ontario nest records scheme - Atlas of the Breeding Bird of Ontario
Transcription
ontario nest records scheme - Atlas of the Breeding Bird of Ontario
ISSN 0228-0787 ONTARIO NEST RECORDS SCHEME – ONRS 37 THIRTY –SEVENTH REPORT (1956 – 2005) George K. Peck and Mark K. Peck Spring/Summer 2006 ROSS’S GOOSE - FRONT COVER We are honoured and grateful to Barry Kent MacKay for donating the profit from the sale of this painting to assist in the publications cost of this, our 50th anniversary report. His excellent painting of a Ross’s Goose pair at the nest is not only a wonderful addition to the report, but it is particularly appropriate for 2005, since the first two Ontario nests of this species were located in Kenora District in 2005. ONTARIO NEST RECORDS SCHEME Thirty-Seventh Report (1956 – 2005) OUR 50th ANNIVERSARY!!! The Ontario Nest Records Scheme (ONRS) at the close of 2005 has been operative for 50 nesting seasons. Thus, in our semi-centennial year gathering of this ‘best-of-all’ breeding evidence, the active nest with its accompanying data, can be of vital importance to all our efforts to conserve the biodiversity of our birdlife. we continue to be one of the longest-running avian monitoring programs in Ontario. Begun in 1956 by George Francis and James Woodford, we were the second nest record program in Canada, after the British Columbia Nest Record Scheme, initiated in 1955 by M.T. Myres. Unlike the British Columbia scheme we do not consider broods away from the nest in our database. Our volunteer program is based in Ornithology, Department of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), Toronto, Ontario, where the nest record cards and the computer database are stored. The ONRS is, essentially, a collection of data records, each detailing one or more visits to an occupied bird’s nest, a nest under active construction, or to an active nesting colony, in Ontario. The majority of the current nest records are submitted annually by field volunteers who find active bird nests and record and submit the significant data on nest cards, or on-line by computer. In regard to nest record entry, hard-copy cards are preferred to on-line entry for purposes of processing and summarizing this data. However, if on-line entry is chosen, contributors are urged to carefully enter all known fields and to always supply their observer numbers, provincial region codes (4 letters, not numbers), coordinates or written location, visit dates, nest contents and/or nest activity, and habitat particulars for each nest record. Again, in this final year of the Ontario Breeding Bird Atlas, our cooperative association has resulted in a steady increase in valued nest records, as nests discovered by atlassers are submitted to the ONRS. In addition to the nests reported by our regular ONRS contributors, these atlas records are greatly appreciated and are a valued asset to our database, especially the records from the littleworked areas in northern Ontario. We urge all atlassers to submit all of their nest finds, and also, to continue to work their squares for this purpose, after 2005. The ONRS is a continuing program and the NEST DATA SUBMISSION All nest records from both current and previous years, should now only be entered on-line or on the prenumbered scannable nest cards, now in their sixth year of use. Earlier-version cards cannot be scanned directly into our database and require laborious and time consuming entry. On-line entry is available at www.birdsontario.org/onrs/onrsmain,html. From this same website the instructional Ontario Nest Records Handbook, and the blue, four-fold ONRS Coding System field card can be down-loaded. The ONRS Annual Report and the up-to-date six-part Revisions of the two volumes of the Breeding Birds of Ontario and the Volume 1 Appendix, can also be down-loaded from the Ontario Nest Records Scheme website: www.birdsontario.org/onrs/nidiology.html. MAKING OUT NEST CARDS (important points to remember). 1. County/Region codes:Because each species’ cards are tracked and filed alphabetically by region, it is very important that these 4-letter codes be entered in the provided space. Do not write the atlas region number in this space. See in the Handbook or Table 2 of this report for the 4-letter regional codes. 2. Observer Number: Always include your number because it may be our only access to your address. If you do not have a number, please advise and one will be supplied. This number is the same as that supplied to atlas participants. 3. Coordinates: If possible, list coordinates for the nest location. These may be either latitude/longitude (degrees, minutes, seconds – not decimals) or, preferably, UTM (northing/easting) points, and both can be determined by the use of topographical/atlas maps or GPS units. If no method for determining coordinates is available, write in a location in the provided space on the card. When using UTM coordinates please include the 2-number UTM ZONE (e.g. 15, 16, 17, 18). 1 4. Species Codes: Always include these 4-letter codes, which are found on the blue Coding System Card. 5. Colony Cards: A single card will suffice for colony visits; nest numbers and contents can be written in the Comments section. 