brown Thrasher 1
European Starling 425
American Pipit 24
Cedar Waxwing 50
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 8
Pine Warbler 1
Chipping Sparrow 60
Savannah Sparrow 43
Song Sparrow 1
White-throated Sparrow 24
White-crowned Sparrow 6
Dark-eyed Junco 4
Northern Cardinal 59
Red-winged Blackbird 3520
Eastern Meadowlark 55
Common Grackle 15
Brown-headed Cowbird 375
American Goldfinch 95
House Sparrow 5

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


------- End of Forwarded Message -------

--

 
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Des Allemands Quad , 2/6/10
From: Phillip Wallace <PWallace AT NEWMANSCHOOL.ORG>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 19:21:18 -0600
Labirders,
 
David Muth and I spent some time this morning atlassing in the Des Allemands 
Quad. Northern Watertrhushes are becoming routine, it seems. The Swainson's 
Hawk was very unusual, but clealry seen in flight by David. 

 
Good BIrding,
 
Phillip Wallace

________________________________

 
From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org [mailto:do-not-reply AT ebird.org]
Sent: Sat 2/6/2010 7:18 PM
To: Phillip Wallace
Subject: eBird Report - Des Allemands Quad , 2/6/10

5.25 hours
 
2 observers
 
15 miles



Location:     Des Allemands Quad
Observation date:     2/6/10
Number of species:     78

Snow Goose     1     Blue Goose - flyover
Wood Duck     2
Mottled Duck     4
Blue-winged Teal     2
Pied-billed Grebe     4
Brown Pelican     32
Double-crested Cormorant     26
Anhinga     1
Great Blue Heron     6
Great Egret     44
Snowy Egret     37
Cattle Egret     3
Black-crowned Night-Heron     2
White Ibis     400
Plegadis sp.     15
Black Vulture     38
Turkey Vulture     51
Bald Eagle     8
Northern Harrier     1     Near-adult plumage
Red-shouldered Hawk     10
Swainson's Hawk     1     Flyover - DPM; underwing pattern clearly seen
Red-tailed Hawk     3
American Kestrel     6
Peregrine Falcon     1
Sora     1
Common Moorhen     5
Killdeer     45
Lesser Yellowlegs     5
Laughing Gull     47
Ring-billed Gull     48
Rock Pigeon     4
Eurasian Collared-Dove     2
White-winged Dove     25
Mourning Dove     45
Belted Kingfisher     5
Red-bellied Woodpecker     21
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     3
Downy Woodpecker     13
Hairy Woodpecker     2
Northern Flicker     2
Pileated Woodpecker     3
Eastern Phoebe     27
Loggerhead Shrike     9
White-eyed Vireo     2
Blue-headed Vireo     4
Blue Jay     27
American Crow     145
Carolina Chickadee     29
Tufted Titmouse     5
Carolina Wren     28
House Wren     8
Golden-crowned Kinglet     1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     8
Eastern Bluebird     6
Hermit Thrush     2
American Robin     150
Gray Catbird     1
Northern Mockingbird     32
European Starling     125
American Pipit     76
Cedar Waxwing     72
Orange-crowned Warbler     21
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     78
Pine Warbler     2
Palm Warbler     1     Heard only - PAW
Northern Waterthrush     1     Video
Common Yellowthroat     4
Savannah Sparrow     19
Song Sparrow     1
Swamp Sparrow     14
White-throated Sparrow     9
Northern Cardinal     66
Red-winged Blackbird     550
Eastern Meadowlark     32
Common Grackle     250
Boat-tailed Grackle     250
Brown-headed Cowbird     7
American Goldfinch     65
House Sparrow     13

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 

Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad 2/6/10,St tammany
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 18:04:57 -0600
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Saturday, February 06, 2010 5:58 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/6/10


>
>
> Location:     Folsom Quad
> Observation date:     2/6/10
> Notes:      St tammany Parish/Hwy25 btwn Blackwell ln and Stone HIll 
> Rd.Drove 5.8miles/1.5hrs/1 observer.Cold/windy/overcast. Surveyed Damiano 
> rd and Stone Hill Rd.Not much going on as far as seeing birds.
> Number of species:     20
>
> American Kestrel     1
> Killdeer     30
> Mourning Dove     1
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     3
> Eastern Phoebe     1
> Loggerhead Shrike     2
> Blue Jay     2
> American Crow     3
> Carolina Chickadee     12
> Carolina Wren     1
> Eastern Bluebird     4
> American Robin     130
> Northern Mockingbird     5
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     20
> Pine Warbler     5
> White-throated Sparrow     2
> Northern Cardinal     6
> Red-winged Blackbird     84
> Eastern Meadowlark     6
> Brown-headed Cowbird     3
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Fwd: eBird Report - Denham Springs Quad , 2/6/10
From: Bob & Karen Pierson <piersor AT COX.NET>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 16:52:57 -0500
  
> 
> Location:     Denham Springs Quad
> Observation date:     2/6/10
> Notes: 3 observers(Bob & Karen Pierson, Winston Caillouet) - 3hrs 45min & 
5.3miles - 3.8 miles/30 min by car & 1.5 miles/ 3hr 15 min on foot . All in EBR 
Parish (Woodlawn Acres BREC Park/Antioch BREC Park/Phillips Rd off Tiger Bend 
Rd.) 

> Number of species:     45
> 
> Canada Goose     2
> Double-crested Cormorant     4
> Great Blue Heron     6
> Great Egret     4
> Black Vulture     18
> Turkey Vulture     1
> Osprey     1
> Sharp-shinned Hawk     1
> Red-tailed Hawk     5
> American Kestrel     1
> Killdeer     6
> Wilson's Snipe     15
> Mourning Dove     20
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     11
> Downy Woodpecker     2
> Northern Flicker     3
> Pileated Woodpecker     5
> Eastern Phoebe     1
> Loggerhead Shrike     2
> Blue Jay     12
> American Crow     14
> Fish Crow     1
> Carolina Chickadee     19
> Tufted Titmouse     4
> Carolina Wren     4
> Golden-crowned Kinglet     5
> Eastern Bluebird     10
> American Robin     219
> Northern Mockingbird     10
> Brown Thrasher     2
> European Starling     45
> American Pipit     15
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     36
> Eastern Towhee     4
> Vesper Sparrow     4
> Savannah Sparrow     4
> Song Sparrow     1
> Swamp Sparrow     1
> White-throated Sparrow     2
> Northern Cardinal     35
> Red-winged Blackbird     62
> Eastern Meadowlark     4
> Common Grackle     162
> American Goldfinch     20
> House Sparrow     8
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 

Subject: Exotic Waterfowl at Kenner City Park
From: Michael Hilferty <nolabird2 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 15:51:35 -0600
LABIRD:

Yesterday I was birding the La Branche Quad and made my way to the Kenner
City Park. I found an array of normal/expected Louisiana wintering
waterfowl, but I also found a handful of ducks such as a Mandarin Duck, 1 or
2 Tufted Ducks, and numerous other species. Some had plastic zip-ties on
their legs while others (a majority of the expected LA birds) did not. They
seemed to be rather tame, which is probably why they're at the City Park.
Does anyone know the origin of these birds?

Michael Hilferty
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Baton Rouge W Quad , 2/5/10
From: Michael Hilferty <nolabird2 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Sat, 6 Feb 2010 15:07:42 -0600
Survey done Friday morning with Jacob Cooper. Started at 7:05 a.m. and went
for 1 hour 25 minutes around the LSU lakes system.

