[Tweeters] Wintering vs. Migrants
Robert O'Brien
baro at pdx.edu
Sun Mar 19 09:10:12 PDT 2023
Here is another way to tell. A couple of weeks ago, after
intermittent snowfall, we had a flock of 15-20 American Robins in a field
where patches of the snow had melted. They were all males in high breeding
plumage, with their black heads and full, bright, off-red breasts. Clearly
these were migrants, although none were singing.
Bob OBrien Portland
On Sun, Mar 19, 2023 at 1:56 AM Michael Price <loblollyboy at gmail.com> wrote:
> This time of year there's always the same problem: are the birds you're
> seeing the first northbound migrants or the wintering population?
>
> Crude rule of thumb:
> silent - wintering
> singing - northbound migrant males (northbound males usually precede
> northbound females in order to secure territory ahead of rival males).
>
> Back East, in London ON, during the winter months we'd have winter robins,
> Turdus migratorius, race nigrideus, always silent but for calls, but we
> could always know when our Eastern Robin T.m migratorius, our breeding
> species arrived about March 9, singing.
>
> best, m
>
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