6. Brown-headed Cowbird: Please indicate cowbird eggs/young when present, and do not remove these from the nest as removal often causes nest desertion. A second card for cowbird is no longer necessary. 7. Nest Visit Dates: Correct visit dates are vital, and should always be included. They enable the determination of egg dates, incubation periods, fledging times, etc. 8. Comments: Bear in mind that written comments, although encouraged, are not read by the computer and have to be entered by hand in to the database. They should not replace the proper Visit Status Codes or Habitat Codes, but should only amplify them or provide information not covered by these codes. However, it should be stressed that shrub and tree names, nest positions/materials/measurements, surrounding vegetation, habitat descriptions etc. are all important, useful and welcome items of information. Nest contents of Pileated Woodpecker, (eg. PIWO202678A) taken with digital camera inside nest cavity - photo M. K. Peck CURRENT YEAR RECORDS ENTRY In 2005, ONRS and OBBA volunteers submitted another outstanding total of 3,491 nest records in time for inclusion in this report. The increased totals over the past five years indicate the welcome addition of atlas records to those of our ONRS contributors. The ONRS records total is now 134,601 and when colonial nests and cards listing more than one nest are added, we have an approximate total of 4,500,000 nests in our database. We continue to maintain a large file of breeding records that do not involve actual nests, but these records are not included in the above totals. Thus, many confirmed Atlas records are not included in our nest totals, although they are included in the species’ summaries in the two volumes of the Breeding Birds of Ontario and their Revisions and Appendices, and these current breeding records will be included in future revisions. SEND US YOUR NEST IMAGES Nest photographs can provide documentation for nestings and, in addition, can add useful information, when accompanying a nest record. We would encourage you to submit your nest photographs, particularly for less common species or extralimital records. Simply send your digital images to [email protected]. Name the files using the prefix 4 letter species code followed by the ONRS card number. Files should be sent as medium resolution jpegs. If you are sending hard copies please record the species code and ONRS card number on the back of the print or the edge of the slide. If you are sending multiple images of the same nest please use a lettered suffix. IN MEMORY OF: It is with deep regret that we report the deaths of two valued contributors to the ONRS, Gordon Bellerby of Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON, 17 January 2005; and Charles J. Whitelaw of Hanmer, ON, 29 June 2005. Gordon Bellerby was a long-time contributor to the ONRS, who contributed a total of 295 nest records dating back to 1966. Among his nest records was included a 24-year history of a Common Loon nest on an island in a Haliburton Lake that indicated that an identical site had been occupied for 22 of those 24 years. He was an active member of the Toronto Ornithological Club for many years, while living in Toronto. 2 Charles Whitelaw began contributions to the ONRS in 1981, and submitted a total of 664 nest records. From his location in Sudbury he submitted many records of Common Raven and other northern birds. He wrote articles on the breeding of Great Gray Owl in 1997, and also on the sixth reported nest of Northern Hawk Owl, also in 1997. Ross’s Goose habitat – 15 June, 2005, west of Cape Henrietta Maria, Kenora District – photo C. D. Jones Sixth reported nest of Northern Hawk Owl, Manitoulin Island – photo G. K. Peck We are continuing to enter all current nest records in our database, and to geo-reference those records, so that all our data, including mapped nest locations will be available on computer for study purposes. Some of the larger submissions for this report include the following: 1. OMNR London – forest bird study – 996 nest records. 2. Bird, G. & H. – historical records – 478 nest records. 3. Clements, B. – 167 nest records. 4. Peck, M.K. – 155 nest records For this report, contributors added eight new species for Grenville, and three new species for each of Glengarry, Haldimand, Leeds, and Niagara. In the breeding season of 2005, two new nesting species were documented for Ontario. Those species and their contributors were: 1. Ross’s Goose G. Coady, D. Sutherland and C. Jones. Breeding of this goose was first documented in 1975, near the mouth of the Brant River, and near where the two 2005 nests were found and photographed on Ontario’s Hudson Bay coast. Ross’s Goose nest – 15 June 2005, west of Cape Henrietta Maria, Kenora District - photo D. A. Sutherland 2. Bufflehead The first documented nest of this species was found and photographed on 10 June 2005 at Black Birch Lake near the Manitoba/Ontario border north of Woodland Caribou Provincial Park. The first documented breeding involved the collection of a female with young in 1938 at Favourable Lake, Kenora