Frequent Fliers. visit Southeast

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Frequent Fliers visit Southeast by Bob Armstrong and Marge Hermans from Southeast Alaska's Natural World From wintering grounds where they ve waited out the lean and cold months, birds come to Alaska each spring in search of high energy food to get them through the season of nesting and rearing young. Our still-extensive forests and their understory plants produce seeds and berries. Insects emerge from winter hiding. Wetlands spawn swarming clouds of mosquitoes, gnats, and midges. Young fish cluster in shallow water nurseries. And cold ocean waters burst with upwellings of nutrients, jump starting a food chain that will eventually feed untold 67 numbers of seabirds, sea mammals, and humans. By late spring Southeast s resident birds chickadees, ravens, hairy woodpeckers, Vancouver Canada geese, and others are joined by hordes of other avian adventurers. Some will stay here all summer long. Others stop just long enough to rest and refuel, then continue to nesting grounds farther north. Where do all the seasonal visitors come from? Decades of research are beginning to tell us. Most of the sandhill cranes that come through Southeast Alaska wintered in California s Central Valley and Carrizo Plain.

68 (Above left) The Pacific-slope flycatcher nests throughout Southeast s coastal rainforest and migrates to the Neotropics for the winter. (Above right) The subspecies of rubycrowned kinglet that we see in Southeast winters from southwestern British Columbia to west central California. (Opposite page) Rock sandpipers commonly nest in Western Alaska, but many spend the winter in Southeast. Neotropical Migrants Some 86 species, one-fourth of the bird species we might see in Southeast, are Neotropical migrants; that is, they breed in or migrate through Southeast Alaska then head for Mexico, Central America, or South America to spend the winter. A Pacific-slope flycatcher hawking insects from a Sitka spruce in June may have traveled 3,400 miles since leaving its winter home on the west coast of Mexico. A six-inch-long barn swallow nesting beneath the eaves of your garage may have flown 4,800 miles from Panama. And a greater yellowlegs plucking small fish from a tidal slough in Petersburg may have flown more than 9,000 miles from Tierra del Fuego at the southern tip of South America. Vireos, most species of warblers, and shorebirds such as American golden-plovers also come to Southeast from places south of our nation s southern border. Nearly all Neotropical migrants eat invertebrates. In summer they thrive on adult insects, insect larvae, and other foods in our forests, meadows, and wetlands. During the long daylight hours, perhaps with more space and fewer predators than in their winter homes, they are able to feed and raise young more successfully than they could if they stayed to the south. Birds from British Columbia and the Lower 48 About a third of the bird species we see in Southeast each year have wintered in British Columbia and the Lower 48 states. Most of our trumpeter swans and northern pintail ducks migrate only as far as farmers fields, productive marshes, and national wildlife refuges to the south. Trumpeter swans forage primarily in the fields of southwest British Columbia and western Washington. Alaska s northern pintails have strong ties to California, where about 85 percent of the pintails that breed in Alaska are estimated to overwinter. Many of our land birds, such as varied thrushes and fox sparrows, also need migrate only to British Columbia and along the west coast to find sufficient berries and seeds to sustain them through the winter. Birds from the North About 12 percent of the bird species we see in Southeast during winter come from areas north of our region. They migrate to Southeast in fall after nesting and spend the winter with us. We have seen flocks of more than 500 long-tailed

ducks feeding on tiny crustaceans near Douglas Island in midwinter, but come spring these birds head north. They may nest in Denali National Park or on the arctic coast of Alaska. Yellow-billed loons, looking like common loons except for their large, yellowish, upturned bills, are also here in winter, but come spring they head north. Some will perhaps nest on tundra lakes on the Seward Peninsula. Rock sandpipers, which spend winters with us, commonly nest in the Aleutian Islands and on islands of the Bering Sea. A few owls that live up north year round sometimes visit Southeast in small numbers for the winter. For example, people in Haines have seen a northern hawk owl every winter for the past several years; and in winter of 2000 a great gray owl thrilled Juneau birders with a visit. Where the Birds Come From Birds from the North 12% 25% Neotropical Migrants Birds from B.C. and the lower 48 34% 6% Oceanics 7% 16% Residents Asiatics Some 336 species of birds have been seen in Southeast Alaska. This graph groups those species according to where we think most of their members come from. 69

