[CT Birds] Ducks and stuff...
Greg Hanisek
ghanisek at rep-am.com
Wed Mar 12 20:55:31 EDT 2008
The micro part can really make your head hurt when you start to think about
it. Ducks definitely are influenced by the presence of open water and find
their way to it with amazing speed when it opens up in spring. I was
thinking about this last week when I visited Lake Winnemaug in Watertown 3
days in a row.
Day 1 - Completely frozen
Day 2 - small sliver of open water holds (in addition to some Canadas and
Mallards) 3 American Wigeon and 2 Hooded Merganser
Day 3 - same small sliver holds 2 Ring-necked Ducks and 3 Common Mergansers
but no wigeon or hoodies
There has to be a lot of (for lack of a better term) trial-and-error flying
around for that sort of thing to happen.
Greg Hanisek
Waterbury
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis Varza" <dennisvz at optonline.net>
To: "Posting Bird List" <ctbirds at lists.ctbirding.org>
Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 2:52 PM
Subject: Re: [CT Birds] Ducks and stuff...
>
> Dave pretty well lays out the Big Picture of migration but doesn't
> lay out the micro-behavior too well, which I don't think anybody
> really knows.
>
> I read a paper on wintering Bald Eagles where they commented that
> birds from Maine can fly down to Long Island and back in one day. Who
> says that birds migrating north do not retreat when prudent,
> especially waterfowl that need open water. I wouldn't be surprised
> that eager ducks fly inland looking for open water and not finding it
> return to the coast. Locally, when reservoirs are freezing and
> thawing, one can see an increase in birds on the coast when they freeze.
>
>
> That is the way I see it
>
> Dennis
>
>
>
> On Mar 12, 2008, at 1:46 PM, David.F.Provencher at dom.com wrote:
>
>>
>> Paul,
>>
>> Here is a very brief response to the question of duck migration
>> timing, as
>> I understand it. There are several possible triggers for duck
>> migration. It
>> is believed length of daylight, or angle of the sun relative to the
>> earth,
>> triggers hormonal changes which in turn cause restlessness in the
>> birds
>> and then actual migration. With waterfowl there have also been
>> cases where
>> mass migration days seem to have been triggered by particularly foul
>> weather (plenty of scope for puns there). So it isn't a case of the
>> birds
>> knowing when to go or knowing what conditions are like on the
>> migration
>> route or at the ultimate destination but rather mostly instinctual
>> behavior
>> triggered by environmental stimulus. Of course the timing of
>> migration can
>> be modified over time by changing conditions. If a species migrates
>> over a
>> period of weeks and conditions change such that the early migrants
>> meet a
>> high mortality rate, for instance iced in wetlands as you
>> mentioned, then
>> the remaining breeders who arrive a bit later when conditions have
>> improved
>> will generate a new generation of birds that tend to migrate a little
>> later. If on the other hand the early migrants meet a favorable
>> environment
>> on arrival, they will have taken all the prime breeding sites and
>> will tend
>> to be more successful than later arriving birds. This will bias the
>> migration period slightly earlier. The whole migration thing is truly
>> fascinating isn't it? And insect migration is even more intriguing.
>>
>> Dave
>>
>>
>>
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