District, and later reports were undocumented sightings of females entering cavities in 1973 (Cochrane District), and in 1983 in Kenora District. The following observation was e-mailed to the ONRS from Susan and Mike Bryan and accompanied the photographs: “On June 10, 2005 while atlassing in Square 15UU61 (near the Manitoba/Ontario border north of 3 Woodland Caribou Provincial Park) we had the good fortune to discover a Bufflehead nest. At about six in the evening we canoed to the east end of Black Birch Lake, pitched the tent and were cooking supper on a sandy beach at the end of a shallow marshy bay . We noted a lone female Bufflehead hanging around in the bay just offshore from our campsite. I saw it fly circling around nearer and nearer the beach where we had pitched the tent. Then it approached a dead Jack Pine about 10 meters from our tent, veering off at the last minute. I got suspicious, went to examine the tree, and saw an old Flicker hole on the far side of the trunk. We moved back a little and watched. Sure enough she entered the hole a few minutes later! We saw her coming and going from the hole several times over the next two days. We assume she must have been on eggs as the young apparently leave the hole almost immediately once they are hatched. Digital photos of the hole and of the duck and the general habitat were taken. Bufflehead is not an uncommon species in the boreal forest in the province where my husband and I frequently canoe (Region 44). We have seen this species in suitable nesting habitat (usually beaver ponds, small lakes) many times but have never found a nest. In fact, the only previous confirmed breeding record I personally had for the species was in the year prior to the Atlas when I found a female with a brood of small young on a beaver pond on the Albany River system (Achapi Lake).” Bufflehead nest snag - 10 June 2005, Black Birch Lake, Kenora District – photo S. Bryan In 2005, 178 nesting species were submitted for this report, along with new nesting regions for 46 species. No cards were received for this report from Dundas, and Lennox & Addington, only one from Frontenac, and three cards from each of Brant and Dufferin. Although our coverage has improved in southeastern Ontario, it is obvious that more field work needs to be done there. CURRENT ONTARIO BREEDING BIRD LIST The current (2005) Ontario breeding bird list total, including hypothetical and undocumented nesting and breeding species remains at 296, of which 289 are represented by nest cards in the ONRS database. Included in the total of 296 are seven (7) species arbitrarily designated as hypothetical (without documented evidence of nesting or breeding), and another four (4) breeding species whose nests have not yet been found, but whose breeding has been documented by specimen collection and/or the photography of flightless or recently-fledged young. The seven hypothetical species are Brant, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Swainson’s Hawk, Eurasian CollaredDove, Kirtland’s Warbler, Connecticut Warbler, and Snow Bunting. The four breeding species still awaiting nest discovery and documentation are Surf Scoter, Bufflehead habitat – 10 June 2005, Black Birch Lake, Kenora District near the Manitoba border north of Woodland Caribou Provincial Park. – photo S. Bryan 4 American Avocet, Pectoral Sandpiper, and Northern Shrike. We have undocumented nest records of the nesting of three of the above-named 11 species, and these are Swainson’s Hawk, Eurasian CollaredDove, and Connecticut Warbler. Nest cards of these latter three species are in the ONRS files, but are bracketed [ ] in the list in Table 1. 2. Sandilands, A., author of Birds of Ontario: Habitat Requirements, Limiting Factors & Status. 3. Authors/editors of Birds of North America. The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and the American Ornithologists’ Union, Washington, DC. 4. Curry, Robert, for Birds of Hamilton and Surrounding Areas (Publication date – September, 2006). 5. Rising, J.D. and D.D. Beadle, authors of The Sparrows of the United States and Canada. Academic Press. 6. Canadian Wildlife Service. 7. Bird Studies Canada, Port Rowan, ON 8. Atlas of the Breeding Birds of Ontario (2001-5) – (Publication date – September, 2007). 9. Global Biodiversity Information Facility – international organization using ONRS data worldwide. 10. Campbell, R.W. et al, authors of The Birds of British Columbia. UBC Press. 11. Authors/editors of Birds of Simcoe County (in progress). 12. Naturalists of Elgin County for Birds of Elgin County. 13. Elder, D.H., for The Black-billed Magpie in Ontario. Ontario Birds 24 (1). 14. Peck, G.K., for Breeding Status and Nest Site Selection of Common Raven in Ontario. Ontario Birds 23(2). 