Friday Feathered Feature

Pied-billed Grebe

Pied-billed Grebe

The pied-billed grebe nests on marshes in Wisconsin. Like many water birds, the pied-billed grebe makes a number of enchanting and bizarre vocalizations; its song is a loud series going “toot-toot-toot” which is unusual enough, but the birds also make taunting chuckle or chatter calls.

Photo by Arlene Koziol

Kestrel Nest Box Program 2021

Kestrel Nest Box Program 2021

Many records were set in our 2021 Kestrel Nest Box Monitoring program that included 208 nest boxes monitored by 65 volunteers and three banders. Roughly 232 young birds fledged, 160 young were banded, and 41 adults were captured.

Photo by Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren

Turkey Vulture

Turkey Vulture

A dark, brooding, and indifferent bird, reading the wind like a well-worn novel, riding the wind, the muse of mortality. Taking a thermal, teetering against the wind, soaring in circles, the Turkey Vulture's mysticism is imagined from a dark and deceased place.

Photo by Mick Thompson

Goose Pond Motus Tower and Sora #32853

Goose Pond Motus Tower and Sora #32853

We were excited when JD Arnston reported that we had our first detection on our Goose Pond Sanctuary Motus bird tracking tower in May. We erected the tower last year and when activated, we are covering an area of about 20 miles from east to west.

Photo by Auriel Fournier / Forbes Biological Station

Wood Thrush

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The wood thrush, found in forest interior habitat, is a charismatic and captivating forest bird. Mornings met with a wood thrush’s cheery and mystical song make any birder feel familiar in that forested environment. With an impressive vocal repertoire, from its unforgettable “ee-o-lay” to its more obscure pit volleys, which are a sharp series of notes—when a wood thrush is in a  woods and it’s singing, it’s unmistakable.

Over the past 50 years wood thrushes have experienced significant declines of at least 60% of their population. Some research shows that wood thrushes overwintering in drier Mexican forest fared worse on breeding grounds, due to the droughty conditions and apparent lack of food availability. When those birds returned to North America to breed, they were in rough shape and laid fewer eggs or couldn’t care for the eggs they did lay. While destruction and fragmentation of forests in Central America certainly doesn’t help wood thrushes, it’s been found recently that fragmentation in North America might be the leading cause of population declines. Wood thrushes need large mature forest in order to breed, while constant disturbance in these forests may not benefit wood thrushes.

The oak and hickory woods at Faville Grove Sanctuary. Photo by Madison Audubon.

The oak and hickory woods at Faville Grove Sanctuary. Photo by Madison Audubon.

At Faville Grove, wood thrushes are uncommon in our mostly grassland landscape. However, nearby oak woodlands, lowland forests along the Crawfish River, and certain Tamarack swamps may hold a few birds. We’ve been hearing them more frequently with the interns in the past couple of weeks. Research shows that post-fledgling birds prefer to hang out in dense shrub thickets on the edge of forested habitat, likely for protection from predators and increasing availability of fruits and invertebrates. That post-fledgling movement may explain why we’ve been hearing them more recently around some grassland and shrubland areas. You should look and listen for this bird near larger forested tracks at Faville Grove.

Written by Drew Harry, Faville Grove Sanctuary land steward

Cover photo by Kelly Colgan Azar / Flickr Creative Commons