The 99th Hamilton Christmas Bird Count (CBC) was held on Thursday, December
26 in Hamilton, Ontario.
The Hamilton CBC count circle centres upon Dundurn Castle; it is bounded in
the west by Christie Lake, in the east by Lake Ontario, in the north by
Lake Medad, and in the south by Hamilton International Airport. It includes
two Important Bird & Biodiversity Areas (IBAs): West End of Lake Ontario
(WELO) IBA, and Dundas Valley & Dundas Marsh IBA.
The weather on count day was cool and damp. It was overcast, with the
thermometer ranging between 0°C and 3°C, humidity near 100%, and a very
light and brief misting rain on a couple occasions. Light winds began from
the east but shifted north by the end of the day.
A record-setting one hundred and nine participants either set out to count
in the field or watch birdfeeders, with twenty-two counters working alone
and the rest forming a total thirty different groups. A total of 359.75
hours effort was put in by the participants (also a record high), with a
resulting 97 different species observed, plus another 4 on the count week,
giving a result of 101 species countable. This is only slightly below both
the 10-year (103.8 species) and 25-year (102.3 species) averages.
A total of 37,165 individual birds were counted on the count day. This is
11,034 below the 10-year average and 25,598 below the 25-year average. It
is only 802 above the lowest year in the last 40 years.
The lower count numbers can be partly explained by the lack of cover ice
over the waterways. In years where ice is prevalent there tends to be much
higher concentrations of waterfowl in our count circle.
Waterfowl numbers do not explain it all, however, as passerine species
counted at 12,164 represent a new 25-year low. Raptor species counted at
139 individuals represents a low not seen since 1999, which had 92 counted.
Another "low" record set was the complete absence of the Green-winged Teal.
This represents the first count day in the modern count (since the circle
was standardized in 1955) that did not have this species found. It was also
not found during count week, making this species a complete miss this year.
A total of seven historical high species counts were set this year. In
spite of the low waterfowl numbers, three of these records are of duck
species.
The White-winged Scoters showed up in plentiful numbers, with a counted
total of 1,604, almost 500 more than the previous record set in 2016.
Red-breasted Mergansers had a strong showing with 781 counted, nearly 200
over the historic record last set in 2009.
Barrow's Goldeneye made its 7th appearance in the Hamilton count, but with
just one individual counted ties with all the previous appearances. What
makes this year different however, was the additional appearance of a
hybrid Barrow's x Common Goldeneye. One could say this sets a new record at
1.5 Barrow's Goldeneyes, however I don't think the CBC database will accept
this count, so will be left at one.
Another species with a similar pattern of appearances, Kumlien's Gull, made
a solo appearance, tying the record of one again. Currently this taxon is
considered a sub-species of Iceland Gull however, so did not count towards
the species count as it would have long ago.
Gray Catbirds were found in multiple locations, with a total count of 4
individuals. This species shows up once and a while, usually as lone
individuals, but until this year were never more than 2 counted in the
entire circle.
Common Raven set a record yet again, this year at 6 counted individuals.
This species first appeared in 2003, and has only been missed once in the
last 10 years of the count, making it a new regular.
Two perennial record-setters have shown no signs of slowing down.
Red-bellied Woodpeckers have set another record at 115 counted. This
species first appeared in the 1979 count, but didn't truly begin to
establish until the 2000s. Since 2001, it has not missed a year.
Carolina Wren have hit a new record of 122 counted, showing now in all
parts of the circle. This species has appeared in the count nonstop since
1994. Prior to that it had always been something found in very small
numbers every few years.
A lone Marsh Wren was found on count day near Eramosa Karst Conservation
Area, representing the first one found on count day since 1982.
Also of note, the Winter Wren, while only matching a 10-year record of 25
counted, has appeared in far more locations than usual. Typically found in
Hendrie Valley and Cootes in good numbers, those locations reported lower
than usual numbers. Instead, the species this year appeared in small
numbers fairly evenly across the circle.
Ten-year high count records were set with the following species: Redhead
(284), Common Goldeneye (3,117), Common Merganser (2,060), Downy Woodpecker
(248), Hairy Woodpecker (103), Northern Flicker (11), and Song Sparrow (46).
Conversely, ten-year lows were set with: American Black Duck (137),
American Coot (8), and Red-tailed Hawk (89).
Twenty-five year lows were set for Black-capped Chickadee (928), and
Sharp-shinned Hawk (2).
