Native shrubs in the landscape do not get the credit they

Similar documents
Yearly Total Summary, Birds Banded, 1995 through 2012 Dan Brown's Hummer Ranch, Christoval, Texas Listed in Phylogenetic Order

Checklist of birds on Nebraska farms

Shrubland Bird Ecology & Management. What are shrublands?

Black Swamp Bird Observatory Navarre, Ottawa NWR Banding Station Spring 2016

Loggerhead Shrike (Lanius ludovicianus)

Managing Iowa Habitats

Birdify Your Yard: Habitat Landscaping for Birds. Melissa Pitkin Klamath Bird Observatory

Species Lists / Bird Walk Dates X= Species Seen, ssp or morph noted; X New Species at CCNHC; X First of Season Migrant

Black Swamp Bird Observatory Navarre Banding Station Fall 2014 Passerine Migration Monitoring Latitude 413 Longitude 0830

Wild Bird Lessons for John E. Conner Museum

PART FIVE: Grassland and Field Habitat Management

Wild Bird & Garden Hanover Center 3501 Oleander Drive Wilmington NC And 105 East Brown Street Southport NC At the Base of

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS JUNE, 2016

Buckner Preserve Shrubland Habitat Management Recommendations

HUNGRYLAND BIRD LIST

Washington State Park Bird Census 2017

Dynamic Forest Management: Forestry for the Birds

Wings N Wetlands Bird List

WVWA 2018 Wissahickon Birdathon Checklist

Effects of Herbaceous Field Borders on Farmland Birds in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley

2009 Winter Bird Survey

Bird Observations. Date Range: For. 1 of 5 2/29/2016 8:36 AM. Home About Submit Observations Explore Data My ebird Help

Expansion Work Has Begun The perimeter dike for Cell 7 is now visible

Oak Woodlands and Chaparral

MAKE YOUR GARDEN A HOME FOR BIRDS, BUTTERFLIES, & OTHER CRITTERS. Quita Sheehan, Conservation Specialist, Vilas County Land & Water Conservation

A Practical Challenge for Atlasers: Identifying Juvenile Birds

Rancocas Birds Bar Graphs

Bluebonnet Bird Monitoring Project 2012 Annual Report

Red-winged blackbird calls sound like loud check and a high slurred tee-err sound when alarmed. Their song is a liquid gurgling konk-ke-ree...

Egg Dates for Species that Breed in the SAAS Chapter Area

Escondido Draw Recreation Area Crockett County, TX M= Spring or Fall Migrant. Bird Species Type

Birding at Cylburn. For easy birding start on the grounds near the Cylburn Mansion... Proceed around the side of the Mansion...

FLORIDA BREEDING BIRD ATLAS GUIDELINES FOR SAFE DATES FOR SELECTED BREEDING CODES. BBA Newsletter Number 6, May 1988 and subsequent updates.

FOREST HABITAT 2015 ANNUAL REPORT

Table 1b. Coverage and Capture Rates During 2018 Fall MM at IBS

J A N U A R Y. Bird Calendar

Migration- A migration is a long distance movement of animals, especially seasonal movement between wintering and breeding grounds.

Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship on Oak Openings Preserve PROGRESS REPORT-2015 BSBO-16-3

Go Au Naturale. Patrick Goggin / Carolyn Scholl Vilas County Land & Water Conservation Department

Come one! Come All! Join the Fun! It is the season for The National Audubon Society 116th Annual Christmas Count.

Date: April, 20, 2013 Location: Lake Conestee Nature Park, 601 Fork Shoals Rd, Greenville, S.C.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * For Judges Use Only

PHOTOGRAPHY. Birding Hotspots of UConn and the Surrounding Area JAMES ADAMS. 9 Merrow Meadow Park Fenton River.7. 5 New Storrs Cemetery 4

AMHERST COLLEGE BIRD SURVEY (116 species total) Submitted Oct 31, 2008, by Pete Westover, Conservation Works, LLC

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 10 14, 2017

Black-bellied Whistling Duck Fulvous Whistling-Duck Gadwall American Wigeon Mallard Mottled Duck Blue-winged Teal Cinnamon Teal Northern Shoveler

INSTRUCTION MANUAL Sparrow-Free Magic Halo. Keep sparrows away from your birdfeeder

Sea & Sage Audubon Southern Sierra Spring Trip May 16-19, 2014 Bob Barnes, Trip Leader

Commonly Seen Birds of the Prescott Area

Massachusetts Grassland Bird Conservation. Intro to the problem What s known Your ideas

Evaluation of wildlife response to vegetation restoration on reclaimed mine lands in southwestern Virginia

Count Summary Report

Wildlife observations at the Olentangy River Wetland Research Park in 1998

Mississippi s Conservation Reserve Program CP33 - Habitat Buffers for Upland Birds Mississippi Bird Monitoring and Evaluation Plan

BirdWalk Newsletter Walk conducted by Perry Nugent Written by Jayne J Matney

Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship on Oak Openings Preserve PROGRESS REPORT-2017 BSBO-18-3

Port Weller West Pier Migration Study, May 2014 J.E. Black, June 2014

ATTRACTING BIRDS TO YOUR YARD. Mary Schiedt Yolo Audubon Society California Native Plant Society, Sacramento Valley Chapter

MIGRATION MONITORING AT PRINCE EDWARD POINT FALL 2013

2017 Monarch Butterfly Conservation Fund Grant Slate

2013 Arkansas State Wildlife Grant Pre-proposal INCREASING GRASSLAND BLOCK SIZE AND RESTORING OZARK PRAIRIE AND WOODLANDS

Grassland Bird Use of the Cole Camp~Green Ridge Prairie Complex During the migration and breeding seasons 2015

Kindergarten is for the birds the American Goldfinch that is!

