Friday, May 7, 2010

Friday - 10 PM

Friday was a great day of birding in Sedgwick County. We are at 134 species already! There are a lot of glaring misses including Great Horned Owl, Hairy Woodpecker, and Nashville Warbler. Keep the reports coming! We're not only hoping to beat the species total from last year, but our participation total as well. That's really what it is all about.

134 Species

1. Double-crested Cormorant
2. Great Blue Heron
3. Great Egret
4. Snowy Egret
5. Little Blue Heron
6. Cattle Egret
7. Green Heron
8. Turkey Vulture
9. Canada Goose
10. Cackling Goose
11. Wood Duck
12. Gadwall
13. Mallard
14. Blue-winged Teal
15. Northern Shoveler
16. Redhead
17. Bufflehead
18. Ruddy Duck
19. Mississippi Kite
20. Bald Eagle
21. Northern Harrier
22. Cooper’s Hawk
23. Swainson’s Hawk
24. Red-tailed Hawk
25. American Kestrel
26. Ring-necked Pheasant
27. Wild Turkey
28. Northern Bobwhite
29. American Coot
30. Killdeer
31. Greater Yellowlegs
32. Lesser Yellowlegs
33. Solitary Sandpiper
34. Spotted Sandpiper
35. Upland Sandpiper
36. Semipalmated Sandpiper
37. Western Sandpiper
38. Least Sandpiper
39. White-rumped Sandpiper
40. Baird’s Sandpiper
41. Pectoral Sandpiper
42. Wilson’s Phalarope
43. Bonaparte’s Gull
44. Franklin’s Gull
45. Forster’s Tern
46. Rock Pigeon
47. Eurasian Collared Dove
48. Mourning Dove
49. Yellow-billed Cuckoo
50. Eastern Screech Owl
51. Barred Owl
52. Common Nighthawk
53. Chuck-will’s-widow
54. Chimney Swift
55. Ruby-throated Hummingbird
56. Belted Kingfisher
57. Red-headed Woodpecker
58. Red-bellied Woodpecker
59. Downy Woodpecker
60. Northern Flicker
61. Pileated Woodpecker
62. Least Flycatcher
63. Eastern Phoebe
64. Great Crested Flycatcher
65. Western Kingbird
66. Eastern Kingbird
67. Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
68. Loggerhead Shrike
69. Bell’s Vireo
70. Warbling Vireo
71. Red-eyed Vireo
72. Blue Jay
73. Fish Crow
74. American Crow
75. Horned Lark
76. Purple Martin
77. Tree Swallow
78. Northern Rough-winged Swallow
79. Bank Swallow
80. Cliff Swallow
81. Barn Swallow
82. Black-capped Chickadee
83. Tufted Titmouse
84. White-breasted Nuthatch
85. Carolina Wren
86. House Wren
87. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
88. Eastern Bluebird
89. Swainson’s Thrush
90. American Robin
91. Gray Catbird
92. Northern Mockingbird
93. Brown Thrasher
94. European Starling
95. Cedar Waxwing
96. Tennessee Warbler
97. Orange-crowned Warbler
98. Northern Parula
99. Yellow Warbler
100. Yellow-rumped Warbler
101. Palm Warbler
102. Blackpoll Warbler
103. American Redstart
104. Common Yellowthroat
105. Spotted Towhee
106. Chipping Sparrow
107. Clay-colored Sparrow
108. Field Sparrow
109. Lark Sparrow
110. Savannah Sparrow
111. Grasshopper Sparrow
112. Song Sparrow
113. Lincoln’s Sparrow
114. White-throated Sparrow
115. Harris’s Sparrow
116. White-crowned Sparrow
117. Northern Cardinal
118. Blue Grosbeak
119. Indigo Bunting
120. Painted Bunting
121. Dickcissel
122. Bobolink
123. Red-winged Blackbird
124. Eastern Meadowlark
125. Western Meadowlark
126. Yellow-headed Blackbird
127. Great-tailed Grackle
128. Common Grackle
129. Brown-headed Cowbird
130. Orchard Oriole
131. Baltimore Oriole
132. House Finch
133. American Goldfinch
134. House Sparrow


Reporting (10): Steve and Kim Calhoun, Jeff Calhoun, Steve Comeau, Tom Ewart, Mike Everhart, Paul Griffin, Allison Jones, Nathan Ofsthun, Art Weigand

No comments:

Post a Comment