Every time I think the Evening Grosbeaks are thinning out or even migrating en mass, they return. I have had a huge flock of these golden birds on my porch all winter and spring. Every morning the air is flooded with raucous finch bird song. According to many sources these beautiful birds are nomadic in southern areas but their presence here has been consistent. Irruptions (or rapid increases) of these birds in fall and winter are a common response to changing food supplies. Perhaps they stay around here because I feed them (as so many people do), but even with a stable food supply they will leave eventually. Western populations migrate to higher altitudes to breed sometime this spring and then return to the lowlands during the winter. In the Northeast, where I come from, the summer arrival of the grosbeaks is an event not to be missed because they migrate north to breed and are gone again within three months. In the last few years the bountiful flocks have been absent, having been replaced by a few breeding pairs. No one knows why Grosbeak numbers are in decline but apparently this downward trend holds for much of the US. While the pattern of decline is clear, the potential causes are murky unless one factors in the usual, Climate Change and insecticide use. I do know that these finches have adapted to having a regular supply of sunflower seed by growing a larger beak. Evening Grosbeaks interest me because they are an example of a bird that migrates in a limited way, (altitudinal) and one who also makes a long distance seasonal flight. Migration is the patterned movement from one place to another that occurs in birds, mammals, fish, reptiles, amphibians, insects and crustaceans. Migration may also occur at the cellular level. Migration can occur seasonally or just once in a lifetime. Birds like grosbeaks migrate to find food and to reproduce, but I can’t find any data on why these birds move from Abiquiu to higher altitudes to breed when there are extensive cottonwood canopies around here and a regular food supply, so there must be other unknown factors. It’s important to distinguish between birds that migrate seasonally for food and reproduction from those who are forced to leave one place for another because of human induced habitat loss, and Climate Change. Is it possible that one of the reasons the grosbeaks move to the mountainous ranges is to escape the heat? Like scientists, I have been intrigued by migration because we know so little about how birds and animals know what they know, and because, unfortunately, whatever capabilities animals have developed over millennia are also being interrupted in ways that we can barely comprehend. Multitudes of studies indicate that 1,800 of the 10,000 remaining bird migrating species probably use a wide variety of mechanisms to navigate, including the stars, the sun, olfactory (chemical) cues, internal circadian rhythms that change in response to the seasons, and Earth's magnetic field. Controversial field theory may also offer an explanation. But the point is, we don’t really know. The mysteries of bird migration continue to haunt me with questions I can’t answer. Here are a few examples of the ways bird migration has changed over the years: 1. Evening grosbeak migration patterns are shifting. 2. Some Canadian geese migrate seasonally; others remain in some states year-round. 3. Lesser black-backed gulls began appearing regularly in the New Jersey area in the 1970s, and are now fairly common winter visitors. 4. Sandhill cranes that used to migrate to Florida for the winter have stable winter populations in the state of Tennessee, and this year we had whole flocks of these birds who spent the winter here rather than moving further south. 5. Not all Rufous hummingbirds migrate to the tropics for the winter. Some are now flying south to areas like Alabama and Florida to remain there for the winter. 6. Barn swallows habitually migrated to South America during the winter but at present they also nest there in addition to moving north to breed. We may not know how migration works, but we do know the patterns of migration are changing and that Climate Change is a reality. My fervent hope is that somehow most species, who are all our “elders” – humans, after all have only been around for 200,000 years - (plants for 450 million years, animals for 350 million years) - may possess strategies that we can’t even imagine to survive the damage that we have brought upon all living things, including ourselves.
5 Comments
Bryce Nielson
5/6/2020 10:06:12 am
I had a flock of grosbeaks arrive in December at my feeder in Bear Lake, Utah. The flock has slowly continued to increase and now 5/6/20 there are about 60. They have eaten 200# of black sunflower seed and show no signs of leaving. Have had visited briefly over the last 40 years but never like this. No decline in Utah.
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Robert DeGray
11/18/2020 04:46:19 pm
We have hade feeders for years. On or about October 20th,2020 [South Eastern Ontario, Monkland. K0C1V0] saw an Evening Grosbeak. Very excited, a day later another came, then all heck broke loose. There are now upwards to 30 of them. They are taking over the feeder, my other birds don't get any seed.
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RONDA TINGLER
2/5/2021 05:47:30 am
I am from pendleton county wv and have had evening grosebeaks at my feeders since dec about 60 or more and 2/5/21 and a lot more now
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I have had evening grosbeaks at my feeder here in upstate New York since Oct 2020. I'm feeding 40lbs of blackoil sunflower seeds to them every week plus fruit and nut mixture. The flock is around 80 birds each day. I haven't had my usual purple finches our tufted titmouse since they've arrived. Will they migrate back to Canada or stay at this location?
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Wayne
4/29/2021 08:02:30 am
Carol, we are also in Upstate New York, and ours arrived about the same timeframe in the fall. We have about 30+. As of 4/29/21 they are still here and we are still feeding them. We have not seen them around here except for a couple passing through once in a while in the past 25 years. We hate to see them go, but we can't afford to continue feeding them all summer long. We are hoping that if we stop feeding them they will migrate and them return in the fall. Such a dilemma!
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