15. Torti, V.M. and P.O. Dunn. for Variable effects of climate change on six species of North American birds. Oecologia 145: 486-495. BOOK SALE – below ½ PRICE Breeding Birds of Ontario: Nidiology and Distribution, Volume 1: Nonpasserines Breeding Birds of Ontario: Nidiology and Distribution, Volume 2: Passerines We continue to offer these books, now at less than half price, as long as our dwindling supply lasts. All proceeds go to the ONRS: $35.00 a set of both volumes 3.10 postage and handling 2.10 GST. $40.60 -- Total To order, mail cheque made out to the Royal Ontario Museum and send to: ONRS/Ornithology, Dept. of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen’s Park, Toronto, ON M5S2C6 Telephone: (416) 586-5523 E-mail: [email protected] Six-part revisions to both volumes of Breeding Birds and an Appendix to Volume 1 were published in the Ontario Field Ornithologists’ journal Ontario Birds, and these have updated the volumes to 1999. The text of these update papers can be downloaded from the Ontario Nest Records Scheme website http://www.birdsontario.org/onrs/nidiology.html. Hard copy versions with their photographs can be purchased from the Ontario Field Ornithologists, Box 455, Station R, Toronto, ON M4G 4E1. Completed nest cards, requests for blank cards and regional nesting lists should be sent to the address or Email on page 3. Coding cards, handbooks, and annual reports can also be requested or can be downloaded from; http://www.birdsontario.org/onrs/onrsmain.html. Please notify us of mailing address changes so we can continue to mail out annual reports to all active contributors. If you do not have an observer number please let us know and one will be supplied. This number is the same one that was used for the Ontario Breeding Bird Atlas. ONRS AS AN INFORMATION SOURCE Some of the individuals and organizations who have recently used and/or are using our database for conservation and research purposes, and others who have cited our publications, include: 1. Bird Life International & Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, publishers of Handbook of the Birds of the World. 5 to hold lichens on the exterior of the nest such that it blends better with the branch it is attached to, the branch also usually encrusted with lichens. Notable here are Ruby-throated Hummingbird, Eastern Wood-Pewee, and Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. The following article was written by Ross D. James especially for our anniversary issue: THE SILKEN TOUCH Birds use many materials to build their nests, varying materials somewhat to use what is available locally, even within the same species. But something that has become widely used by many species, and important to their nests in several different ways, is the silk produced by insects (caterpillars) and spiders. The silk produced by these very different types of animals is remarkably similar – protein polymers of various types. Being relatively strong as well as adhesive, it has been exploited widely by birds to hold their nests in place, and to bind them together. There are about 40 species that nest in Ontario that regularly use insect and/or spider silk in nest building. The birds using silk are generally small, with a nest cup that would be no larger than about 7-8 cm. The silk may not be strong enough to hold larger structures together, but it is just as likely that only the smaller birds are going to be able to gather enough of it to make it a useful material. Most people are aware of its use by the Ruby-throated Hummingbird. It is also used by all our vireos to help suspend their nests, but apparently not by the larger orioles. Virtually all of the wood warblers nesting above ground use silk (except a cavity nester). Cavity nesters of any species generally do not use silk. The exceptions would be House Wren (probably little used) and Brown Creeper. Silk is used by most of the flycatchers nesting in Ontario, including the Eastern Kingbird, an unusually large user. But the largest bird to use silk, and much larger than expected, is the Gray Jay. It may be the largest to use silk anywhere in the world. In this instance, however, the insect cocoons may be more useful for their insulative value than for structural integrity. Other species in Ontario using silk include the kinglets and gnatcatcher, Indigo Bunting, Field Sparrow, Pine Siskin and American Goldfinch. Insect and spider silk is used to attach to or suspend nests from plants. To some extent, especially cocoons, the silk can be stretched to allow some expansion as the nest is built, or stretched by the growing young. This is purely to provide structural support. However, perhaps the most interesting use by several species is in helping to render the nest less visible. Several species use silk Ruby-throated Hummingbird nest – photo G. K. Peck Some species, however, seem to “decorate” the exterior of their nests with numerous lumps of lightcoloured silk, such as spider egg cases, that offers no support for the nest. Several vireos typically do this where nests are suspended from small twigs that have few or no lichens. In such a situation it is likely that the irregular whitish spots serve to break up the outline of the nest, rendering it less visible to potential predators. The wide availability of insect and spider silk has been deftly exploited around the world by a fascinating array of birds. It is not just people to whom silk has become a valued commodity. --- Ross D. James CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS AND LOWLIGHTS Ross’s Goose – the first two documented nests of this species were found on the Hudson Bay coast in Kenora in 2005. Long-tailed Duck – the 11th nest was found in Kenora in 2005. Bufflehead – the first documented nest of this treenesting duck was found in Kenora in 2005. Red-throated Loon – five nests were found in 2005 in Kenora by an atlas group. Pacific Loon – six nests were found in 2005 in Kenora by atlas groups. Red-necked Grebe –since 1997, nesting has continued each year at Bronte Harbour, Halton. 