Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Birds and the Bees

Birds are everywhere is our lives. Can you think of a day that went by without seeing or hearing a bird? With the breeding season underway I discover something new and exciting each time I visit Whiterock Conservancy. On Monday morning I saw the familiar Spotted Sandpiper bobbing its tail while foraging in a bean field next to Highway 141. From a distance, it appeared to have a little peep as a companion, which seemed a bit odd. The plovers and sandpipers that were here weeks earlier should be settling back in the summer breeding grounds. I raised my binoculars for a closer inspection and saw a little puffball bobbing its tail just like mom (or dad). A baby Spotted Sandpiper!

The Spotted Sandpiper is a common resident of Iowa yet very few people have been lucky enough to find the nest or young of this bird. A total of 12 nesting records were reported in the Iowa Breeding Bird Atlas, which details the distribution and life history for each species of breeding bird in Iowa.

Red-winged Blackbird nest parasitized by a Brown-headed Cowbird The Iowa Ornithologists’ Union and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources are now implementing the second Iowa Breeding Bird Atlas project. There are 791 blocks that need to be surveyed by 2012 with a minimum of 20 hours of observation in each block. Block #457 (Whiterock Conservancy) has already recorded 106 unique species and 27 confirmed nesting species. By sharing your field observations, you too can help expand the knowledge of Iowa's birdlife.

About the Guest Author: Scott Schmidt works with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, where he monitors birds on private lands enrolled in the Wetlands Reserve Program.