Hudson River Almanac 2/10/18 – 2/16/18

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
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Coyote courtesy of Ed McGowan (see 2/10)Hudson River Almanac
February 10 – February 16, 2018
Compiled by Tom Lake, Hudson River Estuary Program Consulting Naturalist


OVERVIEW

A fish mystery that had lingered for 86 years was solved this week and we had a rare visit from a Midwest songbird. In a week that included Valentine’s Day, our bald eagles continued to ready themselves and their nests for the upcoming breeding season.

HIGHLIGHT OF THE WEEK

Harris sparrow2/16 – Albany County, HRM 143: While walking along Meadowdale Road (Guilderland) this morning, surveying for the Great Backyard Bird Count, we happened upon a Harris’s Sparrow. We knew what it was immediately despite having seen only one previously in Saratoga County in May 1998. This one was in non-breeding plumage with a small black bib and black on the crown up to the peak. The large, pink bill really stood out. It was a truly handsome bird! There were a few American tree sparrows and white-throated sparrows about, but the Harris’s did not seem to be directly associating with them. (Photo of Harris Sparrow courtesy of Scott Stoner)
– Larry Alden, Sandy Alden (Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club)

[Harris’s Sparrow (Zonotrichia querula) breeds along the edges of boreal forests and tundra in north-central Canada and winters in the Great Plains, from Iowa to Texas, rarely venturing east of the Mississippi. According to e-bird, fewer than a dozen Harris’s sparrows have been reported in New York over the last ten years. Sightings for the Hudson River watershed include: one each from Saratoga County (2016) and Loudonville (2015), a cluster of winter sightings around Goshen (2013-14), and one reported in Newcomb (2012). This bird was way off course. Larry Alden, John Paarlberg]

NATURAL HISTORY ENTRIES

2/10 – Hudson River Watershed: Our list of fishes for the Hudson River watershed (227 species) largely contains fishes for which we have museum specimens or other incontrovertible evidence that they were found here. There are a few exceptions, such as the 19th century record of a dusky shark (Carcharhinus obscurus) for which we have only newspaper accounts.

Another record, until now considered dubious, was the barndoor skate, a large saltwater fish (up to six-feet-long). While the type site for this fish was from the East River (Samuel Mitchill,1818), the single record for the Hudson River began with a newspaper story from August 4,1932, when Jack Johnson reportedly caught a barndoor skate on rod and reel in the river at North Albany (river mile 150). For this saltwater species to be found in freshwater made the thinly documented record doubtful.

Clues to the specimen’s fate comes from J.R. Greeley who notes in his A Biological Survey of the Lower Hudson Watershed (1936), “An adult male of this large species is preserved in the collection of the New York State museum. It was contributed by a local fisherman who said he caught it on rod and reel in the Hudson River at North Albany.” However, the specimen could not be located. It appeared lost.

Barndoor skateThe mystery was solved today. Bob Schmidt, Bryan Weatherwax, and Jeremy J. Wright opened a stainless-steel tank and were surprised to discover that a large skate was squeezed inside. When they accessed the computer records, they discovered that this specimen was the barndoor skate that Jack Johnson caught in 1932. The barndoor skate specimen was a male, measuring 55-inches total length. Schmidt, Weatherwax, and Wright view this specimen as evidence that a barndoor skate was collected in the freshwater tidal portion of the Hudson River in vicinity of North Albany. (Photo of barndoor skate courtesy of Jeremy Wright)
– Tom Lake

[The barndoor skate (Dipturus laevis) is one of two species of the skate family (Rajidae) documented for the watershed, the other being the little skate (Raja erinacea). If you would like a copy of the Checklist of Hudson River Watershed Fishes, please e-mail trlake7.

2/10 – Town of LaGrange, HRM 69: Last night after dark, we spotted a very large coyote on Bushwick Street in LaGrange. I moved here in 2015 from California and I am very familiar with coyotes. They were seemingly everywhere in the San Francisco Bay Area. The coyote we saw last night was far larger than any of the coyotes we used to see in California.
– Shirley Freitas, Annette Caruso

[This was likely an eastern coyote (Canis latrans var.), a variety of coyote that grows to a larger size and often has darker fur than is generally associated with the species. Researchers studying the genes of coyotes in the Northeast have found evidence that these larger coyotes are in fact, coyote-wolf hybrids (Canis latrans x C. lupus), carrying both wolf and coyote DNA. The findings may explain why some coyotes in the East are generally larger than their Western counterparts – that is, more wolf-like in size – and why they are so much more varied in coat color, as might be expected from a creature with a more diverse genome. As a result, we coyote fans like to refer to them as “woyotes.” Tom Lake]