The Missouri Greater Prairie-Chicken: Present-Day. Survival and Movement

Tualatin River NWR and Wapato Lake BCS number: 47-37

BirdWalk Newsletter

Pocahontas County Bird List. Loons. Grebes. Cormorants. Herons & Bitterns

x x x x x x x Green-winged Teal x x x x x x x Canvasback x x x x x x x Redhead x x x x x x Ring-necked Duck x x x x x x x Greater Scaup

A survey of Birds of Forest Park in Everett, Washington

ABOUT BIRDS is a thoughtful yet

Earth Sanctuary. Breeding Bird Survey May 5-July 19, Compiled by Yvonne Palka and Frances Wood

3 Skillet Handle Birding Trail A Nature Path

Arkansas Wildlife Action Plan, State Wildlife Grants Pre-proposal - Cover Page

B I RD SPEC I ES ASSOC I ATED W I TH GREEN ASH WOODLANDS IN THE SLIM BUTTES, SOUTH DAKOTA

Lecture 14 - Conservation of birds

Black-bellied Whistling Duck X X Fulvous Whistling Duck Canada Goose X X X X X Trumpeter Swan X X Wood

Managing Habitats for Wildlife: Case Studies and Curiosities. Scott Ruhren, Ph.D. Senior Director of Conservation Audubon Society of Rhode Island

Special Habitats In Greene County

Paridae: titmice Carolina Chickadee Tufted Titmouse. Sittidae: nuthatches Brown-headed Nuthatch. Certhiidae: creepers Brown Creeper

A presentation to: Rideau Lakes Municipal Services Committee Meeting March 14, A proposal for better cormorant control in Ontario

Snake River Float Project Summary of Observations 2013

Black-crowned Night-heron Minnesota Conservation Summary

From wild bird, to photograph, to painting, renowned wildlife artist Don Edwards will share his process for creating realistic works of art.

Ruby Throated Hummingbirds. By Anastasia Yates

I LLINI PRODUCTION NOTE. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Large-scale Digitization Project, 2007.

The joy of attracting birds is open to everyone at any age, and it is easy and relatively inexpensive. It is a great hobby for an individual or the

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 9-13, 2018

McKay Creek National Wildlife Refuge BCS number: 48-19

Black-chinned Sparrow (Spizella atrogularis)

Tour 14: Yellow Jkt Cyn and Cyn of the Ancients Guest Ranch. Tour 12: Nature Center at Butler Corner 1/2 Day. Tour 11: Pontoon on McPhee Reservoir

Forest Bird Habitat Assessment Fairlee Town Forest

FY2019 Call for Proposals Proposals due September 29, 2017 Work Period July 1, 2018 June 30, 2019

2003 ANALYSIS OF AVIAN GUILD SPECIES DIVERSITY IN THE CARMEL RIVER RIPARIAN CORRIDOR. Twelfth Annual Report

Lincoln Land Community College Bird Banding Station (LLCC BBS) Lincoln Land Community College, Springfield, IL (Coordinates: )

Middle Run Birding Trail. Connecting Conservation, Education, and Recreation

Spring Migration in Cabrini Woods

Native Warm Season Grass Buffer Establishment in the Mississippi Alluvial Valley

Partnerships in Action

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS FEBRUARY, 2017

Wings Over Georgia. A Newsletter about Birds and Butterflies for the Members of The Garden Club of Georgia, Inc. Volume 1 September, 2007 Issue 1

Transcription:

NATIVE SHRUBS ARE CRITICAL COMPONENTS OF HABITAT FOR A KALEIDOSCOPE OF SONGBIRDS AND UPLAND GAMEBIRDS IN GRASSLANDS, FARMLANDS AND RURAL LANDSCAPES IN THE GREAT PLAINS. Northern Bobwhites Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Brown Thrasher Michael Harding Native shrubs in the landscape do not get the credit they deserve. Dozens of bird species rely on native shrubs and the unique habitat provided by shrub thickets. For resident species like the Northern Bobwhite and Northern Cardinal, shrubs are vital throughout the year. The list of migratory bird species that rely on shrubs and similar habitat at various times of the year is incredibly long. Our purpose here is to provide a glimpse of some of the most notable regulars that utilize shrubs and other brushy areas. It is a delight to contemplate the connections connections made by birds that a few shrub thickets on one s farm or ranch may have within the western hemisphere. Neotropical migrants Indigo Bunting Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Bell s Vireo Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Gray Catbird John Bosnak Eastern Towhee Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com 14 Prairie Wings FALL 2015 ~ SPRING 2016

