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ID-FRONTIERS for May 11-17, 2003

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Messages are displayed in the order they were received.
 Subject From Date  Time 
 Re: Origin of Red-legged Honeycreeper  =?iso-8859-1?q?Alex=  Sun, 11 May 2003  10:11am 
 FL Honeycreepers  Jack Dozier   Mon, 12 May 2003  12:23am 
 Filoplumes in NA passerines  Wil Hershberger   Mon, 12 May 2003  7:45pm 
 Re: Filoplumes in NA passerines  Les Chibana   Tue, 13 May 2003  1:44am 
 Re: FL Honeycreepers  Kevin J. McGowan  Tue, 13 May 2003  11:04am 
 Caspian Plover in Texas???  Will Russell   Sat, 17 May 2003  7:21am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Chris Corben   Sat, 17 May 2003  8:50am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Luke Cole   Sat, 17 May 2003  9:57am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Peter Adriaens   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:05am 
 Texas Plover  MARTIN SCOTT   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:09am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Angus Wilson   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:08am 
 Texas Plover  Andrew Birch   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:08am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Alvaro Jaramillo   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:28am 
 Re: Texas Plover  Mike Patterson   Sat, 17 May 2003  10:37am 
 Re: FL Honeycreepers  Charlie Ewell   Sat, 17 May 2003  11:04am 
 Re: Caspian Plover in Texas???  Martin Reid   Sat, 17 May 2003  4:55pm 
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[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Origin of Red-legged Honeycreeper From: =?iso-8859-1?q?Alex=20Lees?= <lincslister(AT)YAHOO.CO.UK> Date: 11 May 2003 10:11am ----INCLUDING text/plain MIME SECTION---- Hi I seem to remember reading in a back issue of Cotinga that the honeycreepers on Cuba are the result of an old introduction. What is the ABA view on vagrants from naturalised populations, evidently the BOU will have to make a decsion in a similar vein on Scared Ibis on one of these days..... Iīm away in the field for the next month or so, so apologies if I donīt get back to anyone on this. Alex LeesCristalino LodgeMato GrossoBrazil Kenn Kaufman <kennk(AT)IX.NETCOM.COM> wrote:Getting to Florida is alittle more of a leap, but I see no reason why the Florida birds shouldn't be genuine wild vagrants from the migratory Mexican population or from Cuba. Kenn Kaufman Tucson, AZ --------------------------------- Yahoo! Plus - For a better Internet experience ----DELETED text/html MIME SECTION----
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: FL Honeycreepers From: Jack Dozier <jdozier(AT)NETTALLY.COM> Date: 12 May 2003 12:23am At 06:11 PM 5/11/03 +0100, you wrote: Hi I seem to remember reading in a back issue of Cotinga that the honeycreepers on Cuba are the result of an old introduction. What is the ABA view on vagrants from naturalised populations, evidently the BOU will have to make a decsion in a similar vein on Scared Ibis on one of these days..... Iīm away in the field for the next month or so, so apologies if I donīt get back to anyone on this. Alex Lees Cristalino Lodge Mato Grosso Brazil Kenn Kaufman <kennk(AT)IX.NETCOM.COM> wrote: Getting to Florida is a little more of a leap, but I see no reason why the Florida birds shouldn't be genuine wild vagrants from the migratory Mexican population or from Cuba. Kenn Kaufman Tucson, AZ It has been reported that there is a bird seller in Homestead, FL that recently sold honeycreepers that were in "good" condition. On the surface this seems to raise a red flag if this turns out to be a fact.. Within less than two months two birds have been reported in the wild. Also winds/storms have been favorable for the presentation of Yucatan waifs (i.e.-White-fronted Dove, simultaneous occurrence with the May Dry Tortugas bird). Does the couple of hundred mile distance from Homestead discount the probability of an escape? Both birds were males, BTW. The first was on a key E of Miami. This new question has to be considered. A population explosion could be occurring, or is it just the luck of the winds? A tough situation I would say. For myself, I would like them to be considered "wild" as I saw the one on the Dry Tortugas, but really, I feel this "seller" issue has to be dealt with. Jack Dozier Alligator Pt., FL jdozier(AT)nettally.com
