- RBA
* New York
* Buffalo
* 04/12/2007
* NYBU0704.12
- Birds mentioned
---------------------------------------------------------- Please phone in any rare sightings so they may be shared via the DAB telephone update system, and submit email contributions directly to dfsuggs localnet com.
 Thank you, David
 ----------------------------------------------------------

 FOX SPARROW
 OREGON JUNCO
 VESPER SPARROW
 GR. WHITE-FR. GOOSE
 CACKLING GOOSE
 Common Loon
 Horned Grebe
 Red-necked Grebe
 Surf Scoter
 White-winged Scoter
 Common Merganser
 Red-br. Merganser
 Ruddy Duck
 Osprey
 Bald Eagle
 Peregrine Falcon
 Purple Sandpiper
 Wilson's Snipe
 Little Gull
 Bonaparte's Gull
 Iceland Gull
 L. Black-b. Gull
 Yellow-b. Sapsucker
 Ruby-cr. Kinglet
 Eastern Bluebird
 Hermit Thrush
 Brown Thrasher
 American Pipit
 Yellow-r. Warbler
 Chipping Sparrow
 Song Sparrow
 Dark-eyed Junco
 Lapland Longspur
 Purple Finch

- Transcript
 Hotline: Dial-a-Bird at the Buffalo Museum of Science
 Date:             04/12/2007
 Number:           716-896-1271
 To Report:        Same
 Compiler:         David F. Suggs (dfsuggs at localnet com)
 Coverage:         Western New York and adjacent Ontario
 Website:          www.BOSBirding.org

 Thursday, April 12, 2007

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 April 5 through April 12 from the Niagara Frontier Region include FOX SPARROWS, OREGON JUNCO, VESPER SPARROW, GR. WHITE-FR. GOOSE and CACKLING GOOSE.

The reprise of winter weather in April resulted in unprecedented numbers of migrant FOX SPARROWS across the region. At many feeders, counts ranged from 2 to 14 FOX SPARROWS. Along the roadside in the Lake Ontario Plains, a count of 31 FOX SPARROWS, plus 345 DARK-EYED JUNCOS and 125 SONG SPARROWS. Another lake plains count covering parts of both the BOS and Rochester regions, reported over 200 FOX SPARROWS, 129 VESPER SPARROWS, 62 EASTERN BLUEBIRDS and over 500 each of WILSON'S SNIPE and AMERICAN PIPIT.

In the Chautauqua County Town of Pomfret, snowy weather drove seven sparrow species to a feeder on Harmon Hill Road, highlighted by 5 VESPER SPARROWS. 70 DARK-EYED JUNCOS at a feeder in the Town of Wilson included a female OREGON JUNCO on April 6 and 9.

 In more typical numbers, reports this week included YELLOW-
B. SAPSUCKER, RUBY-CR. KINGLET, HERMIT THRUSH, BROWN THRASHER, YELLOW-R. WARBLER, CHIPPING SPARROW and PURPLE FINCH.

April 7, the BOS field trip to the Iroquois Refuge and surrounding areas was highlighted by 5 GR. WHITE-FR. GEESE, 5 CACKLING GEESE and an unexpected RED-NECKED GREBE at Cayuga Pool. At the gypsum ponds in the Town of Oakfield, 11 LAPLAND LONGSPURS.

Abundant waterfowl and gulls still on the regions waters. On the upper Niagara River, between Riverside and Tonawanda, many RED-BR. MERGANSERS, a few COMMON MERGANSERS, thousands of BONAPARTE'S GULLS with several breeding plumage LITTLE GULLS, and two terns - either FORSTER'S or COMMON TERN. Above Niagara Falls, 2 PURPLE SANDPIPERS and 3 LITTLE GULLS. And, on the lower river, 4 more LITTLE GULLS at Lewiston.

At Dunkirk Harbor, SURF SCOTER and WHITE-WINGED SCOTER continue, plus 6 COMMON LOONS, 41 HORNED GREBES, OSPREY, 2 ICELAND GULLS and L. BLACK-B. GULL. RED-BR. MERGANSERS were the majority of the waterfowl at the mouth of Cattaraugus Creek in Hanover. From Buffalo, on South Park Lake, COMMON LOON and 2 HORNED GREBES among several diving duck species, and at Tifft Nature Preserve, 17 duck species included 10 RUDDY DUCKS.

Other reports this week - a pair of BALD EAGLES continue in the Alexander Creek flats south of Batavia, and on the grounds of the Buffalo Psych Center, an active PEREGRINE FALCON on the Richardson Towers.

Dial-a-Bird will be updated Thursday evening, April 19. 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

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