Mike Stiles
Contact Mike
|
The Varied Thrush
by
Mike Stiles
Irruption:
A sudden, dramatic and rapid increase in a bird population. Bird
species will irrupt for different reasons and factors include the
availability of food, suitability of climate and amount of predatory
activity.
In
this part of the world, the Varied Thrush has most certainly irrupted.
This thrush breeds in damp, heavily forested areas of western Canada,
up through Alaska, and winters down the west coast to Ventura county.
In "normal" years, there are a few scattered sightings of this bird in
our county, usually found in the more heavily wooded inland canyons and
at higher elevations.
This
fall they are everywhere. Their plaintive "police whistle" song has
been heard along the coast, in backyards, and in their normal wooded
haunts. A birder in Monterey County reported 750 birds in one day, a
high count for that county. Mixed flocks of American Robins and Varied
Thrushes numbering in the thousands were reported in Marin County.
A
birder in San Mateo county had 7,120 one day, and the next had over
4,000. Here in our county, local birder Brad Schram counted over 7,000
birds in a mixed Robin/Varied Thrush flock over his house one morning,
with an estimated 25% of those as the thrush. I even had four in my
backyard one day, a first for my yard list.
Interestingly,
the previous Varied Thrush irruption in 1994 was a precursor to a rainy
year. Let's hope that this irruption is foretelling an end to our
three-year drought here in California.
The
bird's behavior on its breeding grounds is not well known, due to its
shy nature and its use of dark, old growth forest habitat. Future
forest fragmentation may be detrimental to the bird's success. It's odd
"song" was aptly described by Louise Agassiz Fuertes: (it) "is as
perfectly the voice of the cool, dark, peaceful solitude which the bird
chooses for its home as could be imagined". Take a listen here.
The
bird has an interesting migration pattern, where the northernmost birds
will "leapfrog" and winter further south than the southern breeding
birds. Those northernmost birds are what we are probably seeing this
fall.
This
time of year the Varied Thrush will switch from its normal diet of
insects and other arthropods to a diet of berries and seeds. They have
been known to defend a food source aggressively, displaying odd head
down and wings up postures, and will dominate other seed eaters at the
feeder.
Local
birders are hoping that this irruption will produce other northern,
montane species such as Evening Grosbeak, Cassin's Finch, Clark's
Nutcrackers, crossbills and other rarities. One can only hope.
|