Michael Hilferty

Location:     Baton Rouge W Quad
Observation date:     2/5/10
Notes:      Survey done around the City Park/LSU Lakes system in Baton Rouge
with Jacob Cooper. Started at the beach on May street, went around half of
CP lake and then around University Lake. Temps in the high 40s and winds at
5-10 mph. A light fog and clouds covered the area. Count of Green Herons
notable as well as Red-headed Woodpecker. Large flock of MODOs (~20) seen as
well.
Number of species:     42

Canada Goose     2   ?Domestic?
Muscovy Duck (Domestic type)     20
Wood Duck     10
Mallard     5
Mallard (Domestic type)     20
Double-crested Cormorant     30
Anhinga     1
Great Blue Heron     6
Great Egret     22
Snowy Egret     26
Tricolored Heron     2
Cattle Egret     2
Green Heron     3
Black-crowned Night-Heron     2
Red-shouldered Hawk     1
American Coot     28
Killdeer     2
Ring-billed Gull     4
Caspian Tern     1
Forster's Tern     1
Rock Pigeon     60
Mourning Dove     35
Red-headed Woodpecker     1
Red-bellied Woodpecker     1
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     1
Downy Woodpecker     4
Eastern Phoebe     2
Loggerhead Shrike     2
Blue Jay     9
Purple Martin     3
Tree Swallow     2
Carolina Chickadee     1
Carolina Wren     1
American Robin     8
Northern Mockingbird     4
Brown Thrasher     3
European Starling     28
Cedar Waxwing     40
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     15
Song Sparrow     1
Northern Cardinal     6
Red-winged Blackbird     30
Common Grackle     10
House Sparrow     22

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(
http://ebird.org/content/la/)
Subject: Re: Fw: eBird Report - Covington Quad , 2/5/10
From: H M <tashayoda2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 20:30:52 -0800
Sorry, that should be "Yellow rumped warbler (myrtle)" in the list that I just 
sent. 

Handheld birds doesn't differentiate and I keep forgetting to change it in 
ebird. 

Holly Morales




________________________________
From: H M 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 10:06:25 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Fw: eBird Report - Covington Quad , 2/5/10

>
> Location:    Covington Quad
> Observation date:    2/


>
> Location:    Covington Quad
> Observation date:    2/5/10
> Notes:      My yard, -( feeders, wooded,)  along Loretta Drive. (wooded, & 
open lots) 

> Number of species:    16
Partly Cloudy
1 observer, 1 hour, 0.25 miles
Holly Morales
>
> Great Egret    1
> Red-tailed Hawk    1
> Mourning Dove    2
> Red-bellied Woodpecker    1
> Pileated Woodpecker    1
> Eastern Phoebe    1
> American Crow    1
> Carolina Chickadee    4
> Carolina Wren    1
> Eastern Bluebird    1
> American Robin    1
> Yellow-rumped Warbler    35
> Chipping Sparrow    2
> White-throated Sparrow    2
> Northern Cardinal    25
> American Goldfinch    15
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
> 



Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Covington Quad , 2/5/10
From: H M <tashayoda2 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 20:06:25 -0800
>
> Location:    Covington Quad
> Observation date:    2/


>
> Location:    Covington Quad
> Observation date:    2/5/10
> Notes:      My yard, -( feeders, wooded,)  along Loretta Drive. (wooded, & 
open lots) 

> Number of species:    16
Partly Cloudy
1 observer, 1 hour, 0.25 miles
Holly Morales
>
> Great Egret    1
> Red-tailed Hawk    1
> Mourning Dove    2
> Red-bellied Woodpecker    1
> Pileated Woodpecker    1
> Eastern Phoebe    1
> American Crow    1
> Carolina Chickadee    4
> Carolina Wren    1
> Eastern Bluebird    1
> American Robin    1
> Yellow-rumped Warbler    35
> Chipping Sparrow    2
> White-throated Sparrow    2
> Northern Cardinal    25
> American Goldfinch    15
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
> 



Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/5/10, St Tammany Parish
From: janine robin <j-probin1982 AT PEOPLEPC.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 22:11:09 -0600
----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 8:19 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Folsom Quad , 2/5/10


>
> 2 observers/Janine Robin and Mary Mehaffey
> Location:     Folsom Quad
> Observation date:     2/5/10
> Notes:      Folsom Quad/StTammany Parish/driving/walking 3.2 mi/2 hours/2 
> observers/Hwy 1080/graci rd/Phillips rd/ overcast in the 50's.Birded from 
> the roads,all private property,pasteurs,ponds/hardwood forest.
> Number of species:     40
>
> Wood Duck     2
> Ring-necked Duck     4
> Great Egret     1
> Black Vulture     3
> Turkey Vulture     4
> Red-tailed Hawk     1
> American Kestrel     1
> Mourning Dove     7
> Barred Owl     1
> Red-headed Woodpecker     4
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     8
> Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     3
> Downy Woodpecker     1
> Northern Flicker     4
> Pileated Woodpecker     1
> Eastern Phoebe     3
> Blue Jay     7
> American Crow     10
> Carolina Chickadee     20
> Tufted Titmouse     2
> Brown-headed Nuthatch     3
> Carolina Wren     10
> Ruby-crowned Kinglet     4
> Eastern Bluebird     11
> American Robin     355
> Gray Catbird     2
> Northern Mockingbird     6
> Cedar Waxwing     51
> Orange-crowned Warbler     3
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     82
> Pine Warbler     3
> Eastern Towhee     6
> Chipping Sparrow     11
> White-throated Sparrow     13
> Dark-eyed Junco     1
> Northern Cardinal     9
> Red-winged Blackbird     55
> Common Grackle     10
> American Goldfinch     5
> House Sparrow     2
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 
Subject: Wilson's Snipe - Collinston West Quad , 2/5/10
From: Stephen Pagans <slp_4-7 AT ATT.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:52:53 -0800
One crop field that was extremely wet after last night's rain, had the large 
number of Wilson's Snipe.  It happened to be the most I had ever seen together 
and the number may be conservative. 


Location:    Collinston West Quad
Observation date:    2/5/10
Notes:    Weather was cloudy, breezy and cold.  I started this survey at 10:45 
am, went for 3.5 hours and covered 10 miles (1.6 walking) in the southeast part 
of the quad. 

Number of species:    48

Double-crested Cormorant    1
Great Blue Heron    4
Great Egret    4
Black Vulture    3
Turkey Vulture    7
Northern Harrier    1
Red-tailed Hawk    4
American Kestrel    3
Merlin    1
Killdeer    80
Greater Yellowlegs    18
Wilson's Snipe    250
Ring-billed Gull    1
Eurasian Collared-Dove    9
Mourning Dove    66
Red-bellied Woodpecker    7
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker    2
Downy Woodpecker    2
Northern Flicker    2
Eastern Phoebe    2
Loggerhead Shrike    3
Blue Jay    4
American Crow    28
Fish Crow    64
crow sp.    9
Carolina Chickadee    6
Tufted Titmouse    1
Carolina Wren    2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    1
Eastern Bluebird    3
Hermit Thrush    1
American Robin    9
Northern Mockingbird    2
European Starling    41
American Pipit    46
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    4
Savannah Sparrow    87
Fox Sparrow    3
Song Sparrow    30
Swamp Sparrow    5
White-throated Sparrow    13
White-crowned Sparrow    12
Northern Cardinal    20
Red-winged Blackbird    210
Eastern Meadowlark    6
Rusty Blackbird    6
Common Grackle    21
blackbird sp.    1825
American Goldfinch    1
House Sparrow    10

This report was generated automatically by eBird v2(http://ebird.org)
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/5/10
From: glenn ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:23:42 -0800
1 observer, 5 hrs 40 min from 6:20am., 6 miles.

Glenn Ousset



1 observer, 5 hrs 40 min from 6:20am., 6 miles.

Glenn Ousset


----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 8:05:20 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/5/10



Location:    Chalmette Quad
Observation date:    2/5/10
Notes:      Brackish and fresh marsh at north edge of Chalmette, St Bernard 
Parish, small woodlots, brushy edges, wet and dry grassland, residential area 
and yard with feeders. 

