Download the Grandfather Mountain Bird List

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download the Grandfather Mountain Bird List GRANDFATHER MOUNTAIN® What Birds You Can See, When & Where (Not the only times these birds are here, but the times when they are the easiest to identify. Locate them in the spring when they sing, in the fall when they flock.*) Typical Songbirds Spring - Profile Trail Spring to Fall - All Areas Wood Thrush American Robin Yellow-throated Vireo Eastern Bluebird Warbling Vireo Veery Philadelphia Vireo Blue Jay White-eyed Vireo Tufted Titmouse Brown Thrasher Spring & Summer - Profile Trail Gray Catbird Northern Mockingbird Blue-headed Vireo Cedar Waxwing Red-eyed Vireo Summer - Summer - Dan’l Boone Scout Trail Grandfather Trail Carolina Wren Hermit Thrush Golden-crowned Kinglet Black-capped Chickadee Fall - Profile Trail Winter Wren Brown Creeper Swainson’s Thrush Yellow-throated Vireo Warbling Vireo Philadelphia Vireo Winter - Grandfather Trail White-eyed Vireo Ruby-crowned Kinglet Year Round White-breasted Nuthatch (lower elv.) Carolina Chickadee (all over) Red-breasted Nuthatch (higher elv.) Tanagers/Blackbirds Sparrows Spring to Fall Spring - Profile Trail Song Sparrow Scarlet Tanager Winter - Museum Feeders Spring - In Park Fox Sparrow White-throated Sparrow Red-winged Blackbird Year Round - Higher Elv. Dark-eyed Junco Hummingbirds/Swifts/Swallows Flycatchers Summer- In Park Summer - Grandfather Trail Ruby-throated Hummingbird Least Flycatcher Chimney Swift Olive-sided Flycatcher Tree Swallow Northern Rough-winged Swallow Barn Swallow Spring - In Park Eastern Phoebe Finches & Buntings Spring-Summer - Grandfather Trail Year Round - In Park Pine Siskin Indigo Bunting Northern Cardinal Red Crossbill Eastern Towhee Rose-breasted Grosbeak Year Round-Lower Elv. House Finch Occasionally in Winter - Purple Finch Museum Feeders American Goldfinch White-winged Crossbill Evening Grosbeak Warblers Fall - Black Rock Trail Spring & Summer - Grandfather Trail Swainson’s Warbler Worm-eating Warbler Chestnut-sided Warbler Tennessee Warbler Magnolia Warbler Spring - Profile Trail Nashville Warbler Cape May Warbler Canada Warbler Bay-breasted Warbler Hooded Warbler Palm Warbler Louisiana Waterthrush Northern Parula Northern Waterthrush Yellow-rumped Warbler Blackburnian Warbler Spring - Ovenbird Dan’l Boone Scout Trail Black-throated Blue Warbler Black-throated Green Warbler Black & White Warbler Birds of Prey Hawks and Eagles Owls Fall Migration - Linville Peak Summer- Black Rock & Grandfather Trails Golden Eagle Bald Eagle Screech Owl Osprey Great-horned Owl Sharp-shinned Hawk Barred Owl Cooper’s Hawk Northern Saw-whet Owl Red-tailed Hawk Red-shouldered Hawk Spring- Profile Trail Northern Harrier Northern Goshawk Long-eared Owl Broadwinged Hawk Vultures Falcons Fall Migration - Summer - Linville Peak Grandfather Trail Turkey Vulture Peregrine Falcon Black Vulture Year Round - In Park & Along Roadsides Gallinaceous Corvidae Birds Family Wild Turkey American Crow Ruffed Grouse (lower elv.) Northern Bobwhite Common Raven (higher elv.) Medium-sized Land Birds Mourning Dove Rock Dove Belted Kingfisher Pileated Woodpecker Red-bellied Woodpecker Hairy Woodpecker Downy Woodpecker Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Common Flicker (Depart in Winter) Yellow-billed Cuckoo Black-billed Cuckoo Common Nighthawk * list compiled by Jesse Pope, Grandfather Mountain Naturalist.