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Filoplumes in NA passerines From: Wil Hershberger <WHershberg(AT)AOL.COM> Date: 12 May 2003 7:45pm ----INCLUDING text/plain MIME SECTION---- I have noticed that several species of North American passerines exhibit what appear to be two fine filoplumes that extend from the base of the nape. Here is a link to some photos that show this structure. You will need to look carefully to see them. I am planning on looking very carefully for these structures at the MAPS banding station this season. Hopefully, I will be able to secure better photos. Any help with this would be greatly appreciated. <A HREF="http://www.natureimagesandsounds.com/filoplumes.html">http://www.natureimagesandsounds.com/filoplumes.html</A> Wil Hershberger Hedgesville, WV ----DELETED text/html MIME SECTION----
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Filoplumes in NA passerines From: Les Chibana <les(AT)BIRDNUTZ.COM> Date: 13 May 2003 1:44am Whew, they are hard to see! Perhaps you might use a dark card behind the bird to boost contrast. I've seen this feature on juvenile Bushtits. Very curious feathers. Les Chibana, Palo Alto CA On Monday, May 12, 2003, at 07:45 PM, Wil Hershberger wrote: > I have noticed that several species of North American passerines > exhibit what appear to be two fine filoplumes that extend from the > base of the nape. Here is a link to some photos that show this > structure. You will need to look carefully to see them. > I am planning on looking very carefully for these structures at the > MAPS banding station this season. Hopefully, I will be able to secure > better photos. > Any help with this would be greatly appreciated. > http://www.natureimagesandsounds.com/filoplumes.html > Wil Hershberger > Hedgesville, WV >
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: FL Honeycreepers From: "Kevin J. McGowan" <kjm2(AT)CORNELL.EDU> Date: 13 May 2003 11:04am >At 06:11 PM 5/11/03 +0100, Alex Lees wrote: >I seem to remember reading in a back issue of Cotinga that the >honeycreepers on Cuba are the result of an old introduction. Not sure why the Cuba birds are considered introduced, but if they were, the populations were established before 1850. At 03:22 AM 5/12/2003 -0400, Jack Dozier wrote: >It has been reported that there is a bird seller in Homestead, FL that >recently sold honeycreepers that were in "good" condition. When I was a kid in the early 1970s I had a pet male Red-legged Honeycreeper. The only possibly related piece of information I can contribute is that the one I had tried to escape at every possible opportunity. The estrildid finches I had in the same cage never made a move, but the honeycreeper dashed for any crack in the door whenever one appeared. Chasing it around my bedroom was pretty much an every-other-day occurrence. Kevin ***************************************************** Kevin J. McGowan, Ph.D. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology 159 Sapsucker Woods Road Ithaca, NY 14850 607/254-2432 fax 607/254-2111 kjm2(AT)cornell.edu http://birds.cornell.edu/crows/
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Will Russell <willrussell(AT)COMCAST.NET> Date: 17 May 2003 7:21am This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --Boundary_(ID_z+ca3w7IWSFK3AaRY7pCrw) Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT Guy McCaskie asked if I would post the following note. "Kenneth Z. Kurland of El Centro, California, photographed a small long legged plover on the beach at Galveston, Texas, on 28 April 2003. No other birds were present for direct size comparison, but Ken judged the bird to be larger than a Semipalmated Plover and smaller than a Killdeer. Ken tentatively identified the bird as a Lesser Sand Plover <Charadrius mongolus>. However, upon studying the slides, it appears that both Lesser Sand Plover and Greater Sand Plover <C. leschenaultii> can be eliminated, and that the bird might be a Caspian Plover <C. asiaticus>. None of these plovers are recorded in Texas, there is only one record for Greater Sand Plover in North America, and Caspian Plover is unrecorded in North America. I am therefore soliciting comments on the identification of this plover. Nine images can be viewed at www.wingsbirds.com/plover.html . Additional images and/or slides can be provided. Responses can be posted on BIRDWG01 or sent to me at guymcc(AT)pacbell.net Guy McCaskie 954 Grove Avenue Imperial Beach, CA 91932 TEL 619-423-7524" Will Russell willrussell(AT)comcast.net --Boundary_(ID_z+ca3w7IWSFK3AaRY7pCrw) Content-type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT ----DELETED HTML-ENCODED SECTION---- --Boundary_(ID_z+ca3w7IWSFK3AaRY7pCrw)--
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Chris Corben <corben(AT)hoarybat.com> Date: 17 May 2003 8:50am Why isn't it an American Golden Plover? Look at all the barring on the tail. Chris. Chris Corben corben(AT)hoarybat.com www.hoarybat.com