Number of species:    65

Gadwall    250
Mallard    2    not domestic
Mottled Duck    9
Blue-winged Teal    22
Northern Shoveler    2
Lesser Scaup    75
Hooded Merganser    9
Pied-billed Grebe    9
American White Pelican    165
Brown Pelican    22
Double-crested Cormorant    90
Anhinga    1
Great Blue Heron    2
Great Egret    6
Snowy Egret    4
Little Blue Heron    1
Tricolored Heron    9
Black-crowned Night-Heron    90
Yellow-crowned Night-Heron    2    adult
White Ibis    80
Turkey Vulture    1
Osprey    3
Northern Harrier    3    1 male
Red-tailed Hawk    3
American Kestrel    2
King Rail    1    close approach to call, then called.
Virginia Rail    1    close approach to call, silent.
Sora    1    close approach to call, silent.
Common Moorhen    20
American Coot    1800
Killdeer    2
Black-necked Stilt    12
Greater Yellowlegs    1
Wilson's Snipe    1
Bonaparte's Gull    1
Laughing Gull    6
Ring-billed Gull    10
Forster's Tern    2
Rock Pigeon    30
Mourning Dove    12
Belted Kingfisher    1
Downy Woodpecker    1
Eastern Phoebe    1
Loggerhead Shrike    1
Blue Jay    2
American Crow    2
Tree Swallow    125
Carolina Chickadee    2
Marsh Wren    2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    3
Northern Mockingbird    3
European Starling    35
Orange-crowned Warbler    2
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    25    mostly around wax myrtles. 1 in yard.
Pine Warbler    4    all in yard. love peanut butter.
all have visited several days.
Palm Warbler (Western)    3    brushy edge of marsh
Palm Warbler (Yellow)    2    brushy edge of marsh
Common Yellowthroat    3
Savannah Sparrow    15
Swamp Sparrow    12
Red-winged Blackbird    200
Eastern Meadowlark    2
Boat-tailed Grackle    10
House Finch    5
House Sparrow    10

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/4/10
From: glenn ousset <gousset AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:21:03 -0800
1 observer, 1 site, 1 hr from 5:30pm..
To get the Cooper's Hawk on the 2010 quad list.

Glenn Ousset

----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "do-not-reply AT ebird.org" 
To: gousset AT bellsouth.net
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 7:12:44 PM
Subject: eBird Report - Chalmette Quad , 2/4/10



Location:    Chalmette Quad
Observation date:    2/4/10
Notes:      Yard birds in Chalmette, St Bernard Parish, near end of all day 
rain. 

Number of species:    4

Cooper's Hawk    1
Orange-crowned Warbler    1
House Finch    3
American Goldfinch    2

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Logansport E. Quad , 2/5/10 Fem-type Spotted Towhee, 2 WEVI, 5 GRCA
From: Terry Davis <trdavis22 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:15:47 -0800
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Terry Davis 
To: labird-l AT listserv.LSU.edu
Sent: Fri, February 5, 2010 6:09:43 PM
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Logansport E. Quad , 2/5/10 Fem-type Spotted 
Towhee, 2 WEVI, 5 GRCA 



Add: 1 Lincoln's Sparrow. caught the omission late and entered, hit continue. 
Evidently it did not register. Will re-enter at e-bird. 


Location:    Logansport E. Quad
Observation date:    2/5/10
Notes:      2 observers, 9 p hrs, 16 miles.  Hubert and I had an excellent day 
for passerines in previously unsurveyed n and w portions of the quad. We found 
a fem.-type SPTO as best bird , 2 WEVI and 5 GRCA among comparatively high  nos 
of some passerine species compared, especially for miles,  to earlier surveys 
this LWBA season. 45 to 53 deg., 100% cloudy with light drizzle to 505 clouds. 
wind calm to 5-8. Directions to SPTO: From town of Logansport at intersection 
of Gum st. and Uncas st. Take gum street left from Uncas (e) 1 mile to un-named 
rd. on right (s) immediately past O.E Price memorial cemetery. Go right (s) for 
6 tenths of a mile. There are many continuous brushy thickets throughout this 
length. Bird was on right (w) side in thicket near rd. Btw, water indicated on 
the map of this quad is unreachable for the most part. 

Number of species:    64

Wood Duck    2
Double-crested Cormorant    17
Great Blue Heron    3
Black Vulture    17
Turkey Vulture    37
Red-shouldered Hawk    3
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    2
Rock Pigeon    28
Mourning Dove    21
Red-headed Woodpecker    5
Red-bellied Woodpecker    28
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker    8
Downy Woodpecker    9
Hairy Woodpecker    2
Northern Flicker    17
Pileated Woodpecker    3
Eastern Phoebe    12
Loggerhead Shrike    1
White-eyed Vireo    2  at separate locales
Blue-headed Vireo    3
Blue Jay    80
American Crow    57
Fish Crow    6
Carolina Chickadee    27
Tufted Titmouse    26
White-breasted Nuthatch    3
Brown-headed Nuthatch    13
Brown Creeper    1
Carolina Wren    66
House Wren    8
Winter Wren    7
Sedge Wren    2
Golden-crowned Kinglet    5
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    34
Eastern Bluebird    48
Hermit Thrush    10
American Robin    305
Gray Catbird    5   2 were in one general area, rest scattered locales. Area 
has much potential 

Northern Mockingbird    37
Brown Thrasher    25
European Starling    1
Cedar Waxwing    35
Orange-crowned Warbler    7
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    85
Pine Warbler    33
Spotted Towhee    1 fem-type- in notes above.
Eastern Towhee    30
Chipping Sparrow    31
Field Sparrow    2
Fox Sparrow    13 Scattered gps of 1 to 3 in thickets, as usual, were often 
with/near BRTH. Much singing. Always an interesting close comparison of "smack" 
calls. 

Song Sparrow    22
Swamp Sparrow    13
White-throated Sparrow    292- Too conservative.  many gps. of 20 to 30 indivs.
Dark-eyed Junco    29
Northern Cardinal    132
Red-winged Blackbird    1983
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Rusty Blackbird    4 . Castor Bayou by boat approx. 1 mile W of Sabine River. 
Thanks to Shelby Goodman. Other passerines notably low on water. 

Common Grackle    3348
Brown-headed Cowbird    43
House Finch    2
American Goldfinch    47
House Sparrow    1

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 



     
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Logansport E. Quad , 2/5/10 Fem-type Spotted Towhee, 2 WEVI, 5 GRCA
From: Terry Davis <trdavis22 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:09:43 -0800
Add: 1 Lincoln's Sparrow. caught the omission late and entered but evidently 
it did not register. Will re-enter. 


Location:    Logansport E. Quad
Observation date:    2/5/10
Notes:      2 observers, 9 p hrs, 16 miles.  Hubert and I had an excellent day 
for passerines in previously unsurveyed n and w portions of the quad. We found 
a fem.-type SPTO as best bird , 2 WEVI and 5 GRCA among comparatively high  nos 
of some passerine species compared, especially for miles,  to earlier surveys 
this LWBA season. 45 to 53 deg., 100% cloudy with light drizzle to 505 clouds. 
wind calm to 5-8. Directions to SPTO: From town of Logansport at intersection 
of Gum st. and Uncas st. Take gum street left from Uncas (e) 1 mile to un-named 
rd. on right (s) immediately past O.E Price memorial cemetery. Go right (s) for 
6 tenths of a mile. There are many continuous brushy thickets throughout this 
length. Bird was on right (w) side in thicket near rd. Btw, water indicated on 
the map of this quad is unreachable for the most part. 

Number of species:    64

Wood Duck    2
Double-crested Cormorant    17
Great Blue Heron    3
Black Vulture    17
Turkey Vulture    37
Red-shouldered Hawk    3
Red-tailed Hawk    1
Killdeer    2
Rock Pigeon    28
Mourning Dove    21
Red-headed Woodpecker    5
Red-bellied Woodpecker    28
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker    8
Downy Woodpecker    9
Hairy Woodpecker    2
Northern Flicker    17
Pileated Woodpecker    3
Eastern Phoebe    12
Loggerhead Shrike    1
White-eyed Vireo    2  at separate locales
Blue-headed Vireo    3
Blue Jay    80
American Crow    57
Fish Crow    6
Carolina Chickadee    27
Tufted Titmouse    26
White-breasted Nuthatch    3
Brown-headed Nuthatch    13
Brown Creeper    1
Carolina Wren    66
House Wren    8
Winter Wren    7
Sedge Wren    2
Golden-crowned Kinglet    5
Ruby-crowned Kinglet    34
Eastern Bluebird    48
Hermit Thrush    10
American Robin    305
Gray Catbird    5   2 were in one general area, rest scattered locales. Area 
has much potential 

Northern Mockingbird    37
Brown Thrasher    25
European Starling    1
Cedar Waxwing    35
Orange-crowned Warbler    7
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)    85
Pine Warbler    33
Spotted Towhee    1 fem-type- in notes above.
Eastern Towhee    30
Chipping Sparrow    31
Field Sparrow    2
Fox Sparrow    13 Scattered gps of 1 to 3 in thickets, as usual, were often 
with/near BRTH. Much singing. Always an interesting close comparison of "smack" 
calls. 