(Above left) Rednecked phalaropes spend the winters in the open ocean of the South Pacific. (Above right) Bramblings are Asiatic birds that occasionally wander into Southeast Alaska. 70 Oceanics About six percent of the birds in Southeast come from or across the open ocean, often from islands and distant continents. Short-tailed shearwaters, gullsized seabirds with long, slender wings, breed in southern Australia. An estimated 30 million of them migrate to the North Pacific in summer to feed. Red-necked phalaropes, which you can sometimes see spinning on the water to stir up food, winter on the open ocean in the South Pacific. Long-tailed jaegers are agile sea birds that catch food in mid-air after they ve chased gulls or terns and forced them to disgorge it. They come to Southeast after wintering off the coast of South America from Ecuador to Chile. Parasitic jaegers follow migrating arctic terns to pirate food from them on their long journeys, then some of them settle down to nest on the Yakutat forelands. Asiatics Only about six percent of the birds that have been seen in Southeast come from Asia, but these are the species that serious birdwatchers may find most exciting. The occurrence of these Asiatics in Alaska is facilitated by the state s closeness to Siberia. Though many of these species occur regularly in western Alaska, most of the ones we see in Southeast are vagrants. They have probably come quite by accident perhaps because they were lost or blown off course by a storm. That does not mean they are always reluctant to stay. A Steller s sea-eagle maintained residence up the Taku River near Juneau for several years, and a lesser black-backed gull once took up housekeeping in a colony of herring and glaucous-winged gulls at the face of Mendenhall Glacier. Whenever Asiatics show up in Southeast, people try to see them, some even coming from distant parts of the United States and hiring helicopters or float planes to arrange a sighting, as in the case of the Steller s sea-eagle. Eurasian wigeons are usually seen every year in the spring among American wigeons passing through Southeast or stopping here to breed. A European golden-plover was discovered one winter by a birder in Ketchikan. And sharp-tailed sandpipers, which closely resemble our common migrants, pectoral sandpipers, are seen in Southeast Alaska almost every year during fall.

Residents About 53 species, or 16 percent of the bird species found in Southeast, live here year round. Blue grouse, adult bald eagles, American dippers, and other resident birds stay because they can find enough to eat throughout the year. Blue grouse, which eat insects, buds, and flowers most of the year, have special bacteria in their gut that help them digest spruce needles, one of the few foods they can find in the winter. The bald eagles you see flapping across winter landscapes survive winter by finding fish and snatching occasional ducks and gulls. American dippers eat primarily aquatic insects, which are abundant in our streams all year round. Common ravens seem to take advantage of anything edible, including winter-killed deer, road-killed porcupines, and garbage from dumpsters and garbage cans. Staying in Southeast year-round has several advantages. Resident birds face none of the perils of long journeys. They can begin nesting before migrant birds arrive, often laying a larger number of eggs and sometimes having time to raise more than one brood per season. But in return they must survive the rigors of winter, with less food, shorter daylight in which to feed, and temperatures that require extra energy in order to keep warm. Worldwide Connections The fact that 84 percent of the species seen here come from elsewhere does say something important to those of us living in Southeast. It reminds us that what happens here depends very much on what happens in other parts of the world where those birds spend their time. It also reminds us we are a crucial link in the yearly cycle each of those species goes through in order to survive. For birds facing the rigors and perils of long-distance travel, every part of the itinerary breeding grounds, wintering grounds, and stopover points where they rest and fuel up are all crucial to their survival. As with any chain, the migration patterns are only as strong as their weakest link. (Above left) This female blue grouse is a good example of a bird that stays in Southeast Alaska year-round. (Above right) Some barn swallows fly nearly 5,000 miles from the Neotropics to nest in Southeast Alaska. 71