6 Red-eyed Vireo – the most northerly provincial nest was reported from northwestern Kenora in 2005. Ten (48%) of 21 nests were parasitized in a 2005 study. Brown Creeper – in Norfolk in 2005, this species became the 89th provincial host of the Brown-headed Cowbird. Veery – eight (32%) of 25 nests contained eggs/young of Brown-headed Cowbird in a 2005 study. Wood Thrush – 18% of 207 Wood Thrush nests were reported parasitized in 2005. Orange-crowned Warbler – the third provincial nest was found in Kenora in 2005 by an atlasser. Ovenbird – 17% of 42 nests of this species were parasitized. Hooded Warbler – an amazing total of 82 nests were reported by a forest bird study group in 2005, from Elgin, Middlesex, and Norfolk counties. Fox Sparrow – the 11th nest was found in Kenora in 2005. Rose-breasted Grosbeak – of 113 nests found by a forest bird study group in 2005, only one was parasitized Dickcissel – a nest of this species was new for Halton RM in 2005. Brown-headed Cowbird – the 89th host was the Brown Creeper – reported in 2005. American White Pelican – Presently the Lake of the Woods colonies (ca 7,400 pairs) appear stable, while the Lake Nipigon colonies (ca 640 pairs) are increasing. Great Egret – new nesting sites have recently been reported: Bergin Island, Stormont County in 2004; and two locations in Toronto in 2004 and 2005. A large increase in pair numbers (75 pairs) on Nottawasaga Island, Simcoe County, coincided with increasing numbers of Double-crested Cormorants. Black-crowned Night-Heron – 237 nesting pairs were reported from Nottawasaga Island, Simcoe County in 2005, a huge increase also coinciding with increasing numbers of cormorants. Merlin – first nests were reported from Durham and Grenville in 2005, for this increasing falcon. Peregrine Falcon – 55 confirmed breedings were reported in 2005. Yellow Rail – large numbers were noted in Rainy River in 2005, where the fifth provincial nest was found. Common Moorhen – 2005 nests in Essex and Grenville were the first reported since 1999. American Coot – still no nests reported since 2000. Sandhill Crane - a first nesting in Lambton County in 2005, and recent breeding records from Luther Marsh, serve to emphasize the increasing number of breeding reports. Piping Plover – after a 24 year absence a pair of Piping Plovers appeared in 2005 at Wasaga Beach, Simcoe County. Many nest scrapes were made but no successful nest resulted. Spotted Sandpiper – a five-egg clutch was reported from Manitoulin in 2005. Whimbrel – 7 nests were found in 2005 in Kenora by atlassers. Hudsonian Godwit – the sixth provincial nest was found in Kenora in 2005. Marbled Godwit – the second nest of this shorebird was reported from Akimiski Island in 2005. Short-billed Dowitcher – the second nest of this shorebird was reported from Akimiski Island in 2005. Parasitic Jaeger – the seventh nest was found in Kenora in 2005. Great Black-backed Gull – nests of this marine gull were reported from Parry Sound and Simcoe in 2005. Red-bellied Woodpecker – the most northerly provincial nest of this Carolinian species was found in Rainy River District in 2005. *** Correction: In ONRS 36, the Tufted Titmouse in Current Highlights (p. 5) should be changed to a Sedge Wren, and on p. 6, remove ‘Nipissing (2004)’ from the Tufted Titmouse listing. NEW NESTINGS FOR ONTARIO REGIONS Ross’s Goose – Kenora (2005) Canada Goose – Haldimand (2005), Manitoulin (2005) Green-winged Teal – Manitoulin (2005) Bufflehead – Kenora (2005) Wild Turkey – Leeds (2005) Double-cr. Cormorant – Chatham-Kent, York (2005), Great Blue Heron – Glengarry (2005) Great Egret – Stormont (2004) Black-crowned Night-Heron – Leeds (2005) Osprey – Russell (2005) Northern Goshawk – Grenville (2005) Red-shouldered Hawk – Grenville (2005) Broad-winged Hawk – Grenville (2005) Red-tailed Hawk – Glengarry (2005), Prescott (2005) Merlin – Durham (2005), Grenville (2005) Yellow Rail – Rainy River (2005) Sandhill Crane – Lambton (2005) Short-billed Dowitcher – Akimiski Island (NWT) (2005) American Woodcock – Grenville (2005) 7 thank Mike Cadman, Angela Darwin of CWS and their support staff, and the regional atlas coordinators for their support of the ONRS. We look forward to the published result of the second provincial atlas. We wish to express our gratitude to the staff of the Ornithology division of the Department of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum: Brad Millen, Departmental Technician, for his expert assistance with data entry and geo-referencing; Cathy Ayley, Administrative Coordinator; Sue Chopra, Accounts Officer; volunteer John Brett for data entry; and to Ross James, Departmental