When one tugs at a single thing in Nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world. ~ John Muir Spotted Towhee Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Blue Grosbeak David Rintoul are well represented among the breeding birds that nest within the branches, forage for food within the thickets and surrounding vegetation, and find shelter from storms and searing heat. Other species pass through in seasonal migrations, and some (Neoarctic species) come to the central Great Plains to spend the winter. The Gray Catbirds nesting in a dogwood thicket in our pasture may winter in Costa Rica; and the Harris s Sparrows that hang out here in the plum thicket along the driveway all winter travel back to the far northern reaches of Canada each summer. If we all mapped the travels of each of the birds that utilize the land we share and the habitats they need, we would likely marvel at how important it is to life far beyond our horizons. Northern Mockingbird Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Yellow-billed Cuckoo Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Painted Bunting Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Loggerhead Shritke John Bosnak FALL 2015 ~ SPRING 2016 Prairie Wings 15

Orchard Oriole David Rintoul Northern Cardinals John Bosnak Bewick s Wren David Rintoul Hope is the thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings the tune without the words And never stops at all. ~ Emily Dickinson Eastern Kingbird Ron Klataske American Robins Ron Klataske Tragically these habitats are often regarded as simply brush to be leveled with brushhog mowers, sprayed with herbicides, or bulldozed. Where brushy draws occur in farmed fields, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service requires removal to be replaced by monoculture grassed waterways (usually planted to bromegrass) when terraces are installed with governmental cost-share dollars. Many tens of thousands of miles of brushy draws have been removed for this purpose in Kansas and surrounding states, and a similar fate is imposed with herbicides at the hands of county noxious weed departments on native vegetation along tens of thousands of miles of rural roads. Within the rural landscape, tens of millions of federal dollars have been spent via USDA to broadcast spray grasslands to kill shrubs. It is not that woody plants should not be controlled and managed, it is the total disregard for ecosystem values by agencies of government that is so disappointing. There is a Need to Include Birds in the Balance. Unless wildlife organizations step to the plate and go to bat for birds and other wildlife that depend on shrub habitat, governmental agencies will ignore the detrimental impacts of their actions. Considering that many entities have only recently begun to recognize the importance of pollinator habitat, there may be hope that the diversity of habitats needed by birds will be recognized as well. Some of the native shrubs and woody vines that are most notable and of significant value for birds in the central prairie states include American plum, sandhill plum, choke cherry, rough-leafed dogwood, elderberry, aromatic sumac, smooth sumac, golden current, buckbrush (coralberry), riverbank grape and bittersweet. 16 Prairie Wings FALL 2015 ~ SPRING 2016

Incredible Little Brown Birds Thirty-five species of American sparrows are our most unimposing and secretive songbirds. But once one gets to know them, they add greatly to our enjoyment of the natural world around us. Their songs are beautiful, but for many displays of their breeding plumage and songs are brief during their spring stay. Many species have distinctive head patterns. Most are migratory; a third nest in the central Great Plains. Others winter in this area or pass through fall and spring. American sparrows are insect and seed-eating birds and most depend on habitats with a mixture of grasses, shrubs and weedy patches. These New World passerine birds share the family Emberizidea with similar buntings, juncos, towhees and longspurs. Birds of a Different Feather - Although American sparrows are delightful and desirable in every way from a human perspective, they unfortunately share the name sparrow with the introduced House Sparrow. Our native birds are not closely related to House Sparrows. Like European Starlings, House Sparrows are ecologically destructive because they displace native birds from their cavity nesting sites, and they are introduced often a nuisance around farmsteads. Lincoln Sparrow John Bosnak Harris s Sparrow David Rintoul Field Sparrow David Rintoul White-Crowned Sparrow Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com White-Crown Sparrow Mike Harding White-Throated Sparrow John Bosnak FALL 2015 ~ SPRING 2016 Prairie Wings 17

Song Sparrow Michael Harding Dark Eyed Junco David Rintoul Birds of Southwestern Shrubs The more arid southwestern part of Kansas hosts a number of birds associated with shrub vegetation unique to that area. Curve-billed Thrashers, Greater Roadrunners and Scaled Quail are among them. They all gravitate to thorny brush when it is available. Although rare and routinely eliminated, the shrub-like cholla cactus is one of their favorite protective hangouts. Southwestern Kansas is also the largest remaining occupied range for Lesser Prairie-chickens (LEPC). Sand sagebrush, Artemisia filfolia, is a branching woody shrub and it is one of the most valuable components of LEPC habitat. Grassland habitat is vital for both Lesser and Greater Prairie-chickens, but people often overlook the fact that a low canopy of shrubs and forbs is important for brood and year-round protection from the elements and concealment from predators. Ron Klataske Curved-billed Thrasher David Rintoul Scaled Quail David Rintoul Lesser Prairie Chicken Bob Gress, BirdsInFocus.com Sand Sage Prairie Ron Klataske 18 Prairie Wings FALL 2015 ~ SPRING 2016