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Date: | Thu, 25 May 2006 23:45:25 -0400 |
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I just got a call from Jean Iron by satellite phone from Akimiski Island in
James Bay. James Bay is the southern extension of Hudson Bay reaching deep
into central Canada. Akimiski is the largest island in James Bay - easily
located on a map. Jean is volunteering with the Ontario Ministry of Natural
Resources (OMNR) who is studying the reproduction of Canada Geese
(subspecies interior). The study is headed up by OMNR research scientist
Ken Abraham. The crew is living in a bunkhouse camp on a dry beach ridge
protected by an electric fence to keep away Polar Bears. The pack ice is up
against the north shore of the island but there is considerable open water
south of the island in James Bay. Yesterday and today they surveyed over
100 goose nests. The hatch will be early this year because of a warm spring
and expected to start June 1, which is about a month later than the Giant
Canadas (maxima) in southern Ontario. When the downy young hatch they will
get a tiny numbered web tag to identify them later when they are big enough
to band about late July. Jean also will be assisting Katie Walker, a
graduate student from Trent University in Peterborough (Ontario) who is
starting a study of the Marbled Godwits which breed in the prairie-like
marshes of James Bay. Katie's thesis supervisors are Professor Erica Nol of
Trent and Ken Abraham of OMNR. Very little is known about this small
isolated James Bay population of Marbled Godwits which probably numbers
only a few 1000 individuals in Ontario and Nunavut (Akimiski Island) with a
tiny number in Quebec.
While looking for goose nests today they saw 100s of migrating Brant and
100s of migrating Horned Larks. They also saw Short-eared Owls and
Rough-legged Hawks. Indications are that there is a high vole (Microtus)
population on Akimiski Island. Shorebirds observed included 3 Hudsonian
Godwits, Black-bellied Plover, Red-necked Phalarope and a
displaying/singing Short-billed Dowitcher (probably subspecies griseus).
Other birds of interest were Lesser Snow Geese (mainly blue morph),
Northern Pintails, Northern Shovelers, Peregrine Falcon, Glaucous Gull,
Lapland Longspurs and White-crowned Sparrows. When Jean called tonight it
was snowing and the temperature was 1C. She will phone again on Saturday or
Sunday evening with an update.
Good birding,
Ron Pittaway
Toronto and Minden ON
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