NATURE MONCTON INFORMATION LINE, April 17, 2018 (
Tuesday )
To respond by e-mail, please address your message to the
information line editor, nelson@nb.sympatico.ca
. Please
advise if any errors are noted in wording or photo labeling.
Edited by: Nelson Poirier nelson@nb.sympatico.ca
Transcript by: Brian Stone bjpstone@gmail.com
Info Line # 506-384-6397
(384-NEWS)
** It's last call tonight, Tuesday night, for the Nature Moncton meeting at
7:00 pm at the Rotary Pavillion Lodge across from the former Cabela's location.
Note that the starting time is 7:00, not 8:00 as was incorrectly placed in the
website announcement. The write up is attached. In the second half of the
meeting Shirley Xu will give a short presentation on birds encountered on a
visit to China and other members to share their items of interest.
Nature
Moncton April Meeting
Grand Lake Meadows Natural Protected Area
Date: April 17, 2018 at 7:00 PM
Mapleton Park Rotary Lodge (across from
former Cabela’s)
Speaker: Gart Bishop
The unique
wetlands along the Trans Canada Highway between Jemseg and Upper Gagetown are
part of the Grand Lake Meadows. A portion of these wetlands is protected as
Grand Lake Protected Natural Area. It is home to a collection of species which
are not found elsewhere in the province. Gart Bishop will describe some of these
species -- including New Brunswick’s smallest vascular plant -- that make this
area so different from other wetlands.
Gart has also
agreed to lead a Nature Moncton Field trip this summer to this special area to
see in real time many of the species mentioned in his presentation that can be
found in this unusual community and that have led to protection of the area.
These species will all be emerging and appearing over the next
months.
** Jean Paul Leblanc was quick to followup yesterdays edition concerning a
TREE SWALLOW [Hirondelle bicolore] they
had one arrive to their Bouctouche yard on Monday morning. I suspect that this
is the beginning of a major onslaught of this usually first of the Swallow clan
to return. I hope that the sudden weather event is only a temporary
inconvenience for the new arrivals.
The prominent species in the Sackville Waterfowl Park
were AMERICAN WIGEON
[Canard d'Amérique] and GADWALL [Canard
chipeau].
He got a nice photo of each gender of Wigeon, and a photo of a Gadwall pair that
nicely shows the gender differences.
** Sterling Marsh was driving on the Immigrant Rd.
just before Cape Tormentine on Monday when he came across two
TURKEY VULTURES [Urubu à tête rouge] partaking of a
ripened road kill Raccoon lunch. It almost appeared that one was on guard while
the other dined.
** Mac Wilmot comments that it was
a great day when you can look out your dining room window and photograph a
spring dressed, male WOOD DUCK [Canard
branchu] as happened to him in his Lower
Coverdale yard on Monday. Mac also had a brief visit from
a PINE WARBLER [Paruline des pins]
to his suet feeder but it was quickly crowded out by
HAIRY WOODPECKERS [Pic chevelu]
before he could capture a photo.
** Lois Budd had
a DARK-EYED JUNCO [Junco ardoisé]
arrive to her Salisbury feeder yard on Monday that was sporting a very white
tail. This is a partial albino bird. Note the millet sprays that Lois uses at
her feeder which she comments are Sparrow magnets.
** There surely
has not been an invasion of Bohemian Waxwings this season. It was therefore a
surprise for Clarence Cormier to have a flock of approximately two hundred
BOHEMIAN WAXWINGS [Jaseur boréal]
arrive around his Grande Digue site on Monday. He has had small groups of Cedar
Waxwings popping in all winter. He also had a hundred plus blackbirds that were
a combination of adult male
RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS [Carouge à
épaulettes], some first summer male Red-winged Blackbirds now, and
COMMON GRACKLES
[Quiscale bronzé] as well that included some females. Also two
BROWN-HEADED COWBIRDS [Vacher à tête brune] were present on Monday
and two FOX SPARROWS [Bruant fauve].