Recommended publications
  • Hungary & Transylvania
    Although we had many exciting birds, the ‘Bird of the trip’ was Wallcreeper in 2015. (János Oláh) HUNGARY & TRANSYLVANIA 14 – 23 MAY 2015 LEADER: JÁNOS OLÁH Central and Eastern Europe has a great variety of bird species including lots of special ones but at the same time also offers a fantastic variety of different habitats and scenery as well as the long and exciting history of the area. Birdquest has operated tours to Hungary since 1991, being one of the few pioneers to enter the eastern block. The tour itinerary has been changed a few times but nowadays the combination of Hungary and Transylvania seems to be a settled and well established one and offers an amazing list of European birds. This tour is a very good introduction to birders visiting Europe for the first time but also offers some difficult-to-see birds for those who birded the continent before. We had several tour highlights on this recent tour but certainly the displaying Great Bustards, a majestic pair of Eastern Imperial Eagle, the mighty Saker, the handsome Red-footed Falcon, a hunting Peregrine, the shy Capercaillie, the elusive Little Crake and Corncrake, the enigmatic Ural Owl, the declining White-backed Woodpecker, the skulking River and Barred Warblers, a rare Sombre Tit, which was a write-in, the fluty Red-breasted and Collared Flycatchers and the stunning Wallcreeper will be long remembered. We recorded a total of 214 species on this short tour, which is a respectable tally for Europe. Amongst these we had 18 species of raptors, 6 species of owls, 9 species of woodpeckers and 15 species of warblers seen! Our mammal highlight was undoubtedly the superb views of Carpathian Brown Bears of which we saw ten on a single afternoon! 1 BirdQuest Tour Report: Hungary & Transylvania 2015 www.birdquest-tours.com We also had a nice overview of the different habitats of a Carpathian transect from the Great Hungarian Plain through the deciduous woodlands of the Carpathian foothills to the higher conifer-covered mountains.
    [Show full text]
  • Columba Livia
    Columba livia -- Gmelin, 1789 ANIMALIA -- CHORDATA -- AVES -- COLUMBIFORMES -- COLUMBIDAE Common names: Rock Dove; Common Pigeon; Pigeon biset; Rock DoveI European Red List Assessment European Red List Status LC -- Least Concern, (IUCN version 3.1) Assessment Information Year published: 2015 Date assessed: 2015-03-31 Assessor(s): BirdLife International Reviewer(s): Symes, A. Compiler(s): Ashpole, J., Burfield, I., Ieronymidou, C., Pople, R., Wheatley, H. & Wright, L. Assessment Rationale European regional assessment: Least Concern (LC) EU27 regional assessment: Least Concern (LC) In Europe this species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence 10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure). The population trend is not known, but the population is not believed to be decreasing sufficiently rapidly to approach the thresholds under the population trend criterion (30% decline over ten years or three generations). For these reasons the species is evaluated as Least Concern in Europe. Within the EU27 this species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence 10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure). The population trend appears to be stable, and hence the species does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion (30% decline over ten years or three generations). For these reasons the species is evaluated as Least Concern in the EU27. Occurrence Countries/Territories of Occurrence Introduced: Denmark; Liechtenstein; Netherlands; Gibraltar (to UK) Native: Albania; Andorra; Armenia; Austria; Azerbaijan; Belarus; Belgium; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Cyprus; Czech Republic; Faroe Islands (to DK); Estonia; Finland; France; Georgia; Germany; Greece; Hungary; Iceland; Ireland, Rep.
