Battelle Darby Metro Park, as seen from Google Earth. This is just a snippet of the sprawling 7,000 acre park, but this patch is my favorite spot. It is a recently restored wet prairie, and the transformation from barren croplands to vibrant prairie has been remarkable to watch.
A few times a year, I'll get here and always take the "Teal Trail", as outlined in red. It's about a mile and three-quarter hike, and passes by great habitat. I always find interesting animals along this path, and today was no exception.
Fog-enshrouded prairie just before sunrise. A distant pair of duetting great horned owls and a pack of singing coyotes provided the soundtrack. Lapland longspurs were passing overhead, giving their melodious whistles and dry rattles, and a pair of northern harriers was hunting the meadow.
While shooting animals was my main mission, the early morning light and fog was just too beautiful to not fully drink in, so I grabbed 16-35mm and 70-200mm lenses (Canon, of course), and set out to make some images of the landscape. It was still too dark for good animal photography work, anyway.
Last time I was in this spot - many months prior - cattails were starting to dominate this marsh. Not now. Muskrats have stepped up to the plate and opened the marsh back up. Their conical lodges were quite conspicuous, and so were the aquatic mammals as they swam about harvesting plant material and mud as they labored on their lodges.
After taking this shot, I returned to the vehicle for some heavy artillery: my tripod-mounted Canon 800mm lens linked to the Canon 5D IV, and attached to a Black Rapid strap around my neck was the Canon 5DSR and 500mm f/4 lens. The latter setup is so light it can easily be handheld for birds in flight, or that are within the 800's minimum focusing distance of 19 feet. The Black Rapid strap makes carrying a camera much easier, even a fairly heavy one. It distributes the weight in a balanced manner, and takes all the pressure off the toter's neck and shoulders. More about these straps HERE.
While gear like that isn't cheap, the big telephotos are worth their weight in gold when stalking wildlife. My main game when out on solo missions like this is to try and locate the quarry before they see me, or at least approach subjects in a way that doesn't overly disturb them and allows me to get fairly close. With big lenses one doesn't have to get too near, and thus the critters will often go about their business as they normally would. This always leads to better shots, and is better for the critters.
A muskrat melds glop from the marsh bottom into his lodge. When it dries, it will help anchor the cattail bulwark in place. The industrious little beast made about a trip every two minutes, returning with construction material.
Muskrats are much maligned (like chipmunks), and that's a shame. Much of the vitriol directed at them is due to problems they create with people's structures, such as dikes. Muskrat can be enthusiastic tunnelers and over time their burrows can undermine levees. But in the big picture these mammals are an important part of a mixed-emergent marsh community and a keystone species. Their handiwork creates diversity in a wetland's plant community, thus increasing habitat diversity. This in turn spawns a spike in the abundance and diversity of other animals, everything from dragonflies to ducks. And it's no mystery why mink abound here - the large weasels prey on muskrat.
A muskrat takes a well-earned break, chewing on a cattail tuber at the base of his gargantuan lodge.
I was hoping for waterfowl, but we haven't yet had a big push into this area. All I saw was a smattering of mallards, northern shovelers, gadwall, ring-necked ducks, and a few other species. This is a pair of trumpeter swans, and I must confess I wasn't overly thrilled to see them. Our Division of Wildlife began an ambitious introduction program in 1996, and the birds are clearly taking hold and expanding. There's no indisputable evidence that trumpeters ever bred in this region, and as we've all learned by the disastrous introduction of "giant" Canada geese to areas where they didn't historically nest, large fowl can run amok and quickly become semi-domesticated. We shall see how the swan saga plays out, but I will not be surprised in the least if problems eventually arise. All that aside, trumpeters are spectacular birds, and their throaty bugles provide interesting aural ambience to the marshscape.
Sparrows abounded in the marsh and prairie, including plenty of song sparrows like this one. Swamp sparrows were at least equally numerous, and small flocks of American tree sparrows harvested grain from the prairie grasses.
