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Yearly Totals | Cape Florida Banding Station
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Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. Click on the following link for total birds captured annually from Fall 2002 to Fall 2013. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. Cape Florida Banding Station.
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Quiet mid-October so far | Cape Florida Banding Station
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Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. Quiet mid-October so far. October 19, 2014. We did get a male Wilson’s warbler on Oct 17, described by one of our volunteers as looking like ‘a Hooded warbler with a toupee’. The male’s glossy cap is distinctive but the female does resemble the closely-related Hooded. The Wilson’s is a bit smaller with no white in the tail, has a very different call, and is very active. Wilson’s warblers. Here are the totals so far through Oct 19:.
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Aaaaaaahhhhhhhhhh……..great weather, great days! | Cape Florida Banding Station
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Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. 1000th bird and first Barn swallow! Aaaaaaahhhhhhhhhh…….great weather, great days! October 6, 2014. Top: two Magnolia warblers. Bottom: Western palm warbler. Some of the new species for the season banded yesterday include this beautiful adult male Bay-breasted warbler (above). He still has the diagnostic bay coloring on his sides even though he is in fall plumage. An interesting thing about the movement of birds on Oct 5 was that nearly...
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Rain and birds! | Cape Florida Banding Station
https://capefloridabandingstation.wordpress.com/2014/10/23/rain-and-birds
Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. Quiet mid-October so far. October 23, 2014. Some new species arrived in the last several days. Below is a yellow-breasted chat, the largest member of the warbler family, but its taxonomic status is in dispute. In many ways chats resemble tanagers or mimids rather than wood warblers. They skulk in heavy vegetation and can be hard to see in migration or during the winter when they can be found in brushy areas. TOTALS Oct 23 2014:. Leave a...
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2028 banded for Fall 2014 | Cape Florida Banding Station
https://capefloridabandingstation.wordpress.com/2014/11/07/2028-banded-for-fall-2014
Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. Fall 2015 season is on! 2028 banded for Fall 2014. November 7, 2014. Above: Female and male Black-throated blue warblers; usually our top captures. The lunatics were left in charge on Oct 31. This is what 55 degrees looks like in south Florida. SEASON TOTAL: 2028 birds of 54 species. Black-throated blue warbler: 268. Black and white warbler: 120. Western palm warbler: 56. Swainson’s thrush: 33. Swainson’s warbler: 32. Cape May warbler: 5.
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People — Lockwood Lab
http://www.lockwoodlab.com/people
Julie L. Lockwood, PhD. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources. 14 College Farm Road. New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8525. Lockwood at aesop.rutgers.edu. Well I was raised up beneath the shade of a Georgia pine. And that's home you know. With sweet tea, pecan pie and homemade wine. Where the peaches grow" Chicken Fried, Zac Brown Band. Ji3rown at gmail.com. Alexandrea.safiq at rutgers.edu. Oliverstringham at gmail.com. Robert.pecchia at rutgers.edu. Rafael's research is focused on understanding...
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They’re still coming… | Cape Florida Banding Station
https://capefloridabandingstation.wordpress.com/2013/10/26/theyre-still-coming
Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. 47 Shades of Gray. Activity winding down →. They’re still coming…. October 26, 2013. Yet another great day at the banding station, with 82 new birds of 16 species banded! Here is a close-up of the two Painted buntings. Nico with another Black-throated blue warbler female? No…wait a minute here…. Our first of the season. This has to be one of the cutest of the vireos, with a short beak, dark eye and exquisite lemon-yellow underparts.
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About | Cape Florida Banding Station
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Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. The Cape Florida Banding Station (CFBS) is located in Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park. BBCFSP) at the southern tip of Key Biscayne, a developed barrier island just off the coast of Miami. CFBS partners with the Florida Keys Hawkwatch. And Tropical Audubon Society. To form the South Florida Bird Observatory. August 23, 2013 at 5:00 pm. The site is fantastic! I’m so proud to have been involved in the great work that you guys do!
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Participate | Cape Florida Banding Station
https://capefloridabandingstation.wordpress.com/participate
Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. We are currently fully staffed with so many great volunteers returning from the 2015 season. If you would like to arrange a visit to the station please contact Michelle Davis at vireoojorojo@hotmail.com. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. Notify me of new comments via email.
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capefloridabandingstation | Cape Florida Banding Station
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Cape Florida Banding Station. Monitoring migratory birds since 2002. October 29, 2016. Strong northeast winds have been in place for nearly the entire month of October, and the forecast shows no signs of them abating before we close. We have had mostly single-digit daily captures for the past three weeks, when usually … Continue reading →. Birds and Hurricanes, Part II. October 15, 2016. October 6, 2016. Thrushes on the Move. October 1, 2016. Past The 1000 mark. September 26, 2016. September 16, 2016.
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