Other highlights of the count include: a lone Rusty Blackbird in Stoney
Creek, an Eastern Towhee found on Artaban Road in count week, five Cackling
Goose found in a quarry, a lone King Eider and a hybrid Common Goldeneye x
Hooded Merganser was seen in Hamilton Harbour.
Thank you to all of our counters and those who contributed count week
birds. We saw many new feeder watchers this year, and hope to continue
adding more as we approach our hundredth count next year. A final report
with a full list of all our counters will be in a future issue of the
Hamilton Naturalists' Club journal, The Wood Duck.
The raw data:
- = New highest record in count history (99 years)
*10y = Highest count in last 10 years
CW = Count Week species
Participants: *109
Hours-effort: *359.75
Count day species: 97
Spuhs/slashes: 5
Hybrids: 2
Count week species: 4
Total species: 101
Species counts (in taxonomic order)
Cackling Goose 5
Canada Goose 5,712
Mute Swan 77
Trumpeter Swan 106
Tundra Swan 8
Northern Shoveler 73
Gadwall 47
American Wigeon 1
Mallard 4,015
American Black Duck 137
Northern Pintail 1
Canvasback 209
*10y Redhead 284
Ring-necked Duck 71
Greater Scaup 1,119
Lesser Scaup 452
King Eider 1
Surf Scoter 28
- White-winged Scoter 1,604
Black Scoter 5
Long-tailed Duck 2,236
Bufflehead 316
*10y Common Goldeneye 3,117
Barrow's x Common Goldeneye (hybrid) 1
Common Goldeneye x Hooded Merganser (hybrid) 1
Hooded Merganser 174
*10y Common Merganser 2,060
- Red-breasted Merganser 781
Ruddy Duck 291
Wild Turkey 22
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Horned Grebe 3
Red-necked Grebe 3
Rock Pigeon 1,297
Mourning Dove 889
American Coot 8
Ring-billed Gull 1,127
Herring Gull 568
Iceland Gull 1
- Iceland Gull (kumlieni) 1
Lesser Black-backed Gull 2
Glaucous Gull 1
Great Black-backed Gull 84
gull sp. 5
Red-throated Loon CW
Common Loon 6
loon sp. 1
Double-crested Cormorant 91
Great Blue Heron 4
Black-crowned Night-Heron 1
Northern Harrier CW
Sharp-shinned Hawk 2
Cooper's Hawk 19
Bald Eagle 5
Red-tailed Hawk 89
hawk sp. 3
Eastern Screech-Owl 8
Great Horned Owl 3
Belted Kingfisher 7
- Red-bellied Woodpecker 115
*10y Downy Woodpecker 248
*10y Hairy Woodpecker 103
Downy/Hairy Woodpecker 2
Pileated Woodpecker 10
*10y Northern Flicker 11
American Kestrel 4
Merlin 3
Peregrine Falcon 3
Northern Shrike 4
Blue Jay 314
American Crow 556
Black-capped Chickadee 928
Tufted Titmouse 4
Red-breasted Nuthatch 14
White-breasted Nuthatch 203
Brown Creeper 17
Winter Wren 25
*25y Marsh Wren 1
Golden-crowned Kinglet 23
Eastern Bluebird 24
Hermit Thrush 3
American Robin 448
Northern Mockingbird 15
European Starling 2,631
Cedar Waxwing 333
House Finch 314
Common Redpoll 2
Pine Siskin 2
American Goldfinch 645
Snow Bunting 1
Chipping Sparrow 2
American Tree Sparrow 113
Dark-eyed Junco 724
White-crowned Sparrow 5
White-throated Sparrow 90
Song Sparrow 46
Swamp Sparrow 4
Eastern Towhee CW
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Rusty Blackbird 1
Common Grackle CW
blackbird sp. 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler 2
Northern Cardinal 438
House Sparrow 1,415
TOTAL COUNTED 37,165
Save the date: on December 7, 2020 we'll be celebrating the 100th Hamilton
Christmas Bird Count during the Hamilton Naturalists' Club general meeting.
All are welcomed. See https://hamiltonnature.org/ closer to the date for
details.
Rob Porter,
Compiler, 99th Hamilton Christmas Bird Count
--
Robert Gerald Porter
Hamilton Naturalists' Club / Field Events Director
Weever Apps / Chief Innovation Officer, Co-founder
Songbirding Podcast / Creator, Host
http://twitter.com/rgeraldporter
The 99th Hamilton Christmas Bird Count (CBC) was held on Thursday, December
26 in Hamilton, Ontario.