Song Sparrow    22
Swamp Sparrow    13
White-throated Sparrow    292- Too conservative.  many gps. of 20 to 30 indivs.
Dark-eyed Junco    29
Northern Cardinal    132
Red-winged Blackbird    1983
Eastern Meadowlark    1
Rusty Blackbird    4 . Castor Bayou by boat approx. 1 mile W of Sabine River. 
Thanks to Shelby Goodman. Other passerines notably low on water. 

Common Grackle    3348
Brown-headed Cowbird    43
House Finch    2
American Goldfinch    47
House Sparrow    1

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 




Subject: Fw: eBird Report - Waldheim Quad , 2/5/10 St Tammany
From: Cham & Mary Mehaffey <mehaffey_mary AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 17:19:23 -0800
--- On Fri, 2/5/10, do-not-reply AT ebird.org  wrote:


From: do-not-reply AT ebird.org 
Subject: eBird Report - Waldheim Quad , 2/5/10
To: mehaffey_mary AT bellsouth.net
Date: Friday, February 5, 2010, 7:15 PM




Location:     Waldheim Quad
Observation date:     2/5/10
Notes:      St Tammany Parish; Northwest area of Quad; cloudy, cool; 2 
observers; 2 hrs 15 min; 3.9 miles driving; Fitzgerald Church Rd, Allison Rd, 
Section Rd, Nelson Rd, McLain Rd. 

Number of species:     39

Mallard (Domestic type)     5
Black Vulture     2
Turkey Vulture     4
Red-shouldered Hawk     3
Red-tailed Hawk     2
American Kestrel     1
Killdeer     2
Mourning Dove     3
Red-headed Woodpecker     6
Red-bellied Woodpecker     12
Downy Woodpecker     2
Northern Flicker     6
Pileated Woodpecker     2
Eastern Phoebe     2
Loggerhead Shrike     1
Blue Jay     53
American Crow     12
Carolina Chickadee     21
Tufted Titmouse     16
Brown-headed Nuthatch     5
Carolina Wren     18
House Wren     1
Golden-crowned Kinglet     3
Ruby-crowned Kinglet     1
Eastern Bluebird     12
American Robin     130
Gray Catbird     1
Northern Mockingbird     18
European Starling     8
Cedar Waxwing     35
Orange-crowned Warbler     1
Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     95
Pine Warbler     11
Eastern Towhee     19
White-throated Sparrow     25
Northern Cardinal     31
Red-winged Blackbird     240
Eastern Meadowlark     20
Common Grackle     24
American Goldfinch     21

This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 

Subject: new WBA stats and coverage maps
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 18:04:24 -0600
LABIRD: I just posted new unofficial Winter Bird Atlas stats and Mike  
Baldwin's revised coverage map.

I'll be gone for 10 days, so you're likely not to get another revision  
until I return.  Don't find any mistakes until I get back.

Turn that map fred and green -- thanks for all the hard work.

*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Eagle Expo Morgan City
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 17:00:43 -0600
Labird-
     One more thing to consider during this busy February is the upcoming
Eagle Expo at Morgan City, LA on the 25th-27th of the month.  Check it out
at the Cajun Coast website:

http://www.cajuncoast.com/public/events/eagleexpo/

and/or the BTNEP website:

http://eagles.btnep.org/

Some fun-filled boat trips into the swamp, a great Friday evening banquet
and featured speaker, and some excellent Saturday AM presentations on
eagles, LA raptors, Important Bird Areas, etc.

Cheers,

Steve Cardiff
Subject: Re: Possible coordination of winter bird atlasing in SW LA
From: David Muth <dpmuth AT COX.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 16:42:35 -0500
Triumph, which has had contributions from many, including Steve (Black-headed 
Grosbeak) will remain triumphant. 


David

---- "Steven W. Cardiff"  wrote: 

=============
Labirders-
      For the final two weekends of the winter bird atlas, Donna Dittmann
and I are hoping to invest some time in various blocks of quadrangles in SW
LA.  In particular, I would like to target the Thornwell and Sweet Lake
areas on the weekend of 13-14 Feb, and coastal Cameron Parish on the weekend
of 20-21 Feb.

     For the Thornwell area, we would like to personal invest time in the
Thornwell Quad itself, but we invite others to participate in pushing the
surrounding block of quads to the 10 or 20 hour thresholds and or generally
beef up species lists.  Surrounding Quads are Hayes, Lacassine, Welsh South,
Jennings, Lake Arthur, Mallard Bay, Latania Lake, and Lake Misere.

     In the Sweet Lake area, Donna and I hope to concentrate on the
Boudreaux Lake and Sweet Lake Quads, but other quads in that area (east of
the Calcasieu River and north of the Intracoastal Waterway) include all or
part of Hackberry, Moss Lake, Lake Charles SW, Lake Charles SE, and Iowa.

     For Coastal Cameron Parish, with a couple of exceptions, almost the
entire stretch needs attention, and it would be nice to at least get the
Cameron Quad total well above the Triumph Quad total (just seeing if David
Muth is paying attention :-).

Of course, all this is dependent on the weather, so I will send out another
heads-up towards the middle of next week.  Anyone interested in this
coordinated effort can contact me off list.

Best,

Steve Cardiff

--
David Muth
New Orleans
Subject: Possible coordination of winter bird atlasing in SW LA
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 15:31:13 -0600
Labirders-
      For the final two weekends of the winter bird atlas, Donna Dittmann
and I are hoping to invest some time in various blocks of quadrangles in SW
LA.  In particular, I would like to target the Thornwell and Sweet Lake
areas on the weekend of 13-14 Feb, and coastal Cameron Parish on the weekend
of 20-21 Feb.

     For the Thornwell area, we would like to personal invest time in the
Thornwell Quad itself, but we invite others to participate in pushing the
surrounding block of quads to the 10 or 20 hour thresholds and or generally
beef up species lists.  Surrounding Quads are Hayes, Lacassine, Welsh South,
Jennings, Lake Arthur, Mallard Bay, Latania Lake, and Lake Misere.

     In the Sweet Lake area, Donna and I hope to concentrate on the
Boudreaux Lake and Sweet Lake Quads, but other quads in that area (east of
the Calcasieu River and north of the Intracoastal Waterway) include all or
part of Hackberry, Moss Lake, Lake Charles SW, Lake Charles SE, and Iowa.

     For Coastal Cameron Parish, with a couple of exceptions, almost the
entire stretch needs attention, and it would be nice to at least get the
Cameron Quad total well above the Triumph Quad total (just seeing if David
Muth is paying attention :-).

Of course, all this is dependent on the weather, so I will send out another
heads-up towards the middle of next week.  Anyone interested in this
coordinated effort can contact me off list.

Best,

Steve Cardiff
Subject: Grand Isle-Port Fourchon area atlasing this weekend
From: "Steven W. Cardiff" <scardif AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 15:15:08 -0600
Labirders-
     From Saturday into Monday (2/6-8) observers conducting Piping Plover
(etc.) surveys will also be winter bird atlasing in the Grand Isle-Port
Fourchon area.  I'd be surprised if anyone else is down there atlasing on
super bowl weekend, but just in case and to avoid potential overlap
(especially in car-accessible quadrangles spanning the Port Fourchon-Grand
Isle area)....  I don't know what areas we will be covering on which days,
but we will be atlasing everything on the immediate coast from the eastern
Timbalier Islands on the west in Terrebonne Parish east at least as far as
the East Grand Terre Island area of Jefferson/Plaquemines parishes.

Cheers,

Steve Cardiff
Subject: Re: Sora
From: Heather Mancuso <hmm1778 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 13:40:39 -0600
Thanks to Jacob Cooper's sharp eyes, we were lucky enough to see one last
Sunday during Jeff Harris' tour of the South Farm Complex of Sherburne WMA.
Wish we could have gotten a picture or two of it.  Great job!
Subject: Wood Stork cont.
From: John Conover <jconover AT LUMCON.EDU>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 11:00:02 -0600
all;

the juvi wood stork that was first spotted on the 20th of january is still
present towards the end of highway 56 in south terrebonne parish.  this
morning's sighting marks the 3rd consecutive week it has been seen.
apparently, it is getting abundant food from the ditches along highway 56.

best,

- j

************************************************
John Conover
LUMCON Library
Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium
8124 Highway 56
Chauvin, LA 70344
(985) 851-2875
************************************************
Subject: LA-Netiquette Plea
From: miriam <athena_9 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2010 07:56:51 -0600
Labird
 
The last 2 days' Labird digest transmissions included a discussion on
vulture behavior I found interesting.   It was not enjoyable reading,
however. 
 
