- RBA

* Ontario
* Ottawa/Gatineau
* 17 April 2005
* ONOT0504.17

- Birds mentioned

Common Loon
Double-crested Cormorant
Tundra Swan
Snow Goose
Cackling Goose
Canada Goose
Blue-winged Teal
EURASIAN WIGEON
Common Merganser
Ruddy Duck
Osprey
Bald Eagle
Merlin
Peregrine Falcon
American Coot
SANDHILL CRANE
Greater Yellowlegs
Lesser Yellowlegs
Spotted Sandpiper
CALIFORNIA GULL
Iceland Gull
Glaucous Gull
Three-toed Woodpecker
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Barn Swallow
Veery
Brown Thrasher
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Pine Warbler
Chipping Sparrow
White-throated Sparrow
Rusty Blackbird

- Transcript

hotline: Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club
date: 17 April 2005
number: 613-860-9000
for the status line : press 2
for rare bird alerts: press 1
to report a sighting: press #
coverage: Ottawa/Gatineau (Can. Nat. Capital Reg.), E.Ont., W.Que.
compiler   : Chris Lewis  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
transcriber: Chris Lewis  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
internet   : Gordon Pringle  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

OFNC BIRD STATUS LINE - APR 17 2005 AT 7:00 PM

This is Chris Lewis reporting.

An adult CALIFORNIA GULL found at a large pond on the east side of
Moodie Dr. south of the Trail Rd. landfill on Apr. 15th has not
been relocated.  If you visit this site, please do not cross the
gate as this is private property. A male EURASIAN WIGEON was seen
on the 16th on the Quebec side at Petit Baie Clement, 6 km. west
of Masson; the bay and the bird can also be seen from the Marais
aux Grenouillettes 1.2 km farther west.  An adult Tundra Swan was
discovered in the north-central cell of the Embrun sewage lagoons
along Rte. 400 on the 16th as well.

The 1st locally reported Common Loons were on the Ottawa River at
Andrew Haydon Park and Shirley's Bay on the 17th, Double-crested
Cormorants appeared at Dow's Lake on the 15th and a few began to
appear on the Ottawa River this past weekend.

In waterfowl reports, several flocks of Snow Geese have continued
to move through in the Cobb's Lake Creek area east of Bourget and
at the Embrun lagoons from the 13th through the 17th.  A Cackling
Goose was with the Canada Geese along Hwy 417 at Kinburn Side Rd.
on the 13th. Approx. 130 Common Mergansers were at the Moodie Dr.
pond on the 17th and good numbers of this species are on the
Ottawa River as well. Five displaying male Ruddy Ducks and one
female were on the Moodie Dr. pond on the 17th, and the 1st Blue-
winged Teal of the season was reported from the Embrun lagoons on
the 12th.  Otherwise, all of the expected resident and migrant
ducks are now widespread.

Raptor reports included several Ospreys and an adult Bald Eagle at
the Masson-Thurso marshes in Quebec on the 16th.  Merlins have
been observed performing courtship displays in several suburban
neighbourhoods, and the female of Ottawa's downtown breeding pair
of Peregrine Falcons is now evidently incubating 4 eggs on the
west side of the Crowne Plaza hotel.

Five SANDHILL CRANES were in the cornfields on the west side of
Milton Rd. on the 13th and 10 American Coots were back at the
Alfred sewage lagoons on the 12th.  New shorebirds reported this
past week were both Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs and a Spotted
Sandpiper at the Embrun lagoons.  A late 2nd-spring Glaucous Gull
was on Mud Lake in Britannia on the 13th and a late Iceland Gull,
also a 2nd-spring bird, was at the Moodie Dr. pond on the 17th.

A male Three-toed Woodpecker reported from the Britannia woods
near the southwest corner of Mud Lake on the 16th was not
relocated the next day.  A very early Veery was reported from a
backyard in Manotick on the 16th as well.  The 1st reports of
Northern Rough-winged Swallow and Barn Swallow came in during the
past week, and a Brown Thrasher was singing on the Carp Ridge
along the Thomas Dolan Parkway on the 16th. Other passerine
reports of interest included Yellow-rumped and Pine Warblers at
Britannia this past weekend, and a Pine Warbler was reported from
the Jack Pine Trail on the 16th as well. The 1st reports of
Chipping Sparrow and White-throated Sparrow have begun to come in
since the 11th, and a flock of 40 Rusty Blackbirds were singing on
Twin Elm Rd. north of Cambrian Rd. on the 17th.

Thank you - Good Birding!

- End transcript

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