We are now well into the fall hawk watch season as sites across the country are staffed by citizen scientists engaged in counting raptors heading south for the winter. Various hawk, falcon, vulture, eagle, and kite species plus birds like the Osprey, Northern Harrier and even some owls can be tallied on conducive flight days at migratory hotspots often situated along ridges or at the edge of a body of water. Counting these birds helps keep track of raptor populations on an international scale, gauging the health of these important predator species that have often been threatened by human action, from hunting to chemical pollution. These sites contribute their data to the Hawk Migration Association of North America, founded in 1974 with a mission, “To advance the scientific knowledge and promote conservation of raptor populations through study, enjoyment, and appreciation of raptor migration.” I am the coordinator of one such site – the Boothe Memorial Park Hawk Watch in Stratford, Connecticut that Frank Mantlik, Charles Barnard Jr. and I started in late 2008 thanks to Frank’s observations. You can find our site’s profile with how it all started, general guidelines, information and directions here: http://www.hawkcount.org/siteinfo.php?rsite=703
While being staffed by volunteers and with many other responsibilities for me to take care of, the site is usually only covered on days where we know the conditions will be right for a great hawk flight. We usually have several terrific days each year with a couple dozen more that produce a decent number of birds. This year I will be training two of our wonderfully talented Bridgeport WildLife Guards, Talisha Ortiz and Jamiya Williams, who will be volunteering their time to help complete these raptor observations and conduct some outreach with park visitors who always wonder what we are staring at in the sky. After all their hard work this summer they will spend the fall contributing even more to avian conservation and environmental education. I visited Boothe for part of the day on September 4, but I had my first full day there this past Friday with the results and details below:
Boothe Memorial Park Stratford, Connecticut, USA Daily Raptor Counts: Sep 11, 2015 ------------------------------------------------------------------- Species Day's Count Month Total Season Total ------------------ ----------- -------------- -------------- Black Vulture 0 2 2 Turkey Vulture 3 3 3 Osprey 107 170 170 Bald Eagle 12 20 20 Northern Harrier 1 1 1 Sharp-shinned Hawk 41 44 44 Cooper's Hawk 3 3 3 Northern Goshawk 0 0 0 Red-shouldered Hawk 0 0 0 Broad-winged Hawk 8 17 17 Red-tailed Hawk 0 0 0 Rough-legged Hawk 0 0 0 Golden Eagle 0 0 0 American Kestrel 9 11 11 Merlin 5 5 5 Peregrine Falcon 0 1 1 Unknown Accipiter 0 0 0 Unknown Buteo 0 0 0 Unknown Falcon 0 0 0 Unknown Eagle 0 0 0 Unknown Raptor 2 2 2 Total: 191 279 279 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Observation start time: 08:30:00 Observation end time: 17:00:00 Total observation time: 8.5 hours Official Counter: Bill Banks, Scott Kruitbosch, Tom Murray Observers: Bill Banks, Charlie Barnard, Dave Zawisha, Frank Mantlik, Ron Pelletier, Tom Murray Visitors: Approximately 15 park visitors or volunteers stopped by to chat or inquire what we were doing. Otherwise it was pro observers only. Weather: A cold front featuring waves of heavy rain moved offshore overnight with the remnants still pushing through New England this morning. Cloud cover persisted through the morning only to be replaced by additional clouds as the low tried to unsuccessfully develop precipitation back to the W. Drier air moved in on a weak high during the afternoon, giving us some fair weather clouds. The wind was strongest from the departing low, though mostly only 4-7MPH with an occasional 8-12MPH burst, all from the NE. The high shifted the wind to the N and slightly NW before the count ended. Temperatures beat expected highs as we neared 80 with still sticky air. Low levels were turbulent and faster early in the morning, possibly being why we peaked in flight then. Raptor Observations: We set our all-time OSPR daily record at 107 breaking the previous high of 67 on 09/16/12. We would have broken it last Friday, 09/04/15, when we had 61 in only 3.5 hours but lacked coverage. All 8 BWHA were single birds. We had a variety of tracks but the most common one was probably nearly due W. They were at the limit of binocular range once the thermals came up, and we likely still missed some despite the clouds. There was no perceptible drop down period. The lunchtime lull was severe. We had several local RTHA, TUVU, OSPR, PEFA, and BAEA, plus at least 21 BLVU. The counted migrant TUVU were a group choice based on their height, track, wings and lack of deviation. Non-raptor Observations: Southbound migrants included: American Black Duck 2 COMMON NIGHTHAWK 2 Chimney Swift 81 Ruby-throated Hummingbird 7 PURPLE MARTIN 1 Tree Swallow 69 Barn Swallow 10 Cedar Waxwing 25 Migrants in the park included: None because the front was still pushing through overnight. Tomorrow will be a very different story. Predictions: Light and variable somewhat N winds should shift more S or SE. It may be decent early but probably will be slower overall. ======================================================================== Report submitted by Scott Kruitbosch (skruitbosch@rtpi.org) Boothe Memorial Park information may be found at: www.rtpi.org
Perhaps next week will bring us thousands of Broad-winged Hawks and hundreds of other awesome birds of prey as great flight conditions are likely in the next few days. We will be watching the weather and the skies all to continue our work, and Roger Tory Peterson’s passion, in monitoring and protecting our birds while educating the public on why they should, too.
Scott Kruitbosch
Conservation & Outreach Coordinator