- RBA
* New York
* Buffalo
* 07/31/2003
* NYBU0307.31
- Birds mentioned

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  Please phone in any rare sightings so they 
  may be shared via the DAB telephone update 
  system, and submit email contributions directly 
  to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Thank you, David
  /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

  MERLIN
  GREAT CORMORANT
  WHITE-WINGED SCOTER
  Green-winged Teal
  Bald Eagle
  American Kestrel
  Semipalmated Plover
  Killdeer
  Greater Yellowlegs
  Lesser Yellowlegs
  Spotted Sandpiper
  Whimbrel
  Ruddy Turnstone
  Sanderling
  Semipalm. Sandpiper
  Western Sandpiper
  Least Sandpiper
  Pectoral Sandpiper
  Short-b. Dowitcher
  Great Black-b. Gull
  Caspian Tern
  Horned Lark
  Northern Mockingbird
  "Brewster's Warbler"

- Transcript
  Hotline: Dial-a-Bird at the Buffalo Museum of Science
  Date:             07/31/2003
  Number:           716-896-1271
  To Report:        Same
  Compiler:         David F. Suggs ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
  Coverage:         Western New York and adjacent Ontario
  Transcriber:      David F. Suggs

  Thursday, July 31, 2003 

  Dial-a-Bird is a service provided by your Buffalo Museum of 
  Science and this answering system was donated by the Buffalo 
  Ornithological Society. Press (2) to leave a message, (3) 
  for updates, meeting and field trip information and (4) for 
  instructions on how to report sightings and use this system. 
  To contact the Science Museum, call 896-5200. 

  Highlights of reports received July 24 through July 31 from 
  the Niagara Frontier Region include MERLINS, GREAT 
  CORMORANT, WHITE-WINGED SCOTER and shorebirds. 

  A real surprise this week - 3 MERLINS were found on the 
  University at Buffalo Main Street Campus. These falcons may 
  be a breeding family from a local but unknown location. The 
  falcons are all in basic or female plumage, but no male 
  MERLIN has ever been found in the 10 years that MERLINS have 
  wintered on the campus. 

  On Lake Ontario, July 26, there was a report of a GREAT 
  CORMORANT passing by Wilson Harbor. This would be only the 
  third record of this species in the BOS archives, and the 
  second at Wilson. GREAT CORMORANTS are known to occur more 
  often to either side of the BOS territory - in Rochester and 
  Hamilton, Ontario. 

  July 27, the BOS field trip for shorebirds to the Lake Erie 
  shore of Ontario was highlighted by an unexpected WHITE-
  WINGED SCOTER along Highway 3 in Port Colborne, on the river
  just west of the Welland Canal. In the morning, shorebirds
  at Rock Point Park in Dunnville included 5 SHORT-B. DOWITCHERS
  with SEMIPALMATED PLOVER, KILLDEER, GREATER YELLOWLEGS, LESSER 
  YELLOWLEGS, SPOTTED SANDPIPER, SANDERLING, SEMIPALM. 
  SANDPIPER, LEAST SANDPIPER and PECTORAL SANDPIPER, plus 
  GREAT BLACK-B. GULL and 5 CASPIAN TERNS. Later in the day, a 
  WESTERN SANDPIPER was on the beach at Rock Point, and at the 
  nearby Feeder Road turf farms, a WHIMBREL, which is a good 
  find away from the lake shore. Also, RUDDY TURNSTONES were 
  at several locations on the lake shore, a pair of GREEN-
  WINGED TEALS at Morgan's Point in Wainfleet, and more SHORT-
  B. DOWITCHERS at Erie Beach in Fort Erie. 

  At the turf farms in Clarence, SEMIPALMATED PLOVER and many 
  KILLDEER, plus AMERICAN KESTREL and HORNED LARK were 
  reported this week along  Countyline Road west of Goodrich 
  Road. 

  Breeding Bird Atlas work in the Niagara County Town of 
  Hartland reported an interesting bird - a female, first 
  generation "BREWSTER'S WARBLER", on private property. 

  There were several reports this week of a BALD EAGLE in the 
  Lakeview area of the Town of Hamburg. An unexpected NORTHERN 
  MOCKINGBIRD was seen along the thruway at the airport in 
  Cheektowaga. And NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRDS have also been 
  residing in the Town of Tonawanda at River Road and Sheridan 
  Drive and on Woodward Avenue west of Military Road. 

  Dial-a-Bird will be updated Thursday evening, August 7. 
  Please call in your sightings by noon Thursday. You may 
  report sightings after the tone. Thank you for calling and 
  reporting to Dial-a-Bird. 

- End Transcript
D Suggs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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