    [Show full text]
  • Monitoring Nesting Golden Eagles for the Farmington Field Office, and Nesting Raptors for the Taos Field Office, BLM Resource Areas, New Mexico
    Monitoring Nesting Golden Eagles for the Farmington Field Office, and Nesting Raptors for the Taos Field Office, BLM Resource Areas, New Mexico. 2006 Annual Report Prepared for: Bureau of Land Management Farmington and Taos Field Offices New Mexico Prepared by: Hawks Aloft, Inc. P.O. Box 10028 Albuquerque, NM 87184 (505) 828-9455 E-mail: [email protected] Golden Eagle and Raptor Surveys, Farmington and Taos Field Offices, 2005 20 December 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary ....................................................................................................................... iii Chapter 1: Distribution and reproductive success for Golden Eagles on BLM Administered Land in San Juan, McKinley, Rio Arriba, and Sandoval Counties, New Mexico. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................2 Study areas .......................................................................................................................................3 Methods ...........................................................................................................................................3 Results ..............................................................................................................................................5 Discussion ........................................................................................................................................7 Recommendations ............................................................................................................................9
    [Show full text]
  • Field Checklist (PDF)
    Surf Scoter Marbled Godwit OWLS (Strigidae) Common Raven White-winged Scoter Ruddy Turnstone Eastern Screech Owl CHICKADEES (Paridae) Common Goldeneye Red Knot Great Horned Owl Black-capped Chickadee Barrow’s Goldeneye Sanderling Snowy Owl Boreal Chickadee Bufflehead Semipalmated Sandpiper Northern Hawk-Owl Tufted Titmouse Hooded Merganser Western Sandpiper Barred Owl NUTHATCHES (Sittidae) Common Merganser Least Sandpiper Great Gray Owl Red-breasted Nuthatch Red-breasted Merganser White-rumped Sandpiper Long-eared Owl White-breasted Nuthatch Ruddy Duck Baird’s Sandpiper Short-eared Owl CREEPERS (Certhiidae) VULTURES (Cathartidae) Pectoral Sandpiper Northern Saw-Whet Owl Brown Creeper Turkey Vulture Purple Sandpiper NIGHTJARS (Caprimulgidae) WRENS (Troglodytidae) HAWKS & EAGLES (Accipitridae) Dunlin Common Nighthawk Carolina Wren Osprey Stilt Sandpiper Whip-poor-will House Wren Bald Eagle Buff-breasted Sandpiper SWIFTS (Apodidae) Winter Wren Northern Harrier Ruff Chimney Swift Marsh Wren Sharp-shinned Hawk Short-billed Dowitcher HUMMINGBIRDS (Trochilidae) THRUSHES (Muscicapidae) Cooper’s Hawk Wilson’s Snipe Ruby-throated Hummingbird Golden-crowned Kinglet Northern Goshawk American Woodcock KINGFISHERS (Alcedinidae) Ruby-crowned Kinglet Red-shouldered Hawk Wilson’s Phalarope Belted Kingfisher Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Broad-winged Hawk Red-necked Phalarope WOODPECKERS (Picidae) Eastern Bluebird Red-tailed Hawk Red Phalarope Red-headed Woodpecker Veery Rough-legged Hawk GULLS & TERNS (Laridae) Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Gray-cheeked Thrush Golden
    [Show full text]
  • 4-H-993-W, Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Food Flash Cards
    Purdue extension 4-H-993-W Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Food Flash Cards Authors: Natalie Carroll, Professor, Youth Development right, it goes in the “fast” pile. If it takes a little and Agricultural Education longer, put the card in the “medium” pile. And if Brian Miller, Director, Illinois–Indiana Sea Grant College the learner does not know, put the card in the “no” Program Photos by the authors, unless otherwise noted. pile. Concentrate follow-up study efforts on the “medium” and “no” piles. These flash cards can help youth learn about the foods that wildlife eat. This will help them assign THE CONTEST individual food items to the appropriate food When youth attend the WHEP Career Development categories and identify which wildlife species Event (CDE), actual food specimens—not eat those foods during the Foods Activity of the pictures—will be displayed on a table (see Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program (WHEP) Figure 1). Participants need to identify which contest. While there may be some disagreement food category is represented by the specimen. about which wildlife eat foods from the category Participants will write this food category on the top represented by the picture, the authors feel that the of the score sheet (Scantron sheet, see Figure 2) and species listed give a good representation. then mark the appropriate boxes that represent the wildlife species which eat this category of food. The Use the following pages to make flash cards by same species are listed on the flash cards, making it cutting along the dotted lines, then fold the papers much easier for the students to learn this material.
