I will add some slightly earlier dates for Yellow-bellied Flycatcher.  In
the Spring 2010 Kingbird Region 10 compilation (KB 60:3, September 2010), I
cited the arrival date as 14 May based on a reliable report.  There are
several reports in the eBird data base for 2010 starting 15 May.

 

Seth Ausubel

Forest Hills, NY

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Shaibal Mitra
Sent: Monday, April 25, 2011 4:15 PM
To: NYSBIRDS ([email protected])
Subject: RE: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 4/25 (incl. YTWA report & much,
much more, Varied Thrush also still there...)

 

>From 1996 through 1999, in the course of near-constant effort banding at the
Fire Island Lighthouse, I captured 11 northbound Yellow-bellied Flycatchers,
on dates ranging from 19 May through 13 June. Four of these 11 were captured
19-20 May 1996, during one of coastal NY's largest spring landbird flights
in recent decades, whereas the other seven were captured on later spring
dates. Thus I would tend to agree with Scott's perception of this species as
a very late spring migrant--much later than Least, and similar in overall
timing to Willow and Alder. 

 

It should be noted that Least and Willow breed in southern NYS, and in large
numbers at much more southerly latitudes, so it is not terribly surprising
to see a few of these species here toward the early end of their respective
passage distributions: e.g., a Least Flycatcher or two at the end of April,
vs. the median date of 12 May for migrant Leasts at Fire Island; or an early
Willow setting up territory around 10 May, vs. the median date of 1 June for
migrant Willow/Alders at Fire Island.

 

Yellow-bellied does not breed anywhere south of NYS (maybe a few in the
Poconos), thus I would tend to think that the dates of territory occupancy
in northern New York would follow closely upon the dates of migratory
arrival in the New York City area.

 

Shai Mitra

Bay Shore

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[[email protected]] on behalf of Tom Fiore
[[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 25, 2011 2:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [nysbirds-l] Central Park, NYC 4/25 (incl. YTWA report & much, much
more, Varied Thrush also still there...)

I may respond on-list to Scott Haber's thoughful response to an early
Empidonax sighting (by me) reported here & seen on Sunday, 4/24, a putative
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher, the ID of which I'm reasonably sure of (seen &
heard singing, not calling, at fairly close range in Riverside Park,
Manhattan) - and am interested to try and look up records from the region of
this and other Empidonax species, including any available specimen & banding
records as well as any video-audio-photo records, and sight reports in the
early season, particularly any before May 1st.  This is not the first
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher I have seen & heard singing &.or calling in New
York City in the beginning stages of the spring push of
neotropical-wintering migrants 9as opposed to shorter-distance migrant
species that may primarily overwinter in the southern U.S. or nearby, such
as Pine Warbler & any number of others that appear as early as March in our
area almost each spring - I do not agree that Yellow-bellied is "among the
last" and while I respect the writing of John M.C. Peterson as regards
breeding information for New York, I do not think it reflects accurately on
the status of migrants in the southern section of the state, with regards to
this species of Empidonax. It would be interesting to read and hear from any
others who have looked as well as listened carefully to the Empidonax group
here in NY and nearby states.

 

Good birding,

 

Tom Fiore,

Manhattan

 

 

  _____  


Think green before you print this email.


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