Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Day 2: Monday May 7, 2012


Dawn Chorus

I got up at 5:00am today to be out and about listening to “The Dawn Chorus” by 6:00am with a small group of avid birders. The moon was just descending behind some mountains by the time we got to the location. I got to see an Osprey (Pandion haliaetus) feeding its young in a nest on a utility pole and a White-throated Sparrow (Zonotrichia albicollis), two birds I had never seen before this trip. 

Osprey

White-throated Sparrow

It was very cold this morning, around 2 degrees, but it heated up significantly throughout the day.

Ecological Restoration: Partnering for the Birds

At around 9:00 to 1:00pm my family and I did a little bit of off-roading to attend the next workshop about a project being carried out by a few different organizations partnering to protect the area. Located between the Fairmont Hot springs and the Canal Flats, this project works in rehabilitating and conserving prime habitat for the Red-listed Lewis’s Woodpecker (Melanerpes lewis). About 10 to 15% of Canada’s Lewis’s Woodpeckers breed in this small 30-hectare piece of land. Around 16-20 active nesting sites have been found and monitored here. 

Since this is a fire-base ecosystem, our guide talked a lot about the effects of prescribed burning in the area and how that effects populations of mammals and birds along with the composition of the plant community. These are low-intensity burns that aren’t even hot enough to burn off the cryptogamic layer of lichens and moss which inhibits the growth of non-native plants. 

They also inject Red Belted Polypore (Fomitopsis pinicola), a tree heart rot, into living trees – preferably Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) or Larch (Larix spp.) –  to weaken one section of the tree and leave the rest healthy and strong; this is called making a “window.” Windows are made, as they would potentially be prime habitat, for a Lewis’s Woodpecker. The tree’s core weakens making it easier for Primary Cavity Excavators. 

Windowed Ponderosa Pine

Although we didn’t get to see a Lewis’s Woodpecker, there were multiple Mountain Bluebirds, Northern Flickers, a Red-breasted Nuthatch and a sapsucker. 

Red-breasted Nuthatch

Male and Female Mountain Bluebirds

Some plants of notice on this excursion were the Hooker’s Townsendia (Townsendia hookeri) and the prairie crocus  (Anemone patens ssp. multifida).

Hooker's Townsendia

Prairie Crocus

The Hydrological Cycles in the Columbia Valley: The Role of Weather

Once we finished off-roading, we had a donut break and then went to the Hoodoos to talk about the Hydrological Cycles in the Columbia Valley. By this time (2:00pm) the sun was high in the sky and jackets and gloves from the morning adventures could be left in the car! While hiking up the Hoodoos, we saw lots of prairie crucuses along with tons of Rocky Mountain juniper (Juniperus scopulorum). 

Rocky Mountain Juniper

Sitting on the top of the Hoodoos looking down on the entire valley and just listening to someone spout off tons of random facts was amazing. 

The Columbia Valley

Part of the Hoodoos Formation

There were some swallows and swifts that I could not identify to specific species at the top as well. After we all got nice sunburns we headed back down to our cars seeing a perfectly positioned hawk that I of course had to be too slow to get my camera out for. There was also a Red Squirrel eating seeds in a Douglas-fir on the way down. We finished that workshop at around 4:30pm.

Life Among Birds

The main reason this talk was amazing is because the speaker had done most of his early research on the life styles and characteristics of crows. On the specific island he did his research, the crows had different social platforms. The richest (smartest/highest in the social order) crows got the “beach front property” or the rocks right next to the water while the other crows had to find territory in the hills. Living in the hills means you have to fly further to get food which results in an unprotected territory and also unprotected young. Since crows are cannibals, this is a big problem. One way female crows have tried to overcome this problem is by having one egg, of usually four, a day later than the rest. The egg that is laid last is not as pigmented as the rest making it lighter in colour. Since crows intuitively pick shiny, light objects, crows looking for a meal will pick this egg. If this egg is not taken, it is usually the runt of the family and will probably not survive anyways. One other cool thing about crows is that it has been confirmed that they can count to at least seven if not more.

Another topic that was addressed was the “protection rings” of herons versus eagles. Groups of herons will purposely nest below a eagle nest as a kind of intimidation factor. If the eagle has a sufficient supply of food elsewhere, it will not go after the herons or their eggs. There have even been instances where when the eagle decides to move its nest, a whole colony of herons will move with it.

Our speaker has also done work with sandpipers and their migration routes. He went around the world putting up mist nets and marking these little birds with bands indicating where they were caught. These little birds have a top speed of 40km/h but can fly from San Francisco to Alaska at 80km/h by using the low altitude winds to double their speed! Their main predator is the Peregrine Falcon which significantly affects their distribution and their time of migration. Sometimes the little sandpipers will migrate early due to a wave of Peregrine Falcons coming.

We then learned about one of the rarest of the rare birds in the world: the Chinese Crested Tern. There are probably only about 50 left and they were just discovered by chance a few years ago after thought to be extinct for decades. This subject brought up the topic to birding in general. The speaker left us with the phrase “Know your limit and bird within it.” Some people just like to see the bird, check it off on a list and leave. We were persuaded to take time to learn about the bird, watch it’s behaviours and actually watch it. Birding can be a very obsessive activity which complete destroys the initial point of bird watching. 

Day 1: Sunday May 6, 2012


Vancouver is in the Coastal Western Hemlock zone. Fairmont Hot Springs is in the Interior Douglas-fir zone.

Leaving our house in Vancouver at 7:49am, it took nearly 12 hours to reach our final destination at the Resort. Driving through mountains for hours was amazing and the scenery was ever changing and dramatic. I definitely took way too many photos of the snow-capped peaks. Here's two of my favourite!



Along with going through mountain ranges, we constantly followed the Fraser and then the Thompson Rivers for most of our drive. 

Fraser River

The first cool wildlife we saw was several Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus), followed by two Bighorn Sheep (Ovis canadensis), then a Chukar (Alectoris chukar) and lots of Mule Deer (Odocoileus hemionus).

Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep

When we went to the store later to buy dinner, we saw some Brewer’s Blackbirds (Euphagus cyanocephalus) that are closely related to the Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus), but surprisingly quieter.

Going to a different time zone meant we got there an hour later than we expected. The Interior Douglas-fir zone obviously has a lot of Interior Douglas-fir trees. These trees are nothing like the Douglas-fir we have on the coast and it will take a while to get used to seeing such small DBH and short trees. We went to bed early, as we had to go to the Dawn Chorus the next morning.