Unfortunately the vulture thread was nearly buried in a pile of political
mess, multiple repeats and cyber-jibberish.  The political mess I found
pretty offensive (albeit lame), but relatively easy to dismiss for obvious
reasons.  Plus it's been properly taken care of, and for that I am thankful.
The repeats and cybergarbage I found much more irritating.
 
Again...admittedly nagging...:
 
A) Please don't simply hit "reply" when posting to this listserv.  
 
B) Please copy only the most relevant parts of an email to which you reply.

 
C) Please check your email program settings to ensure your transmission
isn't littered with extraneous characters like "=" and "20", and/or, it
doesn't post in a garbled form.
 
Though I'm tempted to simply hit "reply" and repeat the entire practically
unscrollable cf mess that is today's Labird transmission, I have more
consideration for my fellow Labird members than that.  
 
Is it just me and my old software?  Does no one else have this difficulty?
Feel free to reply privately offlist, so as not to continue trashing the
listserv with non-bird posts.
 
MiriamLDavey
BatonRougeLA
Subject: FW: eBird Report - Triumph Quad , 2/2/10
From: Tom Trenchard <trench19 AT HOTMAIL.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 20:12:43 -0600
LaBirders,

 

Triumph Quad count below done on February 2nd.

 

Highlights include:  Brown-crested Flycatcher, Broad-tailed Hawk,

Swainson's Hawk, Surf Scoter...


Tom T.

 


-----
Tom Trenchard
Penn Mill Lakes Subdivision
Covington/Lake Ramsey Area
Martinville Quad Compiler


==========================================

> Location: Triumph Quad
> Observation date: 2/2/10
> Notes: Includes area across LA from Fort Jackson; part of Fort Jackson 
grounds; east edge of woodlot adjacent to Fort; short distance along LA23. 
Clear and chilly; breeze none to light. Four observers (Janine Robin, Mary 
Mehaffey, Glenn Ousset, Tom Trenchard), starting at 9:15AM, for 4 hours, 50 
minutes, for about 3.5 miles walking & driving. 

> Number of species: 63
> 
> Lesser Scaup 1150
> Surf Scoter 1 Fort Jackson pond. Probably 1st winter male. Lengthy 
observation & photo. 

> Bufflehead 2 Fort Jackson pond.
> Hooded Merganser 1 Fort Jackson pond.
> Ruddy Duck 4
> American White Pelican 6
> Brown Pelican 13
> Double-crested Cormorant 17
> Anhinga 2
> Great Blue Heron 2
> Great Egret 2
> Snowy Egret 5
> Cattle Egret 6
> White Ibis 50 Flock in distance in flight.
> Plegadis sp. 20 Flock in distance in flight.
> Roseate Spoonbill 40 Flocks in distance in flight of 30 & 10.
> Black Vulture 1
> Turkey Vulture 23
> Osprey 2
> Northern Harrier 3
> Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
> Broad-winged Hawk 3 Field across LA23 from Fort. Multiple recent reports.
> Swainson's Hawk 1 In flight; wing pattern readily visible. Multiple recent 
reports. 

> Red-tailed Hawk 5
> American Kestrel 3
> Merlin 1 Field across LA23 from Fort.
> Spotted Sandpiper 1 Fort Jackson pond.
> Ring-billed Gull 5
> Mourning Dove 15
> Belted Kingfisher 10
> Red-bellied Woodpecker 2
> Yellow-bellied Sapsucker 1
> Downy Woodpecker 2
> Hairy Woodpecker 1
> Northern Flicker 4
> Eastern Phoebe 15
> Brown-crested Flycatcher 1 Field across LA23 from Fort. Reported by others. 
Responded to call. Photos taken. 3x5 submitted. 

> Loggerhead Shrike 3
> American Crow 6
> Tree Swallow 3
> Carolina Chickadee 2
> Carolina Wren 2
> House Wren 5
> Golden-crowned Kinglet 1 Woodlot; responded to call.
> Ruby-crowned Kinglet 7
> American Robin 2
> Gray Catbird 6
> Northern Mockingbird 12
> European Starling 5
> American Pipit 15 Side of levee in grass at Fort.
> Orange-crowned Warbler 7
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 30
> Palm Warbler (Yellow) 1
> Black-and-white Warbler 1 Woodlot. 3x5 submitted.
> Chipping Sparrow 1 Field across LA23 from Fort.
> Lark Sparrow 1 Field across LA23 from Fort.
> Savannah Sparrow 46
> Swamp Sparrow 4
> White-throated Sparrow 2 Field across LA23 from Fort.
> White-crowned Sparrow 5 Field across LA23 from Fort.
> Northern Cardinal 6
> Red-winged Blackbird 8
> Boat-tailed Grackle 1
> American Goldfinch 11
> 
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/) 


 		 	   		  
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Subject: Vulture Diet
From: Hubert Hervey <hawkeyehub1 AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 13:11:16 -0800
LA Bird,
Vultures are eating more animal matter than vegetable matter when they scatter 
bovine fecal material searching for food that suits them.  Cows can pass mucous 
secretions for two weeks after calving.  They also "drool" the same material 
when in season.  Their after-birth is a choice food item, as it is easily 
eaten, and often draws scores of both vulture species.  The fecal matter can 
contain bloody secretions from the bowels, especially if cattle are being fed a 
rough stemmed hay such as Johnson Grass harvested with over 4 weeks between 
cuttings. The intestinal lining is scratched by the harsh stems and bloody or 
mucous secretions will occur.  Vultures eat this material.  Cows will eat 
animal matter and pass it in their droppings a few days later, especially their 
own after-birth.  Further evidence is provided by the fact that vultures do not 
eat the contents of the rumen (all vegetable) or the other 3 stomachs of cattle 
carcasses of which I have 

 regretably seen hundreds.  That vegetable material remains for the beetles to 
devour. 

Hubert Hervey, retired dairy farmer
Subject: Fw: eBird Report - St. Tammany Quad , 2/3/10
From: "Harvey L. Patten" <puffin AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 14:20:58 -0600
Reached the 20 hour threshold and have posted 69 species for the quad.

Harvey L. Patten
Covington


----- Original Message ----- 
From: 
To: 
Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 2:17 PM
Subject: eBird Report - St. Tammany Quad , 2/3/10


>
>
> Location:     St. Tammany Quad
> Observation date:     2/3/10
> Notes:      Yesterday morning I birded in the northeastern section of the 
> quad along a 10.5 mile route for 5 hours beginning at 6:20 a.m.
> Number of species:     53
>
> Canada Goose     37
> Wood Duck     1
> Wild Turkey     7
> Great Blue Heron     1
> Great Egret     2
> Turkey Vulture     9
> Red-shouldered Hawk     4
> Red-tailed Hawk     1
> Killdeer     5
> American Woodcock     1
> Mourning Dove     12
> Red-bellied Woodpecker     21
> Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     3
> Downy Woodpecker     1
> Northern Flicker     14
> Pileated Woodpecker     4
> Eastern Phoebe     3
> Loggerhead Shrike     5
> Blue-headed Vireo     2
> Blue Jay     42
> American Crow     27
> Fish Crow     16
> Carolina Chickadee     7
> Tufted Titmouse     13
> Brown-headed Nuthatch     13
> Carolina Wren     13
> House Wren     1
> Ruby-crowned Kinglet     7
> Eastern Bluebird     19
> Hermit Thrush     2
> American Robin     170
> Gray Catbird     2
> Northern Mockingbird     17
> European Starling     1
> Cedar Waxwing     7
> Orange-crowned Warbler     2
> Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle)     175
> Pine Warbler     7
> Palm Warbler     2
> Common Yellowthroat     1
> Eastern Towhee     9
> Chipping Sparrow     8
> Savannah Sparrow     1
> Song Sparrow     3
> Swamp Sparrow     5
> White-throated Sparrow     4
> Dark-eyed Junco     3
> Northern Cardinal     34
> Red-winged Blackbird     51
> Eastern Meadowlark     4
> Common Grackle     1
> Brown-headed Cowbird     6
> American Goldfinch     14
>
> This report was generated automatically by eBird 
> v2(http://ebird.org/content/la/)
> 
Subject: extending WBA season by 1 day
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 12:49:12 -0600
LABIRD: given that the 10 Jan - 20 Feb schedule of this WBA season  
lopped off a critical Saturday at one end and would lop off a critical  
Sunday (21 Feb) at the other end, and furthermore given that a  
substantial portion of LABIRDERs will be unable to function mentally  
or physically on Super Bowl Sunday, and likely at least one subsequent  
day, I hereby proclaim the addition of one extra weekend day to the  
WBA sample period to make the sampling more equivalent to previous WBA  
periods .... call it Saints Amnesty Day?  In the name of science,

