Editor & Proofreader

Editor: Nelson Poirier    Proofreader: Louise Nichols

Thursday, 3 April 2025

April 3 2025

 

NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS

April 3, 2025 

 

Nature Moncton members, as well as any naturalist in New Brunswick or beyond, are invited to share their photos and descriptions of recent nature sightings to build a fresh (almost) daily edition of Nature News

 

 

To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the information line editor,  nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com .

 

 

Please advise the editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com and the proofreader Louise Nichols at Nicholsl@eastlink.ca if any errors are noted in wording or photo labelling.


For more information on Nature Moncton, check the website at 
www.naturemoncton.com.

 

Proofreading courtesy of Louise Nichols

nicholsl@eastlink.ca

 

 **Again, a reminder that the amphibian outing for tomorrow night (Friday) with Andrew Darcy is postponed until more suitable amphibian weather/temperature arrives. Stay tuned!

The bird box cleanout on Riverfront trail is still scheduled for this coming Saturday.


**Shannon Inman was able to capture some excellent photos through the woods, including one of an American woodcock and another of a male ruffed grouse putting on its stunning mating display which is certain to capture the attention of any nearby female suitor.

John Inman’s ‘flock’ of rusty blackbirds continues to swell and is now showing arrivals appearing in their breeding plumage that is quite different from their winter plumage (which many would consider more attractive). It is notable that the Inman’s feeder yard can attract significant numbers of rusty blackbirds, a bird that is in significant decline.

 

**Richard Blacquiere found a presumed female duck yesterday afternoon at the Hampton Lagoon that appeared to have in-between characteristics of a mallard duck and an American black duck. It was near a pair of typical mallard ducks but stayed by itself. It was mallard-sized, with relatively dark plumage overall and an olive bill with a dark center. It's hard to see, but Richard thinks the belly was dark as well. The white bars on either side of the bluish speculum look too restricted for a mallard duck but would be out of place on a black duck. Richard is tentatively suggesting a female mallard x black duck hybrid but would be interested in hearing other opinions.

 

**Louise Nichols sends a photo of a red-breasted nuthatch and a golden-crowned kinglet that she took on Wednesday morning while exploring a trail off Walker Rd. in Sackville with Brian Stone.  They hoped to see a boreal chickadee, but not many birds were out and about in the cold temperatures and brisk wind. 

Louise also attaches a few photos she took at Point-du-Chene last month.  One shows a herring gull with fish as its prey.    Another photo is of a male mallard-black duck hybrid.

(Editor’s note: Louise’s herring gull photo provides interesting fodder. It is in molt to its next phase, and so could be a late 1st-winter bird as it is showing a lot of brown with a receding black bill. However, the second photo shows a yellow eye, which would be more consistent with a 2nd-winter bird. Only the bird knows for sure. To add to that, the guides state that variability comes into play at this stage of molting.

The second interesting point is the bird's prey, which is a fish that we very seldom see.  After consultation with Alyre Chiasson, we believe it to be an ocean pout, a species neither of us has seen in the wild. However, it is not an uncommon bottom-dwelling fish, eel-like in appearance, that can survive in near-freezing waters. It is found off the coast of New England, extending eastward to eastern Canada, which further increases the possibility.

Any other thoughts would be appreciated.)

 

**Brian Stone sends a few photos from the Sackville and Cap-Pele areas. Several red-breasted nuthatches and golden-crowned kinglets were present in the woods outside Sackville, and common eiders were close enough at wharves in the coastal waters of the Cap-Pele region to show well in photographs. The temperature was not that low, but the high winds made it feel even colder. Louise Nichols braved the chill to join Brian on parts of his outing but was not rewarded with any special sightings. Hopefully, next time will be better.

 

**Yesterday’s query about experience/ information on the use of butterfly boxes was answered by butterfly guru Rheal Vienneau. His response is quoted below: 

“In my humble opinion, butterflies in our neck of the woods will not enter butterfly boxes, and my experience with them confirms this.  In nature, butterflies seek shelter in trees, under heavy foliage, and in thick grass.  They will seek shelter from rain, wind, high temperatures, bird predators, etc.  Butterflies will also shelter for the night in these same areas.

