United States’ most popular birds


Spectacled eiderFrom the National Wildlife Federation in the USA:

Ten Most Wanted

Ever wonder what species U.S. birders want to see most? Read the results of our informal survey

07-12-2010 // NWF Staff

Which species do U.S. birders most want to see? Here are the results of an informal survey conducted by the editors of National Wildlife:

1. Spectacled eider. This Alaskan species topped many bird-watchers’ lists, perhaps because of the male’s flashy breeding plumage: white “goggles” on a chartreuse head. But like some hard-core birders, this species also shrugs at tough conditions. While most birds are flying south, spectacled eiders head for the middle of the Bering Sea, wintering in openings in the sea ice.

2. Ross’s gull. When a vagrant Ross’s gull shows up in the Lower 48, as one did on Plum Island off Massachusetts several years ago, birders rush to see it. A High Arctic species, the bird has a circumpolar distribution, wintering above the Arctic Circle and rarely breeding farther south than northern Manitoba.

3. Ivory gull. The is another Far North species that the birders we questioned want to see. The world’s only pure white gull, it winters at the edge of pack ice in Arctic waters and breeds only in remote parts of northern Canada.

4. Gyrfalcon (white morph). Many birders also long to see a white morph of the gyrfalcon, a variety of the raptor that normally inhabits only parts of northern Canada and Greenland. When one of them showed up in the Lower 48 not long ago, Ted Floyd, editor of Birding magazine, couldn’t pass up the opportunity. He drove hundreds of miles from his home in Colorado to South Dakota to see the bird.

5. Snowy owl. The snowy owl, another white Arctic species, ranks high on many “must see” lists. The largest (or at least heaviest) North American owl, it flies south periodically into the Lower 48 during the cold months when food is in short supply. (Some respondents rated another northern owl, the great gray, ahead of the snowy on lists.)

6. Black-footed albatross. “For many birders, seeing your first albatross is a big deal,” says Floyd. The world’s second largest population of the black-footed albatross breeds in remote Midway Atoll at the far northwestern end of the Hawaiian island chain. It is the only albatross that is seen regularly off the U.S. West Coast—but only if you venture out from the mainland 15 or 20 miles by boat.

7. White-tailed tropicbird. Most experienced birders lust for a glimpse of this bird, which comes ashore only briefly to nest on remote islands in the Caribbean and other tropical areas. “They’re just spectacular,” says Floyd, “ghostly white with these incredible tail streamers.” Your best bet to see one near the Lower 48 is to take a pelagic trip off the coasts of North Carolina or Florida.

8. Atlantic puffin. “Everyone loves puffins,” says Linda McCauley, a board member at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Of the world’s four species, the Atlantic puffin is the easiest to see in this country, outside of Alaska. Colonies breed on islands off Maine.

9. Elegant trogon. The appeal of this bird is obvious: It’s a rare sight in the United States, and it has gorgeous plumage, which actually provides effective camouflage in the shady Arizona canyons that are its only U.S. hangout. Birders most often locate the species not by sight but by its croaking calls.

10. Ivory-billed woodpecker. Though the striking ivory-billed woodpecker had long been considered extinct, birders continued to hold out hope that they might see it. A few years ago, several alleged sightings of ivorybills in bottomland hardwood habitat in Arkansas became the talk of the birding world.

Our top ten list might not match your own. Other often-mentioned species include the whooping crane and Kirkland’s [sic; Kirtland’s] warbler (both endangered); the greater roadrunner (for its cartoonlike appearance); the American dipper (for its odd behavior of slipping into streams and walking underwater); and Bachman’s warbler (like the ivorybill, thought to be extinct).

10 Myths About Bird Behavior: here.

Bird photos: here.

Endangered whooping crane population rebounds: here.

North America is home to remarkable wildlife spectacles where thousands and sometimes millions of wild creatures come together at the same time; following are six of our favorites that you can experience firsthand: here.

Why are there so many bird species in the tropics? Here.

Reclusive and seldom seen, two Mountain Trogons (Trogon mexicanus) were photographed near El Cañón del Fresno Reserve in central Mexico supported by World Land Trust (WLT): here.

2 thoughts on “United States’ most popular birds

  1. This summer I visited Crater Lake National Park for the first time, and it reminded me how extraordinary America’s parks and wild places are.

    The Obama Administration wants to hear from citizens like us who care about protecting these wild places for future generations. Please take this opportunity to share your experiences and ideas, courtesy of The Wilderness Society.

    Thanks for all you do!

    Bob Fertik

    The Wilderness Society

    Tell President Obama: Protect our wilderness, public lands and natural heritage!

    Dear Activist,

    America’s great outdoors… what do you think should be preserved for future generations? What should our conservation priorities be for the 21st century?

    America’s Great Outdoors is an unprecedented conservation effort spearheaded by President Obama and several government agencies to reconnect people with nature. The Obama administration wants your input to create this blueprint for the future of conservation in America, and members of his cabinet have been traveling around the country this summer listening to our ideas about conservation.

    Please tell the Obama Administration to make wilderness, new parks and monuments, and restoration of wetlands and wildlife habitat the cornerstone of America’s Great Outdoors.

    Why speak out now? New and growing threats – overdevelopment, pollution and a changing climate – demand a smarter, science-based approach to protecting wild areas, wildlife, rivers and lakes and cultural and historic sites that connect us to nature, to each other and to our shared past.

    Thousands of Americans have spoken out as part of the America’s Great Outdoors Initiative this summer in preparation for a major administration report this fall.

    Now it’s your turn to be heard.

    All summer long, The Wilderness Society has been organizing people to turn out to listening sessions with officials, delivering messages face-to-face about special places, like Otero Mesa in New Mexico, the San Gabriel Mountains in California and the North Cascades in Washington. We’ve pushed for new wilderness protections in Tennessee, West Virginia and Maine.

    We’ve also delivered specific policy recommendations that will lead to long term protection of our lands and water, including:

    * Protect more wilderness
    * Establish more national parks and monuments
    * Keep our forests healthy
    * Protect and restore wildlife habitat and wetlands
    * Improve opportunities for outdoor recreation

    Please act now, to ensure that public lands protection is the center of America’s conservation vision.

    Each generation has the opportunity – the responsibility – to protect our natural heritage for the next generation. Thank you for all you do for America’s wilderness and public lands!

    Sincerely,

    Kathy Kilmer
    The Wilderness Society

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.