*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Please, no political posts
From: "James V. Remsen" <najames AT LSU.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 12:49:03 -0600
Wendy/LABIRD -- no need for this plea -- just follow guidelines for  
appropriate posts to LABIRD-L at the LABIRD-L website.  Basically, if  
it doesn't have to do with information on Louisiana birds, it's not  
appropriate, period, politics or otherwise.

Your Grouchy and Ruthless "listowner"


On Feb 4, 2010, at 10:46 AM, wendy rihner wrote:

> Labird:
>
> I think it might be a good idea NOT to send political postings on  
> LABIRD for a variety of reasons. I really don't care what anyone  
> thinks of any particular politician, and besides, that is not why I  
> have subscribed to LABIRD.  In fact, I would much rather read  
> someone's posting congratulating that poster on his or her first  
> yard robin.
>
> Thank you.
>
>
> Wendy Rihner
> Metairie, LA
> --- On Wed, 2/3/10, Maurice Duvic  wrote:

*****************************
J. V. Remsen
Museum of Natural Science
Foster Hall 119
LSU
Baton Rouge, LA 70803
225-578-2855
najamesLSU.edu
Subject: Re: Please, no political posts
From: Heather Mancuso <hmm1778 AT GMAIL.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 11:22:56 -0600
The offender was removed from the listserve.  See the post from Dr.  
Remsen.

Sent from hammerspace

On Feb 4, 2010, at 11:18 AM, "Tifft, Michael"   
wrote:

> That post does not belong in this List Serve.  Moderator?
>
> Sent with Good (www.good.com)
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From:   Joyce Bennett [mailto:jabird AT BELLSOUTH.NET]
> Sent:   Thursday, February 04, 2010 11:13 AM Central Standard Time
> To:     LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
> Subject:        Re: [LABIRD-L] Please, no political posts
>
> Wendy et al, I am sure that was truly an error posting but I will
> admit I read it and enjoyed it much more than the numerous postings of
> buzzards and owls.
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Feb 4, 2010, at 10:46 AM, wendy rihner  wrote:
>
>> Labird:
>>
>> I think it might be a good idea NOT to send political postings on
>> LABIRD for a variety of reasons. I really don't care what anyone
>> thinks of any particular politician, and besides, that is not why I
>> have subscribed to LABIRD.  In fact, I would much rather read
>> someone's posting congratulating that poster on his or her first
>> yard robin.
>>
>> Thank you.
>>
>>
>> Wendy Rihner
>> Metairie, LA
>> --- On Wed, 2/3/10, Maurice Duvic  wrote:
>>
>>
>> From: Maurice Duvic 
>> Subject: [LABIRD-L] Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>> To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
>> Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 10:31 PM
>>
>>
>> Vic
>> Author
>> Forty
>> Missions
>> Madison,MS
>> jsb8 AT webtv.net
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Ann Beam
>> Sent: Wednesday, February 3, 2010 4:01 PM
>> To: Ann Watterson, Danny Stancil, Susan Shelley, Jane C. Sanderson,
>> lorene phillips, Marion Herndon, Maurice Duvic, Coral Edwards, cari
>> ann crenshaw, maryann crenshaw, Peg Bedini, susan beam
>> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Ralph Heath
>> To: Ann Beam ; Bruce Foxworthy ; Edwin Floyd ; Joel Kimrey ; Mike
>> Winner ; Perry Nelson ; Samuel Johnson ; Susan Johnson ; Sylvia Jones
>> Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 3:24 PM
>> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Forwarded Message ----
>> From: jonah dawson 
>> To: anne mccutcheon ; billy taylor 
>> ; Bob Dawson ; bonnie lucas
>> ; dan medlin ; DONNA
>> MILLHORN ; ed craig ;
>> Linda Miller ; marion rich >> ; Mark Dawson ; Ralph Heath >> ; Roger Dawson ; Will H. Britt >>
>> Sent: Thu, January 28, 2010 6:27:55 PM
>> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Bennie Smith
>> To: Lois ; jonah
>> Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:43 AM
>> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>           Parallels  of Abraham Lincoln and B. H. Obama:
>>
>>           1.   Lincoln placed his hand on  the Bible for his
>> inauguration. Obama used the same Bible.
>>
>>           2.    Lincoln came from Illinois . Obama comes from
>> Illinois .
>>
>>           3.   Lincoln  served in the Illinois Legislature.. Obama
>> served in the Illinois Legislature.
>>
>>           4.   Lincoln had very little experience before becoming
>> President.. Obama had very little experience before becoming
>> President.
>>
>>           5.   Lincoln rode the train from Philadelphia to
>> Washington  for his inauguration. Obama rode the train from
>> Philadelphia to Washington for  his inauguration.
>>
>>           6.   Lincoln was a skinny lawyer.   Obama is a skinny
>> lawyer.
>>
>>           7.   Lincoln was a  Republican.  Obama is a skinny lawyer.
>>
>>           8.   Lincoln  was highly respected.  Obama is a skinny
>> lawyer.
>>
>>           9.    Lincoln was born in the United States . Obama is a
>> skinny lawyer.
>>
>>           10. Lincoln was honest, so honest he was called Honest
>> Abe.  Obama is  a skinny lawyer.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
> www.mcglinchey.com | www.CafaLawBlog.com
>
> Confidentiality Statement: This email may contain attorney-client  
> privileged or confidential information. It is for the sole use of  
> the intended recipient(s). If you have received this transmission in  
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> the original message to us at McGlinchey Stafford, 12th Floor, 601  
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>
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> See McGlinchey Stafford Disclaimer/Privacy Policy 
http://www.mcglinchey.com/disclaimer.html 

Subject: Re: Please, no political posts
From: "Tifft, Michael" <mtifft AT MCGLINCHEY.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 11:18:38 -0600
That post does not belong in this List Serve.  Moderator?

Sent with Good (www.good.com)


 -----Original Message-----
From:   Joyce Bennett [mailto:jabird AT BELLSOUTH.NET]
Sent:   Thursday, February 04, 2010 11:13 AM Central Standard Time
To:     LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject:        Re: [LABIRD-L] Please, no political posts

Wendy et al, I am sure that was truly an error posting but I will
admit I read it and enjoyed it much more than the numerous postings of
buzzards and owls.