** Ethel Douglas visited the Sackville Waterfowl Park on April 11 to
see AMERICAN WIGEONS [Canard d'Amérique], GADWALLS [Canard
chipeau], MALLARDS [Canard
colvert], CANADA GEESE [Bernaches du Canada] and
several RING-BILLED GULLS [Goéland à bec cerclé]. Ethel
comments that she had a
male RING-NECKED PHEASANT [Faisan de Colchide] outside
her Royal Oaks condo window on Saturday. The males have become very bold, if not
careless, at this time of year.
** Jan Tingley reports activity that she saw on
Sunday morning around the first pond at the bottom of the hill in Hillsborough.
She saw a pair
of RED-BREASTED MERGANSERS [Harle huppé] swimming
around and a TREE SWALLOW [Hirondelle bicolore] on a hydro
wire. This may have been the same bird that Jamie and Karen Burris photographed
at that spot on Sunday. Red-breasted Mergansers are not normally expected in a
fresh water pond, which I assume this pond is. Jan notes that the ice is still
in the lower ponds. She also comments that there are a number of RING-NECKED PHEASANTS [Faisan de Colchide] chasing
each other about in the fields behind East Riverview.
** In an earlier edition it was mentioned that few, if any, Scaup
were noted on the Kennebecasis River along the Norton Shore Rd. on a visit there
on April 09 but that Joanne Savage reported significant numbers there three
weeks earlier so I had assumed that they had come and gone. However Joanne and
David Putt did that same run on April 16 to find that there were approximately
ten thousand SCAUP, so it would appear that the migration is far from over but
is moving through in waves as many of our migrating seabirds do. Joanne comments
that it was an impressive show with the sheer number of birds present.
** Recently Brian Stone submitted a photo of a mass of reddish, pea
sized bodies on the bark of a tree at the Irving Arboretum in Bouctouche. I had
no idea what they were, but curiosity killed the cat and so I had to go see it.
It turned out to be an elderly American Basswood tree, aka American Linden. It
turns out that the large branch had been severely split from the tree and when
this happens with some trees, especially Basswood, it releases the growth of
buds which are under the bark to emerge as a survival technique with the buds
developing into new, young branches that were evident when looking further up
the branch as more photos attached show.
The Basswood is very difficult to grow from seed but a cut stump will send up shoots called coppicing as other hardwood trees will do as well. The scenario described is another way the Basswood is able to self propagate and survive without seed propagation.
The Basswood is very difficult to grow from seed but a cut stump will send up shoots called coppicing as other hardwood trees will do as well. The scenario described is another way the Basswood is able to self propagate and survive without seed propagation.
Dan Hicks, an arborist with the City of Moncton, recognized what was
going on from the series of photos and gave some reliable Google sites to
interpret the scenario.
Nelson
Poirier,
Nature
Moncton
AMERICAN KESTREL (FEMALE). APRIL16, 2018. GORDON RATTRAY
AMERICAN WIGEON (FEMALE). APRIL16, 2018. GORDON RATTRAY
AMERICAN WIGEON (MALE). APRIL16, 2018. GORDON RATTRAY
BASSWOOD a. APRIL 15, 2018. NELSON POIRIER
BASSWOOD b. APRIL 15, 2018. NELSON POIRIER
BASSWOOD c. APRIL 15, 2018. NELSON POIRIER
BASSWOOD d. APRIL 15, 2018. NELSON POIRIER
DARK-EYED JUNCO (WHITE TAIL).APRIL 16, 2018.LOIS BUDD
GADWELL (PAIR). APRIL16, 2018. GORDON RATTRAY
RUDDY DUCK (MALE). APRIL16, 2018. GORDON RATTRAY
TREE SWALLOW. APRIL 16, 2018. JP LEBLANC
TURKEY VULTURES. APRIL 16, 2018.STERLING MARSH
WOOD DUCK (MALE). APRIL 16, 2018. MAC WILMOT