I had already heard the harsh chaks of two marsh wrens when I encountered this aggressive little fellow. He took umbrage to my presence and followed me along the trail for a good 100 feet, cursing me in wren-speak from the dense cattails. As is typical of these feathered busybodies, he mostly kept to the dense growth but did reveal himself a few times and I was ready.
The spot where I shot this marsh wren was a goldmine. A late common yellowthroat popped up, and sparrows were everywhere. A quick movement down the trail materialized into a mink, which briefly bounded down the path in its slinky-like gait. Longspurs whistled overhead and as a finale, a merlin rocketed low over the marsh, spotted me and juked slightly off to the west, depriving me of possible photos. No worries, I was mostly interested in my diminutive but sassy stub-tailed wren.
By now, temperatures were in the low 40's, sluggish western chorus frogs and spring peepers slowly creaked out their songs, and, amazingly, a few fall field crickets and striped ground crickets were attempting to sing. Four hours had already passed by, and it was time to head for home.
A romp through the diverse flora and fauna of Ohio. From Timber Rattlesnakes to Prairie Warblers to Lakeside Daisies to Woodchucks, you'll eventually see it here, if it isn't already.
Showing posts with label song sparrow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label song sparrow. Show all posts
Sunday, November 25, 2018
Friday, July 31, 2015
Song Sparrow, preening
A beautiful Song Sparrow, Melospiza melodia. A very successful songbird, Song Sparrows can be found in all manner of places throughout their expansive range. For many readers, this will be one of the first birds that one hears upon exiting the abode in the morning. Yet they occur in the wildest of places, and every sort of situation in between.
I've got plenty of Song Sparrows around me, and common as they may be, I seldom overlook the shy little songsters. Back on May 15, I only had a few hours to get out and so I went over to a nearby park with plenty of biodiversity. As I stood quietly along the boardwalk, the melodious little animal featured in these photos hopped to a nearby branch, and engaged in a vigorous bout of preening.
Although he was only about 25 feet away, the sparrow ignored me and set about cleaning and straightening his feathers.
Preening in songbirds, as you may have noticed, is often accompanied with ferocious spasms of shaking. The reason for the intensity of the feather ruffling may be due to the little white dashes in the air around the bird. Click the photo to enlarge, and you should be able to see them. I suspect the airborne particles are feather mites, and violent shaking amid the preening may serve to dislodge some of the parasites.
More of the presumed feather mites drift from our bird, as he comes out of the shakes.
Even while busily occupied with grooming, the sparrow cannot help himself and pauses to deliver a beautiful melody.
Careful preening entails all sorts of gymnastics, including rubbing one's head along a rough branch. Judging by the sparrow's slack-jawed gape and lolling tongue, that must feel pretty good.
I won't even attempt an interpretation of this pose. Looks a bit like he's flashing a gang sign, though.
I love to shoot birds as they preen or otherwise fidget and shake. Rather than set my shutter speed to something lightning fast, like 1/4000 which would freeze everything, I sometimes prefer a much slower speed. This image was at 1/1000 - fast, but not nearly enough to completely stop the bird's motion. But we end up with a beautiful swirl of feathers, as if the bird is moving in the photo. Note the eye and head, though - sharp. Always aim for the eye when shooting animals.
The preening session nearly concluded, our sparrow fluffs his feathers to truly rotund dimensions.
I've got plenty of Song Sparrows around me, and common as they may be, I seldom overlook the shy little songsters. Back on May 15, I only had a few hours to get out and so I went over to a nearby park with plenty of biodiversity. As I stood quietly along the boardwalk, the melodious little animal featured in these photos hopped to a nearby branch, and engaged in a vigorous bout of preening.
Although he was only about 25 feet away, the sparrow ignored me and set about cleaning and straightening his feathers.