The Hamilton CBC count circle centres upon Dundurn Castle; it is bounded in
the west by Christie Lake, in the east by Lake Ontario, in the north by
Lake Medad, and in the south by Hamilton International Airport. It includes
two Important Bird & Biodiversity Areas (IBAs): West End of Lake Ontario
(WELO) IBA, and Dundas Valley & Dundas Marsh IBA.
The weather on count day was cool and damp. It was overcast, with the
thermometer ranging between 0°C and 3°C, humidity near 100%, and a very
light and brief misting rain on a couple occasions. Light winds began from
the east but shifted north by the end of the day.
A record-setting one hundred and nine participants either set out to count
in the field or watch birdfeeders, with twenty-two counters working alone
and the rest forming a total thirty different groups. A total of 359.75
hours effort was put in by the participants (also a record high), with a
resulting 97 different species observed, plus another 4 on the count week,
giving a result of 101 species countable. This is only slightly below both
the 10-year (103.8 species) and 25-year (102.3 species) averages.
A total of 37,165 individual birds were counted on the count day. This is
11,034 below the 10-year average and 25,598 below the 25-year average. It
is only 802 above the lowest year in the last 40 years.
The lower count numbers can be partly explained by the lack of cover ice
over the waterways. In years where ice is prevalent there tends to be much
higher concentrations of waterfowl in our count circle.
Waterfowl numbers do not explain it all, however, as passerine species
counted at 12,164 represent a new 25-year low. Raptor species counted at
139 individuals represents a low not seen since 1999, which had 92 counted.
Another "low" record set was the complete absence of the Green-winged Teal.
This represents the first count day in the modern count (since the circle
was standardized in 1955) that did not have this species found. It was also
not found during count week, making this species a complete miss this year.
A total of seven historical high species counts were set this year. In
spite of the low waterfowl numbers, three of these records are of duck
species.
The White-winged Scoters showed up in plentiful numbers, with a counted
total of 1,604, almost 500 more than the previous record set in 2016.
Red-breasted Mergansers had a strong showing with 781 counted, nearly 200
over the historic record last set in 2009.
Barrow's Goldeneye made its 7th appearance in the Hamilton count, but with
just one individual counted ties with all the previous appearances. What
makes this year different however, was the additional appearance of a
hybrid Barrow's x Common Goldeneye. One could say this sets a new record at
1.5 Barrow's Goldeneyes, however I don't think the CBC database will accept
this count, so will be left at one.
Another species with a similar pattern of appearances, Kumlien's Gull, made
a solo appearance, tying the record of one again. Currently this taxon is
considered a sub-species of Iceland Gull however, so did not count towards
the species count as it would have long ago.
Gray Catbirds were found in multiple locations, with a total count of 4
individuals. This species shows up once and a while, usually as lone
individuals, but until this year were never more than 2 counted in the
entire circle.
Common Raven set a record yet again, this year at 6 counted individuals.
This species first appeared in 2003, and has only been missed once in the
last 10 years of the count, making it a new regular.
Two perennial record-setters have shown no signs of slowing down.
Red-bellied Woodpeckers have set another record at 115 counted. This
species first appeared in the 1979 count, but didn't truly begin to
establish until the 2000s. Since 2001, it has not missed a year.
Carolina Wren have hit a new record of 122 counted, showing now in all
parts of the circle. This species has appeared in the count nonstop since
1994. Prior to that it had always been something found in very small
numbers every few years.
A lone Marsh Wren was found on count day near Eramosa Karst Conservation
Area, representing the first one found on count day since 1982.
Also of note, the Winter Wren, while only matching a 10-year record of 25
counted, has appeared in far more locations than usual. Typically found in
Hendrie Valley and Cootes in good numbers, those locations reported lower
than usual numbers. Instead, the species this year appeared in small
numbers fairly evenly across the circle.
Ten-year high count records were set with the following species: Redhead
(284), Common Goldeneye (3,117), Common Merganser (2,060), Downy Woodpecker
(248), Hairy Woodpecker (103), Northern Flicker (11), and Song Sparrow (46).
Conversely, ten-year lows were set with: American Black Duck (137),
American Coot (8), and Red-tailed Hawk (89).
Twenty-five year lows were set for Black-capped Chickadee (928), and
Sharp-shinned Hawk (2).