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Luke Cole <luke(AT)IGC.ORG> Date: 17 May 2003 9:57am This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --Boundary_(ID_jXdSpGtGze9OTtV2bodG1A) Content-type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT An interesting bird, to say the least! The images on the web appear very very dark on my monitor, so I am sure I am missing some of the finer detail. Is that others' experience too, or just my monitor? Things I like for Caspian Plover: Big supercilium behind the eye. Broad unbroken breast band. Small amount of white in the upperwings. Legs extending beyond tail in flight. Things I dont like for Caspian Plover: There doesnt seem to be *any* white at the end of the tail at all visible on my monitor, while Caspian should have a white terminal fringe (I cant tell where the beach begins and the tail ends, though, this could be computer-related); the tail appears more reminiscent of a golden-plover. I would expect the forehead to be whiter. I would also expect a more dainty, not so bulky, appearance. I look forward to the thoughts of greater minds than mine... Luke Cole San Francisco --Boundary_(ID_jXdSpGtGze9OTtV2bodG1A) Content-type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT ----DELETED HTML-ENCODED SECTION---- --Boundary_(ID_jXdSpGtGze9OTtV2bodG1A)--
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Peter Adriaens <peter.adriaens(AT)DUTCHBIRDING.NL> Date: 17 May 2003 10:05am Chris is right. This is an American Golden Plover, since Caspian Plover has no barring on the tail, a white terminal tailband, an obviously white forehead, a thinner bill (especially at the tip), and a white rather than greyish wingbar. Best regards, Peter Adriaens
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Texas Plover From: MARTIN SCOTT <scillybirder(AT)HOTMAIL.COM> Date: 17 May 2003 10:09am I would suggest that it is an American Golden Plover- a worn first year bird. A very similar individual turned up as a vagrant on the Isles of Scilly, England and caused alot of confusion along similar lines for some birders. _________________________________________________________________ Overloaded with spam? With MSN 8, you can filter it out http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail&pgmarket=en-gb&XAPID=32&DI=1059
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Angus Wilson <wilsoa02(AT)MED.NYU.EDU> Date: 17 May 2003 10:08am Re: Comments on a plover photographed in Texas in April 2003 by Kenneth Z. Kurland. http://www.wingsbirds.com/plover.html What a fascinating bird! To get the debate going, here are my own first impressions and quickly formulated thoughts. I look forward to counter arguments, especially from those with field experience of Caspian Plover, which I regrettably do not have yet. Looking at the photos, the shape and proportions remind me of a _Pluvialis_- type plover (e.g. American Golden-Plover), however, the patterning of the plumage is clearly atypical for any of the four species. Many features (tail pattern etc) are wrong for either of the Sand Plovers and these two don't need to be discussed further. The most 'Caspian Plover-like' features seem to be the diffuse, but broad and solid, breast band, the white throat and the strong whitish supercillium. It is very useful to have a set of photos to examine (not just one or two) and to have them showing the bird both landed and in flight. I hate to be a party pooper but several features seem inconsistent with Caspian Plover, or for that matter, the closely-related Oriental Plover. The Texas bird does not look as rangy or long-legged as I would have expected and there are some troubling plumage and structural details as well. At this point, I lean toward an aberrantly plumaged American Golden-Plover. -- The bill seems too short and thick (stubby) for Caspian Plover. -- The wing bar does not seem quite right. It extends (weakly) onto the outer primaries and includes only a few secondaries. I recall that in Caspian the bases of the inner primaries are white and there is a sharp transition at the outer five or so primaries where the white is restricted to a thin line along the quill. The result is a squarish wedge or block on the inner primaries. Some of the photos suggest this, but in other the white appears more like an extensive bar. -- The amount of pale feathering on the front of the head, directly above the bill, seems too limited for any of the adult plumages. -- Tail feather appear to be finely barred. Surely these should be solid brown? -- The bird does not look as long-legged as I would expect. In other words there is not that much tibia exposed below body feathering. Admittedly this could be because the body feathering is fluffed out in all the shots. -- Legs look dark blue-gray rather than pale gray-green but I'm willing to concede this might be an artifact of the film/scanning/monitor. Here are a couple of useful reference photos: Spring female http://www.galleryofbirds.com/caspianplover/caspianplover.html basic adult? http://www.wildlife.shetland.co.uk/pics/casp.jpg Cheers, Angus Wilson New York City http://www.oceanwanderers.com ------------------------------------------------- This mail sent through IMP: http://horde.org/imp/