I believe butterfly boxes are too much of an unnatural means for butterflies to use them for shelter.”

 

**Recently, when completing the work on the peregrine falcon nest box on the summit of Assumption Place, some weathered regurgitated pellets were noted. We often think of these pellets as being from an owl, but many raptors and some other birds also regurgitate pellets. In this scenario where the pellets were found, regurgitated pellets from the falcons would be assumed.

Don McAlpine from the NB Museum confirmed that possibility and I am quoting his helpful response below: 

“Any owl pellet I have seen had bones in it, frequently entire lower jaws and near entire crania of small mammals, along with various long bones, individual teeth, etc.  Hawk pellets do contain bone, but it is typically broken or crushed.  One does not find whole crania in hawk pellets, in part due to the feeding method (tearing food versus swallowing whole) and the nature of the digestive system (less efficient in owls). Given the nature of these pellets (mainly feathers? Entirely feathers?) and the location (peregrines in the area), I would agree that falcon seems like a more likely source.”

  

**Many senior New Brunswick naturalists will have

fond memories of the times they spent with Hilaire and

Rose-Aline Chiasson, a couple from Lamèque, who started the Acadian Peninsula Naturalist Club.

Hilaire passed away on March 29, with Rose-Aline having predeceased him. Hilaire’s obituary can be found at the link below:

 

https://www.hommagenb.com/obituaries/hilaire-chiasson-1940-2025-pointe-alexandre/

 

 

 

 

Nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Nelson Poirier.

Nature Moncton



AMERICAN WOODCOCK. APRIL 2, 2025. SHANNON INMAN


RUFFED GROUSE (DISPLAYING MALE). APRIL 2, 2025. SHANNON INMAN


ICELAND GULL. APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


ICELAND GULL. APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


HERRING GULL WITH OCEAN POUT PREY. MARCH 20, 2025. LOUISE NICHOLS


HERRING GULL WITH OCEAN POUT PREY. MARCH 20, 2025. LOUISE NICHOLS


MALLARD X BLACK DUCK HYBRID. MARCH 20, 2025. LOUISE NICHOLS


MALLARD X BLACK DUCK (HYBRID FEMALE). APRIL 2, 2025. RICHARD BLACQUIERE 


MALLARD X BLACK DUCK (HYBRID FEMALE). APRIL 2, 2025. RICHARD BLACQUIERE 


COMMON EIDER (FEMALE). APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


COMMON EIDER (MALE). APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET (MALE). APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET. APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


RUSTY BLACKBIRD (BREEDING PLUMAGE MALE). APRIL 2, 2025. JOHN INMAN


RUSTY BLACKBIRD (BREEDING PLUMAGE FEMALE). APRIL 2, 2025. JOHN INMAN


RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH. APRIL 2, 2025. LOUISE NICHOLS 


RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH. APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET. APRIL 2, 2025. LOUISE NICHOLS 




GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET. APR. 02, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


PEREGRINE FALCON PELLET. APRIL 2, 2025. NELSON POIRIER 


PEREGRINE FALCON PELLET. APRIL 2, 2025. NELSON POIRIER 




























  

Wednesday, 2 April 2025

April 2 2025

NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS

April 2, 2025 

 

Nature Moncton members, as well as any naturalist in New Brunswick or beyond, are invited to share their photos and descriptions of recent nature sightings to build a fresh (almost) daily edition of Nature News

 

 

To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the information line editor,  nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com .

 

Please advise the editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com  and proofreader Louise Nichols at Nicholsl@eastlink.ca if any errors are noted in wording or photo labelling.


For more information on Nature Moncton, check the website at 
www.naturemoncton.com.

 

Proofreading courtesy of Louise Nichols

nicholsl@eastlink.ca

 

 

**Andrew Darcy has been monitoring local vernal ponds for amphibian activity for a Nature Moncton outing this coming Friday night. Andrew’s recent monitoring has found this coming Friday night is too early, so he is postponing the event until conditions are right, which may well be another week. Stay tuned, as this will be a great spring outing when conditions are right.