Associate, for his valued advice on ONRS matters and published papers using ONRS data. Bird Studies Canada (BSC) and its staff (Denis Lepage, Jon McCracken, Rosie Kirton, Susan Debrecini) have been a valuable source of assistance in nest card scanning, website maintenance for online card entry and the downloading of ONRS-related material, assignment of observer numbers, and for their annual submission of nest records to the ONRS of such special-interest species as Bald Eagle, Prothonotary Warbler and others. These card submissions have helped keep our files on these signal species complete and up-to-date. We wish to thank the Ontario Division of the Canadian Wildlife Service for their interest and annual financial support of the ONRS, which has ensured that our important monitoring program continues to flourish and become the valuable environmental database it is. Great Black-backed Gull – Parry Sound (2005) Rock Pigeon – Algoma (2005), Parry Sound (2005) Yellow-billed Cuckoo – Niagara (2005) Long-eared Owl – Grenville (2005) Chimney Swift – Bruce (2003) Red-bellied Woodpecker – Rainy River (2005) American Three-toed Woodpecker – Algoma (2005) Blue-headed Vireo – Timiskaming (2005) Red-eyed Vireo – Grenville (2005) American Crow – Lanark (2005), Stormont (2005) Northern Rough-winged Swallow – Prescott (2005) White-breasted Nuthatch – Haldimand (2005) Brown Creeper – Prince Edward (2005) Carolina Wren – Brant (2005) Winter Wren – Niagara (2005) Sedge Wren – Nipissing (2004) Golden-crowned Kinglet – Niagara (2005) Veery – Haldimand (2005) Hermit Thrush – Northumberland (2005) Tennessee Warbler – Timiskaming (2005) Chestnut-sided Warbler – Grey (2004) Prairie Warbler – Hastings (2005) Mourning Warbler – Lambton (2005) Swamp Sparrow – Leeds (2005) Northern Cardinal – Grenville (2005) Dickcissel – Halton (2005) Orchard Oriole – Wellington (2005) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We continue to be grateful to our regular ONRS contributors, and also to the Ontario Breeding Bird Atlas volunteers, in its final year, who have submitted nest records to the ONRS. The atlas records have been an especially valuable contribution because many of their records were from little-worked areas of the province. We also again urge atlassers to retain their squares in the future and to continue to search for and submit records of all the nests they find. We would like to George K. Peck and Mark K. Peck, ONRS/Ornithology, Department of Natural History, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen’s Park, Toronto, ON M5S 2C6 8 Table 1: Card Totals per Species – following the recent revisions of the American Ornithologists Union Check-List’s 47th supplement. SPECIES Snow Goose Ross’s Goose Canada Goose [Brant] Mute Swan Trumpeter Swan Tundra Swan Wood Duck Gadwall American Wigeon Am. Black Duck Mallard Blue-winged Teal Cinnamon Teal Northern Shoveler Northern Pintail Green-winged Teal Canvasback Redhead Ring-necked Duck Greater Scaup Lesser Scaup King Eider Common Eider Surf Scoter White-winged Scoter Long-tailed Duck Bufflehead Common Goldeneye Hooded Merganser Common Merganser Red-br. Merganser Ruddy Duck Gray Partridge Ring-necked Pheasant Ruffed Grouse Spruce Grouse Willow Ptarmigan Sharp-tailed Grouse Gr. Prairie-Chicken Wild Turkey Northern Bobwhite Red-throated Loon Pacific Loon Common Loon Pre2004 2004 22 5 1419 313 63 10 216 202 25 389 1568 376 1 18 80 34 4 22 36 6 13 1 10 1 8(10) [2] 130 157 137 39 19 18 155 416 36 40 2 2 36 15 10 24 587 77 13 6 5 7 2005 52 2 107 5 3 4 5 1 12 2 15 2 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 4 3 2 1 8 5 3 1 7 18 1 1 20 5 6 10 SPECIES Pied-billed Grebe Horned Grebe Red-necked Grebe Eared Grebe American White Pelican Double-cr. Cormorant American Bittern Least Bittern Great Blue Heron Great Egret Snowy Egret Cattle Egret Green Heron Black-cr. Night-Heron [Yellow-cr. Night-Heron] Turkey Vulture Osprey Bald Eagle Northern Harrier Sharp-shinned Hawk Cooper’s Hawk Northern Goshawk Red-shouldered Hawk Broad-winged Hawk [Swainson’s Hawk] Red-tailed Hawk Rough-legged Hawk Golden Eagle American Kestrel Merlin Peregrine Falcon Yellow Rail King Rail Virginia Rail Sora Common Moorhen American Coot Sandhill Crane American Golden-Plover Semipalmated Plover Piping Plover Killdeer Black-necked Stilt American Avocet Spotted Sandpiper 9 Pre2004 519 12 132(134) 4 50 628 280 387 917 60 1 32 251 481 129 1159(1166) 881(1261) 292 105 181 202 456 246 [1] 1351 9 29 423 143 162 4 14 236 271 530 465 32 6 58 132 1620 853 2004 3 2005 1 5 7 2 11 3 1 35 8 9 31 2 4 7 2 4 7 31 62 5 1 5 2 2 6 3 50 25 5 2 8 2 3 4 35 37 1 11 12 5 2 7 55 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 22 1 10 8 1 14 9 Cont’d. Table 1: Card Totals per Species SPECIES Solitary Sandpiper Greater Yellowlegs Lesser Yellowlegs Upland Sandpiper Whimbrel Hudsonian Godwit Marbled Godwit Semipalmated Sandpiper Least Sandpiper Pectoral Sandpiper Dunlin Stilt Sandpiper Short-billed Dowitcher Wilson’s Snipe American Woodcock Wilson’s Phalarope Red-necked Phalarope Little Gull Bonaparte’s Gull Ring-billed Gull California Gull Herring Gull Great Black-backed Gull Caspian Tern Black Tern Common Tern