    [Show full text]
  • Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers
    Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers A dissertation presented to the faculty of the College of Arts and Sciences of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Brandan L. Gray August 2019 © 2019 Brandan L. Gray. All Rights Reserved. 2 This dissertation titled Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers by BRANDAN L. GRAY has been approved for the Department of Biological Sciences and the College of Arts and Sciences by Donald B. Miles Professor of Biological Sciences Florenz Plassmann Dean, College of Arts and Sciences 3 ABSTRACT GRAY, BRANDAN L., Ph.D., August 2019, Biological Sciences Ecology, Morphology, and Behavior in the New World Wood Warblers Director of Dissertation: Donald B. Miles In a rapidly changing world, species are faced with habitat alteration, changing climate and weather patterns, changing community interactions, novel resources, novel dangers, and a host of other natural and anthropogenic challenges. Conservationists endeavor to understand how changing ecology will impact local populations and local communities so efforts and funds can be allocated to those taxa/ecosystems exhibiting the greatest need. Ecological morphological and functional morphological research form the foundation of our understanding of selection-driven morphological evolution. Studies which identify and describe ecomorphological or functional morphological relationships will improve our fundamental understanding of how taxa respond to ecological selective pressures and will improve our ability to identify and conserve those aspects of nature unable to cope with rapid change. The New World wood warblers (family Parulidae) exhibit extensive taxonomic, behavioral, ecological, and morphological variation.
    [Show full text]
  • Avian Predation in a Declining Outbreak Population of the Spruce Budworm, Choristoneura Fumiferana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)
    insects Article Avian Predation in a Declining Outbreak Population of the Spruce Budworm, Choristoneura fumiferana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) Jacques Régnière 1,* , Lisa Venier 2 and Dan Welsh 3,† 1 Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Centre, 1055 rue du PEPS, Quebec City, QC G1V 4C7, Canada 2 Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Great Lakes Forestry Centre, 1219 Queen St. E., Sault Ste. Marie, ON P6A 2E5, Canada; [email protected] 3 Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service, Ottawa, ON K1A 0H3, Canada * Correspondence: [email protected] † Deceased. Simple Summary: Cages preventing access to birds were used to measure the rate of predation by birds in a spruce budworm population during the decline of an outbreak. Three species of budworm-feeding warblers were involved in this predation on larvae and pupae. It was found that bird predation is a very important source of mortality in declining spruce budworm populations, and that bird foraging behavior changes as budworm prey become rare at the end of the outbreak. Abstract: The impact of avian predation on a declining population of the spruce budworm, Cho- ristoneura fumifereana (Clem.), was measured using single-tree exclosure cages in a mature stand of balsam fir, Abies balsamea (L.), and white spruce, Picea glauca (Moench.) Voss. Bird population Citation: Régnière, J.; Venier, L.; censuses and observations of foraging and nest-feeding activity were also made to determine the Welsh, D. Avian Predation in a response of budworm-linked warblers to decreasing food availability. Seasonal patterns of foraging. Declining Outbreak Population of the as well as foraging success in the declining prey population was compared to similar information Spruce Budworm, Choristoneura from birds observed in another stand where the spruce budworm population was rising.