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Texas Plover From: Andrew Birch <andyrbirch(AT)YAHOO.COM> Date: 17 May 2003 10:08am It is an interesting bird but I agree with Chris that it's an odd American Golden Plover. It's not convincing for Caspian. Heavily barred tail and even some spangling/barring in some of the wing coverts, short stubby thick bill, dark legs, broad flaring eyestripe looks more like American Golden. Compare to: http://www.birdfoto.fsnet.co.uk/caspianplover/caspianplover.html Best, Andy Birch
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Alvaro Jaramillo <chucao(AT)ATTBI.COM> Date: 17 May 2003 10:28am At 10:50 AM 5/17/2003 -0500, Chris Corben wrote: >Why isn't it an American Golden Plover? Look at all the barring on the tail. > >Chris. > >Chris Corben I agree with Chris. The photos looked like a rather dull Golden Plover to me, and I had not keyed in to the barring on the tail which should clinch it as Pluvialis. Down in Argentina in the boreal winter its common to see real dull looking American Golden Plovers like this. The first year birds probably mostly stay down there, so we get little experience with them up in the north; unlike with Black-bellied Plover. regards Alvaro Alvaro Jaramillo Biologist San Francisco Bay Bird Observatory P.O. Box 247 Alviso, CA 95002 (408)-946-6548 http://www.sfbbo.org/ chucao(AT)attbi.com
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Texas Plover From: Mike Patterson <celata(AT)PACIFIER.COM> Date: 17 May 2003 10:37am I would think the following would be sufficient to eliminate Caspian Plover.... length (mm) Semipalmated Plover 170-190 Caspian Plover 180-200 Killdeer 230-260 American Golden Plover 240-280 -- Mike Patterson Astoria, OR celata(AT)pacifier.com
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: FL Honeycreepers From: Charlie Ewell <Anhinga42(AT)SWFLA.RR.COM> Date: 17 May 2003 11:04am All, I recently checked with the owner of Butterfly World in Coconut Creek (north of Ft Lauderdale) to see if any of their Red-legged Honeycreepers had escaped. He told me none had, and added they have had them for years, breed them occasionally, and he knows of many importers and breeders here in Florida. While this obviously does not mean the Florida birds were escapes, it does indicate they are certainly present in captivity here in FL. Regards, Charlie Charlie Ewell Arlyne Salcedo Cape Coral, FL Anhinga42(AT)swfla.rr.com SalcedoDVM(AT)swfla.rr.com
[ << | >> | ^^ ] Subject: Re: Caspian Plover in Texas??? From: Martin Reid <upupa(AT)AIRMAIL.NET> Date: 17 May 2003 4:55pm Dear All, I got the initial email just before going to work, and took a quick peek at the pics. Like Chris and others, my first reaction was "Goldie", but I've only just been able to look at the pics more carefully and also see the subsequent messages on this matter. It does look like a Lesser Golden Plover, but I feel that calling it an AMERICAN Golden Plover is a bit hasty at this point - perhaps we should at least visit the possibility of it being a PACIFIC golden plover? Obviously, the plumage does not include much/any summer feathers, and the worn older-generations of feathers look dark and plain - but some first-summer PAGPs retain most of their "winter" plumage,so this element is not decisive, ID-wise, I feel. Consider the structure of the bird: the legs are very long, with the exposed tibia (below the tibial feathering, not the belly - only one pic shows this) looking to be longer than the bill length, and a large part of each foot is visible beyond the tail in flight - too much for AMGP, I wonder? The bird looks small-headed and plump; the wings are longish, but the all-important primary projection beyond the tertials is hard to assess from these scans - but hints (to me) that the tertials may reach 3/4 of the way to the tail. Note that long-winged PAGPs are a significant proportion in the birds that breed in the trans-Yakutia region of east-central Siberia. The Bill is hard to assess but seems to be fairly chunky (this is a variable feature on both forms, with only extremes being obvious.) I wonder if the legs are really grayish? Medium blue-gray is the normal leg color for PAGP (but they can also be olive-gray, and occasionally blackish), but i've yet to see a AMGP with anything but dark gray-black legs (very young birds can have slightly paler legs.) I am not saying it is a PAGP - but i do feel that this needs to be considered - especially as that foot projection in flight seems way beyond the slight toe extension that is the max I've seen on AMGP. Cheers, Martin Martin Reid Fort Worth, Texas mailto:upupa(AT)airmail.net http://www.martinreid.com

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