Arctic Tern Forster’s Tern Parasitic Jaeger Black Guillemot Rock Pigeon [Eurasian Collared-Dove] Mourning Dove Passenger Pigeon Yellow-billed Cuckoo Black-billed Cuckoo Barn Owl Eastern Screech-Owl Great Horned Owl Northern Hawk Owl Barred Owl Great Gray Owl Long-eared Owl Short-eared Owl Boreal Owl Pre2004 3 3 5 71 12 4 1 18 12 21 1 104 331 60 7 24 16 636 2 1881 49(50) 178 1264 824 26 62 5 1 320 [1] 2321 4 127 499 41 128 866 25 40 22 134 34 10 2004 2 1 2005 2 1 7 1 1 1 12 15 12 1 3 2 3 1 4 1 1 1 2 1 3 3 12 1 1 5 5 3 5 4 10 1 1 26 30 25 13 1 4 18 32 2 24 2 1 5 1 SPECIES Northern Saw-whet Owl Common Nighthawk Chuck-will’s-widow Whip-poor-will Chimney Swift Ruby-throated Hummingbird Belted Kingfisher Red-headed Woodpecker Red-bellied Woodpecker Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Downy Woodpecker Hairy Woodpecker Am.Three-toed Woodpecker Black-backed Woodpecker Northern Flicker Pileated Woodpecker Olive-sided Flycatcher Eastern Wood-Pewee Yellow-bellied Flycatcher Acadian Flycatcher ‘Traill’s Flycatcher Complex’ Alder Flycatcher Willow Flycatcher Least Flycatcher Eastern Phoebe Great Crested Flycatcher Western Kingbird Eastern Kingbird Loggerhead Shrike Northern Shrike White-eyed Vireo Yellow-throated Vireo Blue-headed Vireo Warbling Vireo Philadelphia Vireo Red-eyed Vireo Gray Jay Blue Jay Black-billed Magpie American Crow Common Raven Horned Lark Purple Martin Tree Swallow N. Rough-winged Swallow 10 Pre2004 31 317 1 90 156 234 465 320 67 690 473 559 34 152 1298 223 28 331 21 168(171) 172 66 125 352 2244(2288) 478 4 1978(1983) 559(560) 14 100(101) 88 207(208) 43 786 84 565 16 1015 397(401) 206(208) 917 7180(7182) 498(499) 2004 2005 3 2 1 3 27 6 22 22 15 45 1 4 48 14 1 6 12 5 24 47 23 48 4 1 46 8 11 6 23 14 7 13 46 7 2 7 6 42 8 24 20 3 1 1 6 58 33 25 11 28 37 6 7 277 14 45 49 5 8 194 9 Cont’d. Table 1: Card Totals per Species SPECIES Bank Swallow Cliff Swallow Barn Swallow Black-capped Chickadee Boreal Chickadee Tufted Titmouse Red-breasted Nuthatch White-breasted Nuthatch Brown Creeper Carolina Wren Bewick’s Wren House Wren Winter Wren Sedge Wren Marsh Wren Golden-crowned Kinglet Ruby-crowned Kinglet Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Eastern Bluebird Mountain Bluebird Veery Gray-cheeked Thrush Swainson’s Thrush Hermit Thrush Wood Thrush American Robin Gray Catbird Northern Mockingbird Brown Thrasher European Starling American Pipit Bohemian Waxwing Cedar Waxwing Blue-winged Warbler Golden-winged Warbler ‘Brewster’s Warbler’ [Lawrence’s Warbler] Tennessee Warbler Orange-crowned Warbler Nashville Warbler Northern Parula Yellow Warbler Chestnut-sided Warbler Magnolia Warbler Cape May Warbler Pre2004 1580 1094 4271(4276) 837(844) 76 14 137(138) 158 123 52(53) 5 2196(2271) 46 63(72) 539(578) 21 30(36) 183(187) 6856(7152) 2 561(562) 2 211(212) 249 1501(1502) 8350(8397) 1665(1669) 179(185) 935(940) 3166(3270) 8 1 1266(1271) 18 36 2 31 2 111 7 2130 331 154(155) 6 2004 19 28 50 35 1 2 3 6 3 2005 14 40 59 36 SPECIES Black-throated Blue Warbler Yellow-rumped Warbler Black-throated Green Warbler Blackburnian Warbler Pine Warbler [Kirtland’s Warbler] Prairie Warbler 7 Palm Warbler 4 Bay-breasted Warbler 1 Blackpoll Warbler Cerulean Warbler 107 54 Black-and-white Warbler 2 1 American Redstart 1 Prothonotary Warbler 2 Ovenbird 1 Northern Waterthrush 1 3 Louisiana Waterthrush 4 3 [Connecticut Warbler] 55 43 Mourning Warbler Common Yellowthroat 11 30 Hooded Warbler Wilson’s Warbler 1 2 Canada Warbler 9 5 Yellow-breasted Chat 234 210 Scarlet Tanager 230 166 Eastern Towhee 36 28 American Tree Sparrow 5 2 Chipping Sparrow 8 5 Clay-coloured Sparrow 37 23 Field Sparrow Vesper Sparrow Lark Sparrow 12 18 Savannah Sparrow 1 1 Grasshopper Sparrow 1 Henslow’s Sparrow LeConte’s Sparrow Nelson’s Sharp-tailed Sparrow 1 Fox Sparrow 1 Song Sparrow 1 Lincoln’s Sparrow 1 Swamp Sparrow 12 33 White-throated Sparrow 8 7 Harris’s Sparrow 1 2 White-crowned Sparrow Dark-eyed Junco 11 Pre2004 58 240 72 41 18(27) 49 22 19 7 87 77 566(567) 167(188) 632 123(128) 17 [1] 48 234 289(290) 17 32 21 104 183 13 2015(2018) 48 438 544(545) 9 781(783) 89 13 11 4 9 2257(2261) 33 298 563(566) 1 26 202 2004 1 4 2 1 2005 2 5 1 2 10 17 65 1 1 18 45 6 5 2 2 82 1 1 13 2 1 7 3 1 2 18 1 1 4 1 33 1 27 1 16 2 2 3 1 22 6 3 8 4 3 6 Cont’d. Table 1: Card Totals per Species SPECIES Lapland Longspur Smith’s Longspur [Snow Bunting] Northern Cardinal Rose-breasted Grosbeak Indigo Bunting Dickcissel Bobolink Red-winged Blackbird Eastern Meadowlark Western Meadowlark Yellow-headed Blackbird Rusty Blackbird Brewer’s Blackbird Common Grackle Pre2004 14 17 564(566) 843 265 33(36) 167(168) 8121(8124) 449 9 50 46 261 2942 2004 2005 3 3 21 30 128 114 15 20 5 1 38 49 2 1 2 19 1 SPECIES Brown-headed Cowbird Orchard Oriole Baltimore Oriole Pine Grosbeak Purple Finch House Finch Red Crossbill White-winged Crossbill Common Redpoll Hoary Redpoll Pine Siskin American Goldfinch Evening Grosbeak House Sparrow Pre2004 4161 93 979(983) 1 & [1] 136 343(347) 9 10(12) 24 44(47) 1552 12 1621(1652) 2004 137 16 2005 148 4 16 1 5 1 1 2 3 12 1 24 5 11 14 Note: Brackets [ ] around a name indicate a hypothetical breeding species; brackets [ ] around a