Preening in songbirds, as you may have noticed, is often accompanied with ferocious spasms of shaking. The reason for the intensity of the feather ruffling may be due to the little white dashes in the air around the bird. Click the photo to enlarge, and you should be able to see them. I suspect the airborne particles are feather mites, and violent shaking amid the preening may serve to dislodge some of the parasites.
More of the presumed feather mites drift from our bird, as he comes out of the shakes.
Even while busily occupied with grooming, the sparrow cannot help himself and pauses to deliver a beautiful melody.
Careful preening entails all sorts of gymnastics, including rubbing one's head along a rough branch. Judging by the sparrow's slack-jawed gape and lolling tongue, that must feel pretty good.
I won't even attempt an interpretation of this pose. Looks a bit like he's flashing a gang sign, though.
Back to some energetic feather ruffling.
I love to shoot birds as they preen or otherwise fidget and shake. Rather than set my shutter speed to something lightning fast, like 1/4000 which would freeze everything, I sometimes prefer a much slower speed. This image was at 1/1000 - fast, but not nearly enough to completely stop the bird's motion. But we end up with a beautiful swirl of feathers, as if the bird is moving in the photo. Note the eye and head, though - sharp. Always aim for the eye when shooting animals.
The preening session nearly concluded, our sparrow fluffs his feathers to truly rotund dimensions.
And back to singing he goes.
Monday, April 2, 2012
The melodious Song Sparrow
Photo: John Pogacnik
Tiny song sparrow belts out the tunes
The Columbus Dispatch
Sunday April 1, 2012
NATURE
Jim McCormac
One of the most pleasing melodies in suburban Ohio is created by one of our plainest birds, the song sparrow.
Although the 20-gram earth-toned songster lacks visual pizazz, few of our birds can sing as well.
Its scientific name hints at this vocal prowess: Melospiza melodia (melodia means a pleasant song).
Song sparrows coexist well with humans and thrive in gardens, weedy lots, urban parks and other heavily populated places. Almost everyone is probably within earshot of a song sparrow, and you might even have a pair nesting in your yard.
Very few songbirds occur as widely in North America as does the song sparrow. Although the adaptive little birds do fine in suburbia, they also occupy some of the most isolated places on the continent, such as the Aleutian Islands off Alaska.
Their wide geographic distribution has stimulated evolution of many distinct forms, and 24 subspecies of song sparrows have been described.
Song sparrows have been in full tune for several weeks; they frequently will be one of the first birds you hear in the morning. Throwing his head back like a feathered Pavarotti, the sparrow issues a sweet torrent of complex trills interspersed with clear, bell-like notes.
Margaret Morse Nice certainly noticed song sparrows. Life’s obligations, including marriage and five daughters, kept the Massachusetts native from her passion of natural-history study for much of her early adult years. That changed when her husband accepted a position at Ohio State University in 1927, and the family moved to Columbus.
The Nices owned 60 acres along the Olentangy River, near the OSU campus. It was there that Margaret Nice embarked on groundbreaking studies into song sparrows’ behavior. Her eight-year project was probably the most detailed life-history study yet conducted of a North American animal, culminating in the 1937 publication of Studies in the Life History of the Song Sparrow.
“Nice almost single- handedly initiated a new era in American ornithology,” legendary biologist Ernst Mayr said.
At the time of Nice’s song-sparrow research, most scientists focused on collecting birds and studying their appearance and distribution, rather than spending time in the field observing how birds behaved.
Today, many students of zoology study birds in the wild. But it took a Columbus woman and her infatuation with a meek but melodious sparrow to usher in a new age of natural-history study.
Naturalist Jim McCormac writes a column for The Dispatch on the first and third Sundays of the month. He also writes about nature at www.jimmccormac.blog spot.com.
Further afield
Internationally acclaimed biologists Peter and Rosemary Grant will present a lecture, “How and Why Species Multiply: Evolution of Darwin’s Finches,” on April 18 at Ohio Wesleyan University.
The talk will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Gray Chapel in University Hall, 61 S. Sandusky St., Delaware.
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