Wetland Stopovers in Southeast Alaska (Top photo) More than 10,000 snow geese visit the Stikine River Delta every year. (Above) This male snow goose seen on the Mendenhall Wetlands May 3, 2002, had been banded July 14, 2001, and had hatched in summer 2000, on Russia s Wrangel Island in the Chukchi Sea. Migratory birds cannot survive without places to stop, rest, and refuel during their long journeys. For shorebirds these places are especially important because of the long distances that most species fly. The Conservation Plan for Alaska Shorebirds lists three such places in Southeast Alaska that are important for birds needing to rest and refuel during their long journeys. These places have value for other birds as well. In general what s good for a sandpiper is also good for ducks, geese, and even such songbirds as Lapland longspurs and horned larks and the migrating owls, falcons, and hawks that feed on them. The Stikine River Delta near Wrangell is the largest coastal marsh in Southeast Alaska. It is an important refueling area for sandhill cranes, more than 10,000 snow geese, and many other waterfowl as well as hundreds of thousands of shorebirds. Shorebird numbers usually peak around the first week in May. Almost 2,000 eagles are attracted to the delta s spring run of eulachon the largest reported springtime concentration of bald eagles in North America. The Mendenhall Wetlands is the premier spot in Juneau for birds and birders. A total of 218 different species of birds have been seen in this area. That includes 40 species of shorebirds and 34 species of waterfowl. Shorebird and waterfowl numbers often reach into the thousands during the last week in April and during May. The Yakutat Forelands hosts over 100,000 shorebirds each year during migration. The spring bird migration begins in April. Thousands of gulls, geese, and sea ducks can be observed, as can hundreds of swans and sandhill cranes. The main wave of bird migrations passes through the last week of April and the first week of May. The fall bird migration begins in September, bringing sandhill cranes, Canada geese, snow geese, tundra swans, and waterfowl. More than 2,000 Aleutian terns nest within the forelands making this the largest known Aleutian tern colony in the world. One other migratory stopover in Southeast Alaska should also be mentioned: The Dude Creek Critical Habitat Area near Gustavus includes a large expanse of undisturbed wet meadow. Most notably it feeds and shelters flocks of sandhill cranes migrating to and from their nesting areas around the Alaska Peninsula, Bristol Bay, Kenai Peninsula, and upper Cook Inlet. These birds also stop on the Stikine River Delta enroute to their wintering grounds in the Central Valley of California. 72

An arctic tern may have traveled more than 9,000 miles from Antarctica to nest on the Mendenhall Wetlands in Juneau. Facts about Migratory Birds Some Basic Facts Migration is triggered by changing length of daylight. Birds migrate for food, not because of weather. Most songbirds migrate at night, when the air is more stable and temperatures are cool. Hawks migrate in the daylight, soaring on winds and thermals. Shorebirds and waterfowl migrate both day and night when the weather is favorable. Mechanisms for Navigation visual landmarks (raptors, waterfowl) the sun or solar compass (hawks, swifts, swallows) the stars or stellar compass (flycatchers, thrushes, warblers) the earth s magnetic fields (probably all birds) olfactory cues (storm-petrels) A Gauntlet of Perils storms, especially when crossing open water loss of refueling habitat (over 50 % loss of wetlands in the Lower 48) loss of wintering habitat (especially loss of forests in the Neotropics) hitting communication towers, especially lighted ones (An estimated five million birds are killed in the U.S. each year in collisions with towers.) hitting windows (One study shows that each year more than 100 million migrating birds die crashing into windows.) predators (Studies show cats alone kill hundreds of millions of songbirds every year in the U.S.) 73