corresponding card number indicate a nesting or nestings lacking documentation. Where a number is followed by a number in parentheses ( ), used only for non-colonial species, the card number total is on the left, and the nest number total is in parentheses ( ), indicating that more than one nest was described on some of the cards, eg. Bald Eagle, House Sparrow, etc. Pileated Woodpecker feeding young (PIWO202678B) six weeks after egg photo on page 2 - photo G. K. Peck 12 Table 2A: Current Regions – Total of Cards and Species to 2005 Card Spp. REGION Algoma (ALGO) 1232 114 Brant (BRAN) 713 84 Bruce (BRUC) 3216 157 Chatham-Kent (post-2000) (CHAT) 204 61 Cochrane (COCH) 1427 132 Dufferin (DUFF) 3335 106 Dundas** (DUND) 105 32 Durham RM (DURH) 3386 132 Elgin (ELGI) 1819 134 Essex (ESSE) 2530 118 Frontenac (FRON) 1695 150 Glengarry ** (GLEN) 500 70 Grenville ** (GREN) 290 69 Grey (GREY) 4553 130 Haldimand (post-2000) (HALD) 56 29 Haliburton (HALI) 1202 107 Halton RM (HALT) 1953 108 Hamilton (post-2000) (HAMI) 32 19 Hastings (HAST) 646 101 Huron (HURO) 1210 76 Kawartha Lakes (post-2000) (KAWA) 193 69 Kenora (KENO) 3110 175 Lambton (LAMB) 1499 131 Lanark (LANA) 1371 88 Leeds ** (LEED) 1553 132 Lennox & Addington (LENN) 728 109 Manitoulin (MANI) 1353 140 ** combined counties (here considered separately) REGION Middlesex (MIDD) Muskoka DM (MUSK) Niagara (NIAG) Nipissing (NIPI) Norfolk (post-2000) (NORF) Northumberland (NORT) Ottawa (post-2000) (OTTA) Oxford (OXFO) Parry Sound (PARR) Peel RM (PEEL) Perth (PERT) Peterborough (PETE) Prescott ** (PRES) Prince Edward (PRIN) Rainy River (RAIN) Renfrew (RENF) Russell ** (RUSS) Simcoe (SIMC) Stormont ** (STOR) Sudbury (SUDB) Thunder Bay (THUN) Timiskaming (TIMI) Toronto (TORO) Waterloo RM (WATE) Wellington (WELL) York RM (YORK) NWT/Nunavut/Misc. Card 3181 1212 2332 3780 1621 4393 511 1718 2764 1079 337 3442 170 1476 1343 589 104 8177 131 2327 2181 1116 2073 1083 3344 3307 114 Spp. 139 110 113 153 85 128 77 106 139 80 76 131 65 112 130 97 43 169 38 146 151 106 131 82 128 134 25 Card 2075 4300 1390 1464 1792 837 344 2064 7021 Spp. 124 137 111 103 125 102 110 93 141 Table 2B: Historical Regions – Total of Cards and Species to 1974 and to 2000 Card REGION Carleton Co. (pre-1975) (CARX) 896 Durham Co. (pre-1975) (DURX) 2189 Haldimand Co. (pre-1975) (HADX) 150 Haldimand-Norfolk (pre-2001) (HANX) 4072 Halton Co. (pre-1975) (HALX) 2311 Hamilt.-Wentworth (pre-2001) (HAWX) 1820 Kent Co. (pre-2001) (KENX) 3793 Lincoln Co. (pre-1975) (LINX) 887 Muskoka Dist. (pre-1975) (MUSX) 1179 Spp. 106 131 63 150 110 103 143 84 112 REGION Norfolk Co. (pre-1975) (NORX) Ontario Co. (pre-1975) (ONTX) Ottawa-Carleton (pre-2001) (OTCX) Peel Co. (pre-1975) (PEEX) Victoria Co. (pre-2001) (VICX) Waterloo Co. (pre-1975) (WATX) Welland Co. (pre-1975) (WELX) Wentworth Co. (pre-1975) (WENX) York Co. (pre-1975) (YORX) Total cards --Total nesting species --- 13 134,601 289 Table 3: Contributors and Card Numbers processed for ONRS 37 NAME Card NAME Card NAME Card NAME Aikins, B.F. Alexander, S. Bellerby, G. Belyea, G. Binsfeld, G. Bird, G. & H. Brace, D. Bryan, R. Bryan, S. Burke, D./Forest survey Carlson, M. Carpentier, G. Cartwright, C. Catto, M. Cecile, C.P. Chopra, A. Clements, B. Coady, G. Coles, G. Crysler, D. Dalgleish, M. Davidson, A. Daynard, J. Derbyshire, D. Dewey, J. Dodsworth, S. Doucette, R. Eagles, P. Ellingwood, C. Ertolahti, A Ewart, J. Fidler, B. Fleguel, M. Frank, R. Friis, C. Gage, S.R. Gahbauer, M. Galpern, P. Gibson, F. Gibson, G. Gildner, D.T. Giles, E. Goodwin, C. 1 2 4 40 49 478 3 4 32 996 5 5 98 35 1 1 167 111 15 3 2 4 1 59 15 3 1 2 1 8 7 1 5 17 1 4 3 8 16 1 6 6 2 Grandfield, J. Griffen, J. Hagberg, E. Hamill, S. Hamilton, K. Harding, B. Harpley, P. Harris, C.G. Haselmayer, J. Heagy, A. Hodgson, P. Hughes, L. Jackson, J. Jacobsen, A. James, R.D. Jobes, A.P. Johanson, A. Johnson, J. Johnson, M Jones, C. Kerr, D.J. Killeen, R. Kils, J. King, J. Kings, D. Klein, W. Kopysh, N. Korol, B. Lemon, J. Lewington, D. Lipinski, R. Lockhart, S. Lorimer, J. Love, J. Lumsden, H.G. Mackenzie, A. Martin, C. Martin, D. Martin, P. Martin, V. McCracken, J. McDermott, C. McIlveen, W. 1 1 2 81 1 2 11 14 1 1 1 1 1 7 97 28 7 93 1 1 2 3 4 6 2 1 1 21 1 21 1 1 1 1 26 3 7 8 1 1 1 1 2 McLeod, M. Meissner, E. Melcher, N. Millen, B. Mills, M. Morden, B. Mosquin, T. Murphy, G. Murray, R. Nicoll, F. O’Dell, M. Oliver, A. Ontbirds Parker, A. Peck, G.K. Peck, M.K. Phippen, S. Pietracupa, D. Pratt, P. Ratcliff, B. Read, P. Reaume, J. Richards, J. Richardson, L. Riggs, M. Robinson, M. Romaniuk, S. Rule, J.W. Ryder, V. Sandilands, A. Scanlon, D. Schmidt, L. Shackleton, K. Shook, J. Sinclair, A. Sirois, L. Smith, J.C. Stankiewicz, R. Street, M. Sturdee, I. Sutherland, D.A. Swainson, R. Taylor, N. 6 4 1 1 9 1 1 20 1 32 3 30 2 2 36 155 3 2 2 52 27 2 16 2 2 1 10 2 1 7 5 1 8 14 1 110 6 4 2 3 25 1 2 Timmerman, A. Tomlinson, D.W. Tozer, D. Trottier, J. Trute, L. Vallé, E. Vasiliauskas, S. Waddington, J. Wainio-Keizer, K. Walters, B. Warianko, M. Weseloh, C. Wiercinski, M. Wilcox, A. Willcock, D. Williams, G. Wilson, A.E. Woodliffe, P.A. Wormington, A. Yusek, W. 14 Card 1 7 3 2 3 1 8 1 1 15 7 1 1 19 1 1 14 30 63 1