Other highlights of the count include: a lone Rusty Blackbird in Stoney
Creek, an Eastern Towhee found on Artaban Road in count week, five Cackling
Goose found in a quarry, a lone King Eider and a hybrid Common Goldeneye x
Hooded Merganser was seen in Hamilton Harbour.
Thank you to all of our counters and those who contributed count week
birds. We saw many new feeder watchers this year, and hope to continue
adding more as we approach our hundredth count next year. A final report
with a full list of all our counters will be in a future issue of the
Hamilton Naturalists' Club journal, The Wood Duck.
The raw data:
* = New highest record in count history (99 years)
*10y = Highest count in last 10 years
CW = Count Week species
Participants: *109
Hours-effort: *359.75
Count day species: 97
Spuhs/slashes: 5
Hybrids: 2
Count week species: 4
Total species: 101
Species counts (in taxonomic order)
Cackling Goose 5
Canada Goose 5,712
Mute Swan 77
Trumpeter Swan 106
Tundra Swan 8
Northern Shoveler 73
Gadwall 47
American Wigeon 1
Mallard 4,015
American Black Duck 137
Northern Pintail 1
Canvasback 209
*10y Redhead 284
Ring-necked Duck 71
Greater Scaup 1,119
Lesser Scaup 452
King Eider 1
Surf Scoter 28
* White-winged Scoter 1,604
Black Scoter 5
Long-tailed Duck 2,236
Bufflehead 316
*10y Common Goldeneye 3,117
* Barrow's Goldeneye 1
Barrow's x Common Goldeneye (hybrid) 1
Common Goldeneye x Hooded Merganser (hybrid) 1
Hooded Merganser 174
*10y Common Merganser 2,060
* Red-breasted Merganser 781
Ruddy Duck 291
Wild Turkey 22
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Horned Grebe 3
Red-necked Grebe 3
Rock Pigeon 1,297
Mourning Dove 889
American Coot 8
Ring-billed Gull 1,127
Herring Gull 568
Iceland Gull 1
* Iceland Gull (kumlieni) 1
Lesser Black-backed Gull 2
Glaucous Gull 1
Great Black-backed Gull 84
gull sp. 5
Red-throated Loon CW
Common Loon 6
loon sp. 1
Double-crested Cormorant 91
Great Blue Heron 4
Black-crowned Night-Heron 1
Northern Harrier CW
Sharp-shinned Hawk 2
Cooper's Hawk 19
Bald Eagle 5
Red-tailed Hawk 89
hawk sp. 3
Eastern Screech-Owl 8
Great Horned Owl 3
Belted Kingfisher 7
* Red-bellied Woodpecker 115
*10y Downy Woodpecker 248
*10y Hairy Woodpecker 103
Downy/Hairy Woodpecker 2
Pileated Woodpecker 10
*10y Northern Flicker 11
American Kestrel 4
Merlin 3
Peregrine Falcon 3
Northern Shrike 4
Blue Jay 314
American Crow 556
* Common Raven 6
Black-capped Chickadee 928
Tufted Titmouse 4
Red-breasted Nuthatch 14
White-breasted Nuthatch 203
Brown Creeper 17
Winter Wren 25
*25y Marsh Wren 1
* Carolina Wren 122
Golden-crowned Kinglet 23
Eastern Bluebird 24
Hermit Thrush 3
American Robin 448
* Gray Catbird 4
Northern Mockingbird 15
European Starling 2,631
Cedar Waxwing 333
House Finch 314
Common Redpoll 2
Pine Siskin 2
American Goldfinch 645
Snow Bunting 1
Chipping Sparrow 2
American Tree Sparrow 113
Dark-eyed Junco 724
White-crowned Sparrow 5
White-throated Sparrow 90
Song Sparrow 46
Swamp Sparrow 4
Eastern Towhee CW
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Rusty Blackbird 1
Common Grackle CW
blackbird sp. 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler 2
Northern Cardinal 438
House Sparrow 1,415
TOTAL COUNTED 37,165
Save the date: on December 7, 2020 we'll be celebrating the 100th Hamilton
Christmas Bird Count during the Hamilton Naturalists' Club general meeting.
All are welcomed. See https://hamiltonnature.org/ closer to the date for
details.
Rob Porter,
Compiler, 99th Hamilton Christmas Bird Count
--
Robert Gerald Porter
Hamilton Naturalists' Club / Field Events Director
Weever Apps / Chief Innovation Officer, Co-founder
Songbirding Podcast / Creator, Host
http://twitter.com/rgeraldporter