The Snowbird Returns

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Columbia, the snowy owl that Madison Audubon assisted in banding with help from ProjectSNOWstorm, is back on the radar and in the United States. Will she head back to Wisconsin? Follow her journey here.  Photo by Monica Hall

Columbia, the snowy owl that Madison Audubon assisted in banding with help from ProjectSNOWstorm, is back on the radar and in the United States. Will she head back to Wisconsin? Follow her journey here. Photo by Monica Hall

We were delighted to receive an email from Project SNOWstorm on November 28, 2020 titled A New Season Amid Unusual Challenges by Scott Weidensaul. Scrolling quickly through the blog we spotted a photo taken by Monica Hall of “Columbia” being banded and fitted with her transmitter by Gene Jacobs in our residence laundry room on January 28th, 2020.  

 The text read:

“We got full data uploads from Stella and Columbia, both of whom checked in for the first time within minutes of each other on Nov. 12. Columbia, you may recall, was an adult female tagged in January by Gene Jacobs at Madison (WI) Audubon’s Goose Pond Sanctuary. She headed north in April, following the western edge of Hudson Bay to the Melville Peninsula, crossing to Baffin Island, then veering west and eventually reaching Prince of Wales Island in the central Canadian Arctic of Nunavut by mid-June.

Gene Jacobs holds Columbia. Photo by Monica Hall

Gene Jacobs holds Columbia. Photo by Monica Hall

There’s no indication from the tracking data that Columbia nested, though as a two-and-a-half-year-old bird, she might still have been a little young to breed. (The age at which snowy owls usually become sexually mature is still unclear.) She had several areas where she spent weeks at a time, but never showed the singular focus on one spot for six or seven weeks that would indicate a nest.

Columbia began moving south in mid-September, again following the western coast of Hudson Bay to Cape Churchill, where she headed southwest across Manitoba. By Nov. 19 she was near Canora, in extreme southeastern Saskatchewan.”


It is amazing to be sitting at a computer and being able to look at over 7,600 hourly locations of a snowy owl that was last held by Graham Steinhauer at Goose Pond on a cold winter night last January.

You can browse through an interactive map of Columbia’s journey here. Zoom in on the map to take a closer look at the many, many locations she visited on her journey. Screenshot from Project SNOWstorm

You can browse through an interactive map of Columbia’s journey here. Zoom in on the map to take a closer look at the many, many locations she visited on her journey. Screenshot from Project SNOWstorm

Mark could spend hours looking at the data and exploring more about Prince of Wales Island (Canada).  For Columbia to reach Prince of Wales Island she flew northwest from Goose Pond to eastern North Dakota then north.  A distance of about 2,500 miles, about the same distance across the United States, but Columbia does not fly in straight lines.  We wonder if a computer could calculate her miles in one year from her hourly locations?

Prince of Wales Island is Canada’s 10 largest and the 40th largest island in the world.  The island is about 12,870 square miles and 20% of the size of Wisconsin.  Wikipedia states there are no permanent residents.   


Columbia’s summer vacation

She crossed the Gulf of Boothia on June 4 and 5th flying about 70 miles from Baffin Island and “summered” on Prince of Wales Island from June 14th to September 18th before heading south. 

Prince of Wales is a great place for an owl to spend the summer looking for arctic wildlife and enjoying the scenery. In mid-summer she was treated to 24 hours of daylight.  What a change from last winter at Goose Pond when she only experienced nine hours of daylight on the winter solstice.  

This map shows the approximate range of snowy owls throughout the year. Mark and Sue have annotated the map to show where Columbia spent her summer! Range map from Cornell Lab’s All About Birds

This map shows the approximate range of snowy owls throughout the year. Mark and Sue have annotated the map to show where Columbia spent her summer! Range map from Cornell Lab’s All About Birds

Other birds of Prince Wales Island

Earl Godfrey in The Birds of Canada reported 34 nesting species on Prince of Wales Island: Yellow-billed, arctic, and red-throated loons; brant; snow geese; long-tailed ducks; king eiders; rough-legged hawks; gyrfalcons; willow and rock ptarmigans; American golden and black-bellied plovers; ruddy turnstones; red knots; pectoral, white-rumped, Baird’s, and buff-breasted sandpipers; sanderlings, red phalaropes; Pomarine, parasitic, and long-tailed jaegers; glaucous, Thayer’s, and Sabine’s gulls; arctic terns; snowy owls; horned larks; common ravens; water pitits; Lapland longspurs; and snow buntings. It is interesting that common ravens nest about five miles north of Goose Pond and that horned larks are probably the most abundant bird nesting in Arlington Township.

Mammals of Prince Wales Island

The list of mammals is not long but very impressive with marine and upland mammals including arctic fox; arctic hares; arctic wolves (subspecies Canis lupus arctos); Baleen and beluga whales; caribou; lemmings; musk oxen; narwhals polar bears; and ringed seals.


Columbia’s Fall Migration Highlights

On November 28th Columbia was sitting on the hard water of Morrison Lake in North Dakota within one mile of her March 30 stop. Columbia on  December 6th was 311 miles from Goose Pond near the small town of Vesta in western Minnesota and had been heading southeast.  Last year she was seen and photographed at the UW Arlington Agricultural Research Station on December 11th.  We hope to see her on the prairie this winter.  However, time will tell if she returns.  

Columbia, photographed in the fields near the UW Agricultural Research Station near Arlington that she loved to frequent. Photo by Rich Armstrong

Columbia, photographed in the fields near the UW Agricultural Research Station near Arlington that she loved to frequent. Photo by Rich Armstrong


Read More About Columbia

Links below are the January 31, 2020 Friday Feature, November 28, 2020 blog and a link on the Project SNOWstorm website to Columbia.  When you click on the dots you will notice yellow for daylight locations, gray for the blue hours and black for night.  You will also see her flight speed, degree heading, and altitude (a resting location provides the land elevation and a flight location gives you an idea on her flying elevation.  One time she was flying 51.9 miles per hour, probably with a tail wind and at 240 feet high.

We hope you check out her winter travels along with other owls.  Due to the Covid-19 virus no owls will be trapped and transmitted in Wisconsin this winter.  

Arctic wildlife and people are greatly impacted by climate change.  We hope that everyone does what they can to reduce climate change impacts.  

Written by Mark Martin and Susan Foote-Martin, Goose Pond Sanctuary resident managers