In fact, southbound migratory shorebirds have been back in
the Pacific Northwest since the last week of June, but it is timely to write
about them, as they are probably at their peak at the beginning of September.
The adults come back as soon as their young fledge,
but of course some nests fail, and those adults are the first to return. Why
stay in the Arctic, with all those mosquitoes and arctic foxes, when where you
really should be is on a mud flat in Grays Harbor or a sandy beach in Sinaloa?
Some of them are going farther, well into South America, so they had better get
an early start for that long flight.
Perhaps because they are big enough to potentially ward off
predators, large shorebirds such as curlews and godwits divide parental
responsibility, and the sexes migrate together. This is also true of most
plovers. But the first Western Sandpipers you see in fall are probably those
that failed at nesting, then a large wave of females that have left their
families, then the males.
Many of these species undergo body molt while they are
migrating, so in the fall we see birds in breeding plumage, in nonbreeding
plumage, and at all stages in between. In addition, another plumage complicates
the issue. These are the juveniles, young of the year that migrate after the
adults. The peaks of their migration are often about a month apart, so in some
species that continue south after passing through our region, we see a lot of
adults and then a lot of juveniles, but not much mixing.
When trying to identify unknown shorebirds, it is extremely
important to place them in a plumage, or at least an age stage. In fall, the
adults have very worn body feathers until they are all replaced, and many of
them don’t replace all their feathers until some time in the winter. Of the
flight feathers, both the primaries and the tertials (the feathers of the inner
wing that cover the primaries when the wing is folded) become very worn, and
that wear is easily seen. Juveniles, on the other hand, have neat unworn
feathers, including the primaries and tertials.
Get out to the coast and savor the shorebirds. You can
easily see one to two dozen species on a good day, and identification is much
facilitated because they are often in mixed-species flocks.
Dennis Paulson
No comments:
Post a Comment