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 4, 2010, at 10:46 AM, wendy rihner  wrote:

> Labird:
>
> I think it might be a good idea NOT to send political postings on
> LABIRD for a variety of reasons. I really don't care what anyone
> thinks of any particular politician, and besides, that is not why I
> have subscribed to LABIRD.  In fact, I would much rather read
> someone's posting congratulating that poster on his or her first
> yard robin.
>
> Thank you.
>
>
> Wendy Rihner
> Metairie, LA
> --- On Wed, 2/3/10, Maurice Duvic  wrote:
>
>
> From: Maurice Duvic 
> Subject: [LABIRD-L] Fw: Obama and Lincoln
> To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
> Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 10:31 PM
>
>
> Vic
> Author
> Forty
> Missions
> Madison,MS
> jsb8 AT webtv.net
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ann Beam
> Sent: Wednesday, February 3, 2010 4:01 PM
> To: Ann Watterson, Danny Stancil, Susan Shelley, Jane C. Sanderson,
> lorene phillips, Marion Herndon, Maurice Duvic, Coral Edwards, cari
> ann crenshaw, maryann crenshaw, Peg Bedini, susan beam
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ralph Heath
> To: Ann Beam ; Bruce Foxworthy ; Edwin Floyd ; Joel Kimrey ; Mike
> Winner ; Perry Nelson ; Samuel Johnson ; Susan Johnson ; Sylvia Jones
> Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 3:24 PM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ----- Forwarded Message ----
> From: jonah dawson 
> To: anne mccutcheon ; billy taylor 
 >; Bob Dawson ; bonnie lucas
> ; dan medlin ; DONNA
> MILLHORN ; ed craig ;
> Linda Miller ; marion rich  >; Mark Dawson ; Ralph Heath  >; Roger Dawson ; Will H. Britt  >
> Sent: Thu, January 28, 2010 6:27:55 PM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Bennie Smith
> To: Lois ; jonah
> Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:43 AM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>             Parallels  of Abraham Lincoln and B. H. Obama:
>
>             1.   Lincoln placed his hand on  the Bible for his
> inauguration. Obama used the same Bible.
>
>             2.    Lincoln came from Illinois . Obama comes from
> Illinois .
>
>             3.   Lincoln  served in the Illinois Legislature.. Obama
> served in the Illinois Legislature.
>
>             4.   Lincoln had very little experience before becoming
> President.. Obama had very little experience before becoming
> President.
>
>             5.   Lincoln rode the train from Philadelphia to
> Washington  for his inauguration. Obama rode the train from
> Philadelphia to Washington for  his inauguration.
>
>             6.   Lincoln was a skinny lawyer.   Obama is a skinny
> lawyer.
>
>             7.   Lincoln was a  Republican.  Obama is a skinny lawyer.
>
>             8.   Lincoln  was highly respected.  Obama is a skinny
> lawyer.
>
>             9.    Lincoln was born in the United States . Obama is a
> skinny lawyer.
>
>             10. Lincoln was honest, so honest he was called Honest
> Abe.  Obama is  a skinny lawyer.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

www.mcglinchey.com | www.CafaLawBlog.com

Confidentiality Statement: This email may contain attorney-client privileged or 
confidential information. It is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s). 
If you have received this transmission in error, immediately notify us by 
telephone at 504-586-1200 and return the original message to us at McGlinchey 
Stafford, 12th Floor, 601 Poydras Street, New Orleans, LA, 70130 via the United 
States Postal Service. 


***IRS Circular 230 Disclosure: Any tax advice contained in this email 
including any attachments, was not intended to be used, and cannot be used by 
you or anyone else, for the purpose of avoiding penalties imposed by the 
Internal Revenue Code or other law or for the purpose of marketing or 
recommending to any other party any transaction or other matter. 


We take steps to remove metadata in attachments sent by email, and any 
remaining metadata should be presumed inadvertent and should not be viewed or 
used without our express permission. If you receive an attachment containing 
metadata, please notify the sender immediately and a replacement will be 
provided. 


See McGlinchey Stafford Disclaimer/Privacy Policy 
http://www.mcglinchey.com/disclaimer.html 

Subject: Re: VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE
From: jared wolfe <jdwolfe80 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 09:03:31 -0800
Albatross consuming garbage has been well documented (see here for midway atoll 
problems with trash and albatross: 
http://www.fws.gov/midway/Midway_Atoll_NWR_Cigarette_Lighters.pdf). Because 
Albatross are surface feeders and commonly eat brightly colored flying fish 
roe, they have a propensity to eat small, brightly colored pieces of plastic. 
Colored lighters seem to be of particular concern. A good reason to quit 
smoking and not to litter... 


Similar problems have been observed with California Condors. Condor parents 
will bring small pieces of plastic (particularly bottle caps) to the nest which 
are consumed by young Condors. Some Condor biologists believe this behavior 
mimics the provisioning of bone chips to nestlings; bone chips provide an 
essential source of calcium for growing condor chicks. 


Happy birding!

Jared


----- Original Message ----
From: Aelita J Pinter 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Thu, February 4, 2010 10:30:48 AM
Subject: Re: [LABIRD-L] VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE

I don't believe there ever was a serious question of whether they get anything 
beneficial from naugahyde & rubber. The material was dropped (in large 
quantities, alas) into their world in the last rsgbzzzzzillisecond of their 
evolution. It obviously strongly reminds them of something edible, natural 
selection has not yet informed them that it's junk. Or, if it has, maybe we 
have not yet observed it. Unlike the tragic consequences for albatross chicks 
whose parents mistake floating junk for food, regurgitate it for their chicks - 
these starve. Wasn't there something about that on LABIRD (or, PBS) recently: 
skeleton of starved albatross chick, abdominal region packed with garbage. 

________________________________________
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds 
[LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Bill Hemeter [Whemeter AT AOL.COM] 

Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 8:26 AM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE

Duh?  What do you do when want to find information.  Google  it.

This is the best I could find.

_http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.3356/0892-1016%282007%2941%5B235%3AWDCAVE%5D2.0.CO%3B2?cookieSet=1&journalCode=rapt_ 

(http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.3356/0892-1016(2007)41[235:WDCAVE]2.0.CO;2?
cookieSet=1&journalCode=rapt)

Though my Spanish is poor, it appears that naugahyde and the like have no
nutritional value but, are, in fact deleterious, which was what I  expected.
Even vulture guts can't break down complex polycarbons.

Some of you may have access to the sources cited.

Dr. Bill
Lafayette, LA.



      
Subject: Re: Please, no political posts
From: Joyce Bennett <jabird AT BELLSOUTH.NET>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 11:07:01 -0600
Wendy et al, I am sure that was truly an error posting but I will  
admit I read it and enjoyed it much more than the numerous postings of  
buzzards and owls.

Sent from my iPhone

On Feb 4, 2010, at 10:46 AM, wendy rihner  wrote:

> Labird:
>
> I think it might be a good idea NOT to send political postings on  
> LABIRD for a variety of reasons. I really don't care what anyone  
> thinks of any particular politician, and besides, that is not why I  
> have subscribed to LABIRD.  In fact, I would much rather read  
> someone's posting congratulating that poster on his or her first  
> yard robin.
>
> Thank you.
>
>
> Wendy Rihner
> Metairie, LA
> --- On Wed, 2/3/10, Maurice Duvic  wrote:
>
>
> From: Maurice Duvic 
> Subject: [LABIRD-L] Fw: Obama and Lincoln
> To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
> Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 10:31 PM
>
>
> Vic
> Author
> Forty
> Missions
> Madison,MS
> jsb8 AT webtv.net
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ann Beam
> Sent: Wednesday, February 3, 2010 4:01 PM
> To: Ann Watterson, Danny Stancil, Susan Shelley, Jane C. Sanderson,  
> lorene phillips, Marion Herndon, Maurice Duvic, Coral Edwards, cari  
> ann crenshaw, maryann crenshaw, Peg Bedini, susan beam
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Ralph Heath
> To: Ann Beam ; Bruce Foxworthy ; Edwin Floyd ; Joel Kimrey ; Mike  
> Winner ; Perry Nelson ; Samuel Johnson ; Susan Johnson ; Sylvia Jones
> Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 3:24 PM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ----- Forwarded Message ----
> From: jonah dawson 
> To: anne mccutcheon ; billy taylor 
 >; Bob Dawson ; bonnie lucas  
> ; dan medlin ; DONNA  
> MILLHORN ; ed craig ;  
> Linda Miller ; marion rich  >; Mark Dawson ; Ralph Heath  >; Roger Dawson ; Will H. Britt  >
> Sent: Thu, January 28, 2010 6:27:55 PM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Bennie Smith
> To: Lois ; jonah
> Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:43 AM
> Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>             Parallels  of Abraham Lincoln and B. H. Obama:
>
>             1.   Lincoln placed his hand on  the Bible for his  
> inauguration. Obama used the same Bible.
>
>             2.    Lincoln came from Illinois . Obama comes from  
> Illinois .
>
>             3.   Lincoln  served in the Illinois Legislature.. Obama  
> served in the Illinois Legislature.
>
>             4.   Lincoln had very little experience before becoming   
> President.. Obama had very little experience before becoming  
> President.
>
>             5.   Lincoln rode the train from Philadelphia to  
> Washington  for his inauguration. Obama rode the train from  
> Philadelphia to Washington for  his inauguration.
>
>             6.   Lincoln was a skinny lawyer.   Obama is a skinny  
> lawyer.
>
>             7.   Lincoln was a  Republican.  Obama is a skinny lawyer.
>
>             8.   Lincoln  was highly respected.  Obama is a skinny  
> lawyer.
>
>             9.    Lincoln was born in the United States . Obama is a  
> skinny lawyer.
>
>             10. Lincoln was honest, so honest he was called Honest  
> Abe.  Obama is  a skinny lawyer.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
Subject: Please, no political posts
From: wendy rihner <clornda AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 08:46:56 -0800
Labird: 
 
I think it might be a good idea NOT to send political postings on LABIRD for a 
variety of reasons. I really don't care what anyone thinks of any particular 
politician, and besides, that is not why I have subscribed to LABIRD.  In fact, 
I would much rather read someone's posting congratulating that poster on his or 
her first yard robin.   