 

**A recent discussion on the use of butterfly boxes has surfaced, and it would be very appreciated if readers who have used these structures would comment on their effectiveness and how/if they are used by butterflies.

(Editor’s note: I have the impression that these units may impress people more than butterflies, but I would like to be proven wrong. I hope folks who have used these units will share their thoughts.)

 

 

**Although not serious, the recent ice storm was more of an event in Memramcook than in some local areas. Norbert Dupuis photographed a male northern cardinal on an ice-coated shrub. He also photographed a huge flock of common eider going over the Memramcook Valley on that day.

 

**Fred and Lynn Dube had a dozen or more American robins visit their yard, foraging for food. They hoped they had found what they were looking for, as parts of the yard were very torn up, and that wasn't an April Fool's joke. A photo shows only one area of the yard they searched thoroughly.

 

 

**On Sunday, Brian Stone checked out the ponds at Highland Park in Salisbury but found sparse numbers of ducks, just one pair of green-winged teal. Other birds present were several common grackles, numerous male red-winged blackbirds, a few incoming Canada geese, and one very distant, far across the river, pileated woodpecker. Back at home in the yard, a male ring-necked pheasant showed up for a photo, which Brian appreciated greatly.


        **On Tuesday afternoon, after the weather started to clear a bit,         Brian Stone went for a short walk in Mapleton Park and had fun         photographing a busy muskrat as it went about its business in            the newly flooded cattail pond.

 

 

 

 

 

nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Nelson Poirier


Nature Moncton 





GREEN-WINGED TEAL. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GREEN-WINGED TEAL. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GREEN-WINGED TEAL. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


GREEN-WINGED TEAL. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


CANADA GEESE. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


COMMON EIDER. MAR. 28. 2025. NORBERT DUPUIS


RING-NECKED PHEASANT (MALE). MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


RED-WINGED BLACKBIRD (MALE). MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


PILEATED WOODPECKER. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE


NORTHERN CARDINAL (MALE) MAR. 30, 2025, NORBERT DUPUIS


COMMON GRACKLE. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


AMERICAN ROBINS. APRIL 1, 2025. LYNN DUBE 






MUSKRAT. APR. 01, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


MUSKRAT. APR. 01, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


MUSKRAT. APR. 01, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


MUSKRAT. APR. 01, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


PUSSY WILLOW. MAR. 30, 2025. BRIAN STONE


ALDER CATKINS. APR. 01, 2025. BRIAN STONE 












Tuesday, 1 April 2025

April 1 2025

 

NATURE MONCTON NATURE NEWS

April 1, 2025 

 

Nature Moncton members, as well as any naturalist in New Brunswick or beyond, are invited to share their photos and descriptions of recent nature sightings to build a fresh (almost) daily edition of Nature News

 

 

To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the information line editor,  nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com .

 

Please advise the editor at nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com  and proofreader Louise Nichols at Nicholsl@eastlink.ca if any errors are noted in wording or photo labelling.


For more information on Nature Moncton, check the website at 
www.naturemoncton.com.

 

Proofreading courtesy of Louise Nichols

nicholsl@eastlink.ca

 

 

 

**Why is the population of turkey vultures in New Brunswick as high as it is at the Hampton lagoons?

This query was posed to Richard Blacquiere, and who better to make comments on that query? Richard lives near the lagoons and has been monitoring their activity for many years.

Richard's informative response is paraphrased below:

“I have pondered that question since the turkey vultures began gathering there years ago. Just speculation, but my guess is that they’re all young and/or non-breeding birds. I used to think Hampton was a good place because it was close to a DNR dead animal dump on the Ravine Road, about 7 km to the NNE.  However, people who have been there see lots of crows and ravens but not vultures. And when the vultures head off in the morning or return in the evening, it’s seldom in that direction.

 So, I’m not sure why Hampton is the place. Possibly a learned tradition?-- Offspring following their parents in the late summer, somehow understanding it’s a safe place with reliable food not far away, then returning in following years to finish growing up. More speculation.

