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Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Saturday, 27 March 2021

March 27 2021

NATURE MONCTON INFORMATION LINE, 27 March 2021 (Saturday)

 

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Edited by: Nelson Poirier nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Transcript by: Catherine Clements

Info Line #: 506-384-6397 (384-NEWS)

 

**The Miramichi Marsh has become a go-to birding area, with habitat that attracts a variety of wildlife. Peter and Deana Gadd checked it out early Friday afternoon. The ponds are still frozen, but there was meltwater in places, and some open water in the brooks. They did not see any ducks or CANADA GEESE [Bernache du Canada] but did see at least 5 RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS [Carouge à epaulettes] and 7 COMMON GRACKLES [Quiscale bronzé], and perhaps 25 redpolls [Sizerin], 2 COMMON RAVENS [Grand Corbeau] and 3 or 4 CROWS [Corneille], as well as a couple of BLUE JAYS [Geai bleu]. Most interesting for them was their first of the year SONG SPARROW [Bruant chanteur]. Deana heard at least two others and heard a trill which she suspected might have been a SWAMP SPARROW [Bruant des marais].

They were fortunate enough to witness a single BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE [Mésange à tête noire] working energetically at excavating a nest cavity in quite a small diameter snag. It was careful, as they always are, to leave the wood chips at some distance away from the nest.

They saw very briefly an attack on a cluster of birds by either a MERLIN [Faucon émerillon] or SHARP-SHINNED HAWK [Épervier brun].

There was a flock of approximately 42 RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS [Carouge à epaulettes] at their home on Friday afternoon. They have had Red-winged Blackbirds for a while, but numbers are really building. There was also a male BROWN-HEADED COWBIRD [Vacher à tête brune] with them, and a few GRACKLES [Quiscale bronzé] as well. They saw their resident winter RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER [Pic à ventre roux] earlier in the week and are seeing just one NORTHERN CARDINAL [Cardinal rouge] daily now. The Gadd’s had up to 13 Northern Cardinals some days over the winter. One would have to wonder what their thoughts are at the moment, establishing territories or leaving the area? Another month should answer that.

 They also caught sight of a lone CANADA GOOSE [Bernache du Canada], which was their first of the year, at the Newcastle water treatment lagoon on Wednesday.

 

**** Another report of HONEY BEES to a bird feeder yard. John Inman has had a swarm arrive to his 225 Mary’s Point yard very impressed with the cracked corn. His bird patrons are not amused! Two FOX SPARROWS arrived on March 23.  Also a second HOUSE FINCH (female) has arrived. This is very out of character for House Finch to be visiting rural feeder yards normally being very urban in their feeder yard choice. A RUSTY BLACKBIRD is also a patron with a few remaining REDPOLLS still present.

 

**Brian Stone visited Mapleton Park on Thursday to find several EASTERN CHIPMUNKS filling their check pouches and looking to have overwintered very nicely on their stored caches. Brian also photographed a snag tree that PILEATED WOODPEKER(s) found very attractive to leave their large slivers of tailings at the tree base. He also got nice photos of PUSSY WILLOW shrubs opening their bud scales to show their white hairy winter bud insulation. They will soon be showing their green female blooms or yellow male blooms on separate plants. An immature BALD EAGLE did a fly pass.

 

 

**Mac Wilmot comments they seem to have an annual visit from a MOOSE [Orignal] that shows up and wanders about their Lower Coverdale property. On Wednesday morning, Mac found the evidence of the visit again, but this time there seemed to be two animals, so possibly a cow and a yearling.

 

**Gordon Rattray did a check to see the progress to breeding plumage of the RED-HEADED WOODPECKER at Dwayne Biggar’s place in Edgett’s Landing on Friday. It did not show while Gordon was there, but he did get a few consolation prizes: a pleasant photo of a FOX SPARROW [Bruant fauve] with the front nicely showing the rusty arrows on its chest. A COMMON GRACKLE [Quiscale bronzé] showed its iridescence, a PINE SISKIN [Tarin des pins] came by (they seemed to decrease in abundance locally over the winter), and a female RING-NECKED PHEASANT [Faisan de Colchide] strutted about.

 

**Male RING-NECKED PHEASANT [Faisan de Colchide] wattle size, according to literature Pat Gibbs found, would vary somewhat according to age and status in the group. Pat got two photos recently of birds with engorged and unengorged wattles that illustrate some of the information she found and the dramatic wattle engorgement.

 

**We are a day late with this week’s Sky at a Glance, courtesy of Curt Nason; however, it rather looks like Mother Nature is going to start off the week with a cloudy evening and night skies. It is just a blip; the sky will still be there waiting.