 
Thank you. 

 
Wendy Rihner
Metairie, LA 
--- On Wed, 2/3/10, Maurice Duvic  wrote:


From: Maurice Duvic 
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Fw: Obama and Lincoln
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Date: Wednesday, February 3, 2010, 10:31 PM


Vic
Author
Forty
Missions
Madison,MS
jsb8 AT webtv.net


-----Original Message-----
From: Ann Beam
Sent: Wednesday, February 3, 2010 4:01 PM
To: Ann Watterson, Danny Stancil, Susan Shelley, Jane C. Sanderson, lorene 
phillips, Marion Herndon, Maurice Duvic, Coral Edwards, cari ann crenshaw, 
maryann crenshaw, Peg Bedini, susan beam 

Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Ralph Heath 
To: Ann Beam ; Bruce Foxworthy ; Edwin Floyd ; Joel Kimrey ; Mike Winner ; 
Perry Nelson ; Samuel Johnson ; Susan Johnson ; Sylvia Jones 

Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 3:24 PM
Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln






----- Forwarded Message ----
From: jonah dawson 
To: anne mccutcheon ; billy taylor 
; Bob Dawson ; bonnie lucas 
; dan medlin ; DONNA MILLHORN 
; ed craig ; Linda Miller 
; marion rich ; Mark Dawson 
; Ralph Heath ; Roger Dawson 
; Will H. Britt  

Sent: Thu, January 28, 2010 6:27:55 PM
Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln



----- Original Message ----- 
From: Bennie Smith 
To: Lois ; jonah 
Sent: Thursday, January 28, 2010 11:43 AM
Subject: Fw: Obama and Lincoln









            Parallels  of Abraham Lincoln and B. H. Obama:

            1.   Lincoln placed his hand on  the Bible for his inauguration. 
Obama used the same Bible.    


            2.    Lincoln came from Illinois . Obama comes from Illinois .

            3.   Lincoln  served in the Illinois Legislature.. Obama served in 
the Illinois Legislature.  

              
            4.   Lincoln had very little experience before becoming  
President.. Obama had very little experience before becoming President.  

              
            5.   Lincoln rode the train from Philadelphia to Washington  for 
his inauguration. Obama rode the train from Philadelphia to Washington for  his 
inauguration. 

              
            6.   Lincoln was a skinny lawyer.   Obama is a skinny lawyer. 
              
            7.   Lincoln was a  Republican.  Obama is a skinny lawyer. 
              
            8.   Lincoln  was highly respected.  Obama is a skinny lawyer. 
              
            9.    Lincoln was born in the United States . Obama is a skinny 
lawyer. 

               
            10. Lincoln was honest, so honest he was called Honest Abe.  Obama 
is  a skinny lawyer. 



           

                 
                 

           

     




Subject: Re: Sora
From: Jonathan Clark <falloutbird_1 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 08:27:43 -0800
Excellent shot! I've yet to see a Sora myself. 




________________________________
From: thomas finnie 
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Sent: Wed, February 3, 2010 7:46:55 PM
Subject: [LABIRD-L] Sora

Labirders,

It's been almost a year since I started birding and I've been fortunate to
see all of the rails, thanks largely to the Yellow Rail / Rice Festival and
all the good folks who made it possible, except for the Sora and the Black
Rail. It was thrilling when a single Sora sauntered by the edge of the pool
at Lacassine Refuge poking about the grass / reeds in camera range.

Here is the image of the Sora to share with you.

http://i45.tinypic.com/2u77ouv.jpg

Have a Great Day and Happy Birding, :)
Tom



      
Subject: Re: VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE
From: Aelita J Pinter <apinter AT UNO.EDU>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 10:30:48 -0600
I don't believe there ever was a serious question of whether they get anything 
beneficial from naugahyde & rubber. The material was dropped (in large 
quantities, alas) into their world in the last rsgbzzzzzillisecond of their 
evolution. It obviously strongly reminds them of something edible, natural 
selection has not yet informed them that it's junk. Or, if it has, maybe we 
have not yet observed it. Unlike the tragic consequences for albatross chicks 
whose parents mistake floating junk for food, regurgitate it for their chicks - 
these starve. Wasn't there something about that on LABIRD (or, PBS) recently: 
skeleton of starved albatross chick, abdominal region packed with garbage. 

________________________________________
From: Bulletin Board for Dissemination of Information on Louisiana Birds 
[LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU] On Behalf Of Bill Hemeter [Whemeter AT AOL.COM] 

Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 8:26 AM
To: LABIRD-L AT LISTSERV.LSU.EDU
Subject: [LABIRD-L] VULTURES & NAUGAHYDE

Duh?  What do you do when want to find information.  Google  it.

This is the best I could find.

_http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.3356/0892-1016%282007%2941%5B235%3AWDCAVE%5D2.0.CO%3B2?cookieSet=1&journalCode=rapt_ 

(http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.3356/0892-1016(2007)41[235:WDCAVE]2.0.CO;2?
cookieSet=1&journalCode=rapt)

Though my Spanish is poor, it appears that naugahyde and the like have no
nutritional value but, are, in fact deleterious, which was what I  expected.
 Even vulture guts can't break down complex polycarbons.

Some of you may have access to the sources cited.

Dr. Bill
Lafayette, LA.
Subject: Jena East quad 2/1/10
From: Jonathan Clark <falloutbird_1 AT YAHOO.COM>
Date: Thu, 4 Feb 2010 08:25:19 -0800
LWBA
Jonathan Clark
Jena East quad in LaSalle Parish. 2/1/10. 
Time: 3 hrs and 57 minutes starting at 6:40 am. 
Distance Covered: about11 miles. 
Number of species: 38
Weather cold, gray, overcast. Started in my yard in town, went along a route 
through rural areas and country side and back into town to the park before 
returning home. Habitat includes residential areas, hardwood creek bottoms, 
pines (mostly young pine plantations), cutovers,  brushy/weedy/thickets and 
fence row habitat, some pastures, park area with large pines and other trees 
and some hardwood along the creek at the park. Observations from car, also made 
numerous stops where I got out and watched from along the road. 


Red-shouldered Hawk: 4

Mourning Dove: 1

Belted Kingfisher: 2

Red-headed Woodpecker: 2

Red-bellied Woodpecker: 7

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker: 1

Downy Woodpecker: 2

Northern Flicker: 4

Pileated Woodpecker: 1

Eastern Phoebe: 5

Blue Jay: 20

American Crow: 89

Carolina Chickadee: 10

Tufted Titmouse: 6

Brown-headed Nuthatch: 3

Carolina Wren: 14

House Wren: 3

Ruby-crowned Kinglet: 4

Eastern Bluebird: 3

Hermit Thrush: 2

American Robin: 82

Gray Catbird: 1

Northern Mockingbird: 5

Brown Thrasher: 3

Cedar Waxwing: 45

Yellow-rumped Warbler: 5

Pine Warbler: 7

Eastern Towhee: 5

Chipping Sparrow: 28

Song Sparrow: 2

Swamp Sparrow: 1

White-throated Sparrow: 56

Dark-eyed Junco: 31

Northern Cardinal: 36

Common Grackle: 300

Blackbird sp: 10

House Finch: 2

American Goldfinch: 24

House Sparrow: 9