 Currently, the birds appear to prefer the fenced-in area around the first pond. Does the fence give them a feeling of security? Inside the fence, disturbance is minimal, and water is easily accessible. Only a few hundred metres away are the big spruce trees where they roost at night. I liken them to human workers. They leave their house in the morning, stop at Tim’s for a drink and some social time with friends, then head off in various directions to their jobs.     

 That area along the fence isn’t mowed till late in the summer. They’re less likely to be seen on the ground when the grass gets long. But they still perch on the fence for a while in the morning before taking flight. I’m going to suggest to the Hampton grounds maintenance staff that they keep that area mowed in the summer. I think the vultures would appreciate it. I know I would.

 I’ve been meaning to write to the vulture researcher in Florida with whom I used to correspond. He’s worked on vultures for years, so he might be able to shed some light on why Hampton is a favoured location.”

(Editor’s note: My thought would be that Richard, who closely monitors this site and knows the local situation best, may be the most qualified to comment.)

 

**Bob Blake in Second North River maintains daily weather statistics from his home, including morning low temperatures, daily high temperatures, and monthly precipitation.

Bob sends a table comparing the statistics of March 2024 with those of March 2025.

The temperatures did not seem to vary greatly; however, precipitation did, with 83 mm more rainfall in March 2024 than in March 2025. Possibly, the first few days of April 2025 will make up for that.

(Editor’s note: the wise editor makes that unsubstantiated statement after looking out the window this morning!)

2024

2025

morning temperatures

daily highs and rainfall

morning temperatures

daily highs and rainfall

-14-1 day

-9-1

-7-1

-6-1

-5-1

-4-4

-3-1

-2-1

-1-3

0-3

+1-1

+2-4

+4-2

+7-2

+9-1

 

 

+13-1

+11-1

+10-1

21 cms. snow

183 mms. rain

-13-1

-12-1

-10-2

-9-1

-7-5

-5-1

-4-1

-3-1

-1-1

0-4

+1-4

+2-1

+3-3

+5-1

+7-1

+9-1

+10-1

+14-1

+15-2

+12-3

+10-2

30 cms. snow

100

 

 

**Last Friday and Saturday, as Brian Stone was scouting areas for the solar eclipse and then going out to photograph it, he took many photos of the gulls, long-tailed ducks, black scoters, and one song sparrow that he encountered along the way. He also relocated the American coot at Saint Edouard (in a pond just past the road to the wharf) that Robert Shortall had found and documented several times over the last few weeks. Brian's new camera is getting a lot of exercise, and it must be developing new muscles as it has become heavier over the last week. Brian wishes he could say the same for himself.

(Editor’s note: gull photos this time of year can be a challenge. The winter plumage of the immature gulls is in the midst of molting at this time to the next year's plumage. Some of the adult gulls are losing their winter head streaking to become clean white (except for the great black-backed gull, whose head stays white all year as an adult). The ring-billed gulls, many of which may have just arrived from the south, all seemed to have lost their winter-streaked heads.

Perhaps there are too many long-tailed duck photos, but keep in mind that we won't be seeing them much longer!)

 

Nelsonpoirier435@gmail.com

Nelson Poirier.

Nature Moncton



AMERICAN COOT. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 




LONG-TAILED DUCKS (PAIR). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 

LONG-TAILED DUCK (MALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


LONG-TAILED DUCK (MALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


LONG-TAILED DUCK (MALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


LONG-TAILED DUCK (FEMALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


BLACK SCOTERS (MALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


BLACK SCOTERS (MALES AND FEMALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


BLACK SCOTER (MALE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


RING-BILLED GULLS. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


RING-BILLED GULL. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


HERRING GULLS. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


HERRING GULL. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


HERRING GULL (MOLTING TO ADULT PLUMAGE). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


ICELAND GULL (LATE 1ST WINTER). MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE 


SONG SPARROW. MAR. 28, 2025. BRIAN STONE












 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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