    [Show full text]
  • Aullwood's Birds (PDF)
    Aullwood's Bird List This list was collected over many years and includes birds that have been seen at or very near Aullwood. The list includes some which are seen only every other year or so, along with others that are seen year around. Ciconiiformes Great blue heron Green heron Black-crowned night heron Anseriformes Canada goose Mallard Blue-winged teal Wood duck Falconiformes Turkey vulture Osprey Sharp-shinned hawk Cooper's hawk Red-tailed hawk Red-shouldered hawk Broad-winged hawk Rough-legged hawk Marsh hawk American kestrel Galliformes Bobwhite Ring-necked pheasant Gruiformes Sandhill crane American coot Charadriformes Killdeer American woodcock Common snipe Spotted sandpiper Solitary sandpiper Ring-billed gull Columbiformes Rock dove Mourning dove Cuculiformes Yellow-billed cuckoo Strigiformes Screech owl Great horned owl Barred owl Saw-whet owl Caprimulgiformes Common nighthawk Apodiformes Chimney swift Ruby-throated hummingbird Coraciformes Belted kinghisher Piciformes Common flicker Pileated woodpecker Red-bellied woodpecker Red-headed woodpecker Yellow-bellied sapsucker Hairy woodpecker Downy woodpecker Passeriformes Eastern kingbird Great crested flycatcher Eastern phoebe Yellow-bellied flycatcher Acadian flycatcher Willow flycatcher Least flycatcher Eastern wood pewee Olive-sided flycatcher Tree swallow Bank swallow Rough-winged swallow Barn swallow Purple martin Blue jay Common crow Black-capped chickadee Carolina chickadee Tufted titmouse White-breasted nuthatch Red-breasted nuthatch Brown creeper House wren Winter wren
    [Show full text]
  • Sauvie Island Bird Checklist Documents
    WATERFOWL S S F W Cooper’s Hawk* O O O O Pectoral Sandpiper O Northern Goshawk R R Sharp-tailed Sandpiper A Tundra Swan U R U C Red-shouldered Hawk A Stilt Sandpiper A Trumpeter Swan R R R R Red-tailed Hawk* C C C C Buff-breasted Sandpiper A Greater White-fronted Goose U R U O Swainson’s Hawk A A Ruff A A Snow Goose O O U Rough-legged Hawk O O U Short-billed Dowitcher U Ross’s Goose R Long-billed Dowitcher U U U O Ferruginous Hawk A A Emperor Goose R R American Kestrel* C C C C Common Snipe* U O U C Canada Goose* C U C C Merlin O O O O Wilson’s Phalarope O R O SYMBOLS Brant O O O Prairie Falcon R R R R Red-necked Phalarope O R O S - March - May Wood Duck* C C U U Peregrine Falcon # O O O Red Phalarope A A A S - June - August Mallard* C C C C Gyrfalcon A F - September - November American Black Duck A GULLS & TERNS S S F W W - December - February Gadwall* U O U U GALLINACEOUS BIRDS S S F W # - Threatened or Endangered Species Green-winged Teal C U C C Parasitic Jaeger A * - Breeds Locally American Wigeon C U C C Ring-necked Pheasant* U O U U Franklin’s Gull A A A A Eurasian Wigeon O O O Ruffed Grouse* O O O O Bonaparte’s Gull O R O R C - Common U - Uncommon O - Occasional Northern Pintail* C U C C California Quail* R R R R Ring-billed Gull C U U C R - Rare A - Accidental Northern Shoveler* C O C C Mew Gull U O O C Blue-winged Teal* R R R R RAILS, COOTS & CRANES S S F W California Gull C O U C LOONS & GREBES S S F W Cinnamon Teal* U C U O Herring Gull U O U Canvasback O O O Virginia Rail*
    [Show full text]
  • Evolution in the Rock Dove: Skeletal Morphology Richard F. Johnston
    The Auk 109(3):530-542, 1992 EVOLUTION IN THE ROCK DOVE: SKELETAL MORPHOLOGY RICHARD F. JOHNSTON Museumof NaturalHistory and Department of Systematicsand Ecology, 602 DycheHall, The Universityof Kansas,Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA ABSTRACT.--Domesticpigeons were derived from Rock Doves (Columbalivia) by artificial selection perhaps 5,000 ybp. Fetal pigeon populations developed after domesticsescaped captivity; this began in Europe soon after initial domesticationsoccurred and has continued intermittently in other regions. Ferals developed from domesticstocks in North America no earlier than 400 ybp and are genealogicallycloser to domesticsthan to European ferals or wild RockDoves. Nevertheless, North American ferals are significantlycloser in skeletalsize and shapeto Europeanferals and Rock Doves than to domestics.Natural selectionevidently has been