This Week’s Sky at a Glance, 2021 March 27 – 2021 April 3
The spring star is springing up in the east these evenings. Arcturus is the third or fourth brightest star in the sky and the second brightest we can see from New Brunswick. It is just a tad brighter than Vega, the summer star, which rises around 9:30 pm this week. The winter star, Sirius, sets after midnight and Capella, the autumn star, never sets in southern New Brunswick. The discrepancy over whether Arcturus is third or fourth brightest depends on how you define it. Alpha Centauri, in the southern hemisphere, appears brighter but it is a close double star – too close to split with the naked eye – and Arcturus is brighter than either but not both.

Arcturus anchors the constellation Boötes (bo-oh-teez) the Herdsman, and the star’s name means “bear driver.” Boötes is seen chasing the two bears, Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, around the celestial North Pole. To many people the constellation resembles a tie, a kite or an ice cream cone. The head of the herdsman, at the tip of the constellation opposite Arcturus, is the star Nekkar, which sounds somewhat like necktie.

Halfway between Arcturus and the hind leg of Ursa Major is the star Cor Coroli in Canes Venatici the Hunting Dogs. Use binoculars to look for a fuzzy patch halfway between Arcturus and Cor Coroli. This is a globular cluster called M3, the third entry in Charles Messier’s 18th century catalogue of things that resemble a comet but aren’t. This cluster contains half a million stars at a distance of 34,000 light years, nearly a thousand times farther than Arcturus.

This Week in the Solar System
Saturday’s sunrise in Moncton is at 7:08 am and sunset will occur at 7:41 pm, giving 12 hours, 33 minutes of daylight (7:13 am and 7:46 pm in Saint John).  Next Saturday, the Sun will rise at 6:54 am and set at 7:50 pm, giving 12 hours, 56 minutes of daylight (7:00 am and 7:55 pm in Saint John).

The Moon is full this Sunday, the Mi’kmaq Maple Sugar Moon. Mars spends the next two weeks moving along between the long horns of Taurus the Bull. Saturn is rising around 5 am this week, half an hour before Jupiter. Mercury and Venus will be out of sight over the next month. Starting on Tuesday we will have another two-week opportunity to see the zodiacal light in a clear, dark western sky, approximately 45-90 minutes after sunset.

With astronomy meetings and outreach activities on hold you can watch the local Sunday Night Astronomy Show at 8 pm, and view archived shows, on YouTube at: 
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAEHfOWyL-kNH7dBVHK8spg

Questions? Contact Curt Nason at
nasonc@nbnet.nb.ca.

 

 

nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Nelson Poirier,

Nature Moncton

 




BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE EXCAVATING NEST CAVITY. MARCH 26, 2021.  PETER GADD

BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE EXCAVATING NEST CAVITY. MARCH 26, 2021.  PETER GADD

BLACK-CAPPED CHICKADEE EXCAVATING NEST CAVITY. MARCH 26, 2021.  PETER GADD

FOX SPARROW. MAR 26, 2021. GORDON RATTRAY
FOX SPARROW. MARCH 25, 2021. JOHN INMAN


SONG SPARROW. MARCH 26, 2021. PETER GADD

REDPOLL (POSSIBLE HOARY). MARCH 26, 2021. JOHN INMAN


PINE SISKIN. MAR 26, 2021. GORDON RATTRAY

COMMON GRACKLE. MAR 26, 2021. GORDON RATTRAY
RUSTY BLACKBIRD. MARCH 25, 2021. JOHN INMAN


BALD EAGLE (IMMATURE). MAR. 25, 2021. BRIAN STONE

BIRD FEEDER YARD. MARCH 26, 2021. LOIS BUDD

RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS AND 1 BROWN-HEADED COWBIRD (left of center). MARCH 26, 2021. PETER GADD

RING-NECKED PHEASANT (UNENGORGED WATTLES). MARCH 26, 2021. PAT GIBBS

RING-NECKED PHEASANT (ENGORGED WATTLES). MARCH 26, 2021. PAT GIBBS

RING-NECKED PHEASANT. MAR 26, 2021. GORDON RATTRAY
HONEY BEES TO CRACKED CORN. MARCH 26, 2021. JOHN INMAN



PILEATED WOODPECKER SHREDDED TREE. MAR. 25, 2021. BRIAN STONE

MOOSE VISIT (ANNUAL EVIDENCE). MARCH 23, 2021. MAC WILMOT



PUSSY WILLOW. MAR. 25, 2021. BRIAN STONE

PUSSY WILLOW. MAR. 25, 2021. BRIAN STONE

Arcturus_Cor Coroli

GETTING READY FOR CROSSING THE BORDER