reconstitutingreasonable facsimiles of wild size and shape phenotypesin fetal pigeonsof Europeand North America.Received 17 April 1991,accepted 13 January1992. Man, therefore, may be said to have been and southwestern Asia; this is known to be true trying an experiment on a gigantic scale; in more recent time (Darwin 1868; N. E. Bal- and it is an experimentwhich nature dur- daccini, pers. comm.). Later, pigeons escaping ing the long lapse of time has incessantly captivity either rejoined wild colonies or be- tried [Darwin 1868]. came feral, and are now found in most of the world (Long 1981). European,North African, Of the many kinds of animals examined for and Asiatic ferals may have historiesof
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia's Warbler (Oreothlypis Virginiae), in the Birds of North America (Rodewald, P
    Wyoming Species Account Virginia’s Warbler Oreothlypis virginiae REGULATORY STATUS USFWS: Migratory Bird USFS R2: No special status USFS R4: No special status Wyoming BLM: No special status State of Wyoming: Protected Bird CONSERVATION RANKS USFWS: No special status WGFD: NSSU (U), Tier II WYNDD: G5, S1 Wyoming Contribution: LOW IUCN: Least Concern PIF Continental Concern Score: 14 STATUS AND RANK COMMENTS Virginia’s Warbler (Oreothlypis virginiae) does not have any additional regulatory status or conservation rank considerations beyond those listed above. NATURAL HISTORY Taxonomy: Virginia’s Warbler, along with five other wood warbler species in the genus Verminorva, were recently placed in the genus Oreothlypis 1. Virginia’s Warbler is a close relative of Nashville Warbler (O. ruficapilla), but the species have different plumage and breeding habitat requirements 2. Description: Virginia’s Warbler is a small gray warbler with a bold white eye-ring, rufous-crown patch (not always obvious), yellow-green rump, and long tail that almost constantly pumps. It has a variable sized yellow patch on the breast, pale gray belly, and bright yellow undertail coverts. Sexes are similar, but males tend to have more rufous on the crown and more yellow on the breast 3. Similar species in Wyoming include Nashville Warbler, Tennessee Warbler (O. peregrina), and Orange-crowned Warbler (O. celata). However, unlike Virginia’s Warbler, Nashville Warbler has a yellow belly, Tennessee Warbler has white undertail covert’s, and Orange-crowned Warbler has a broken white eye-ring 4. Distribution & Range: Virginia’s Warbler reaches the northern extent of its core North American range in southwestern Wyoming 5, 6.
    [Show full text]
  • The Birds of New York State
    __ Common Goldeneye RAILS, GALLINULES, __ Baird's Sandpiper __ Black-tailed Gull __ Black-capped Petrel Birds of __ Barrow's Goldeneye AND COOTS __ Little Stint __ Common Gull __ Fea's Petrel __ Smew __ Least Sandpiper __ Short-billed Gull __ Cory's Shearwater New York State __ Clapper Rail __ Hooded Merganser __ White-rumped __ Ring-billed Gull __ Sooty Shearwater __ King Rail © New York State __ Common Merganser __ Virginia Rail Sandpiper __ Western Gull __ Great Shearwater Ornithological __ Red-breasted __ Corn Crake __ Buff-breasted Sandpiper __ California Gull __ Manx Shearwater Association Merganser __ Sora __ Pectoral Sandpiper __ Herring Gull __ Audubon's Shearwater Ruddy Duck __ Semipalmated __ __ Iceland Gull __ Common Gallinule STORKS Sandpiper www.nybirds.org GALLINACEOUS BIRDS __ American Coot __ Lesser Black-backed __ Wood Stork __ Northern Bobwhite __ Purple Gallinule __ Western Sandpiper Gull FRIGATEBIRDS DUCKS, GEESE, SWANS __ Wild Turkey __ Azure Gallinule __ Short-billed Dowitcher __ Slaty-backed Gull __ Magnificent Frigatebird __ Long-billed Dowitcher __ Glaucous Gull __ Black-bellied Whistling- __ Ruffed Grouse __ Yellow Rail BOOBIES AND GANNETS __ American Woodcock Duck __ Spruce Grouse __ Black Rail __ Great Black-backed Gull __ Brown Booby __ Wilson's Snipe __ Fulvous Whistling-Duck __ Willow Ptarmigan CRANES __ Sooty Tern __ Northern Gannet __ Greater Prairie-Chicken __ Spotted Sandpiper __ Bridled Tern __ Snow Goose __ Sandhill Crane ANHINGAS __ Solitary Sandpiper __ Least Tern __ Ross’s Goose __ Gray Partridge
    [Show full text]