2/11 – Hudson River Watershed: Winter is one of the best seasons to observe wildlife, especially birds. Keeping in mind that winter is a stressful time for birds, for tips on how to observe them and other wildlife in a legal, safe manner that does not harm or harass them, visit DEC’s website (www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/112582.html). For a DEC press release, click on http://www.dec.ny.gov/press/112637.html.
– Tom Lake

2/12 – Town of Colonie, HRM 157: I counted four Iceland gulls this morning among a cluster of about 300 gulls on the Mohawk River at the Crescent Bridge. A little farther down the river on the Cohoes-Crescent Road, I found a glaucous gull among another cluster of gulls.
– John Hershey (Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club)

Beaver2/12 – Dutchess County, HRM 96: We checked on the beavers at Thompson Pond today. It seemed that we were not the only ones with “cabin fever.” The Thompson Pond beaver family seems to always have an opening in the ice no matter how frozen the rest of the pond is and they remain active during the winter. They were active today working on their lodge, feeding, and entertaining us especially with the slapping of their tails! (Photo of beaver courtesy of Deb Tracy-Kral)
– Kathryn Zvokel Stewart, Bob Stewart

2/12 – Croton Bay, HRM 34-33: From the Metro North 11:00 a.m. local commuter train to Manhattan, I counted 31 bald eagles on Croton Bay, 25 on broken ice floes and six perched in a tree. I estimated that two-thirds of them were immatures.
– Thomas Rhindress

2/12 – Westchester County, HRM 30: On our second-Monday Saw Mill River Audubon bird walk this morning, we saw an interesting movement of 19 black vultures at Rockefeller State Park Preserve. Twelve were drifting together north and the others were perched around the park’s Swan Lake. There have been good numbers of black vultures with the turkey vultures in a night roost five miles upriver near Croton-on-Hudson but not as many recorded here in the last couple of months. We watched as six snow geese flew over heading northwest, and the song sparrows and cardinals were singing their spring songs.
– Anne Swaim

2/13 – Saratoga County, HRM 200: I counted 29 bird species this morning as I made the Northumberland farmland ramble, zigzagging back and forth. There were mixed horned larks and snow buntings in many locations. I also counted 34 common goldeneye with much courting going on. Where there were only drakes, they seemed to practice their moves on each other.
– Ron Harrower (Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club)

2/13 – Hoosic River, HRM 172: I spotted two greater white-fronted geese within a flock of Canada geese along the Hoosic River in Schaghticoke. Bald eagles kept flying past them, but they never moved away.
– Jim de Waal Malefyt (Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club)

Bald eagles2/13 – Town of Poughkeepsie: Nest NY62 continued to be the best bald eagle show in town. The two adults were very active in mid-afternoon still refurbishing their nest, an activity that has been ongoing since early December. They gave us a real treat by perching side-by-side on a branch a few feet above their nest as they enjoyed the warm afternoon sun. (Photo of bald eagles at NY62 courtesy of Dave Tryon)
– Dave Tryon, Louise Tryon

2/14 – Hudson Valley: Eagle courtship is usually, but not exclusively, performed by breeding pairs in the days and weeks before the spring nesting season. We have tried to use simple words to describe this behavior with little success. We have described their aerial performance of grace and symmetry as “sky dancing.” On a long-ago Valentine’s Day at Verplanck, we watched a courtship display over the river in a snow squall. Through a small break in the clouds came a shaft of sunlight and we watched that pair perform as though they were dancing on a sunbeam.

On a Valentine’s Day dawn at New Hamburg a few years ago, my wife and I watched a pair of eagles shadow each other high over the ice with loop-de-loops and wing-touches. At the apex of a long arc in the sky they locked talons – one turned on its back in the air, the other mirrored it from above – and they went into a free-fall for more than a hundred feet before releasing and flaring out over the ice. At the climax of each acrobatic move they fell away in synchronized flight – flap-flap-glide – both wheeling and banking away in perfect form. It was like an exquisite ballet performance. At times, they flew so close to each other that they cast only one shadow, drifting across the limestone face of Cedarcliff. Their effortless yet powerful wing beats moved them through the air as a single bird, communicating more through instinct than any utterance.
– Tom Lake

2/14 – Town of Poughkeepsie: The adult pair at bald eagle nest NY62 were vocalizing more than usual on Valentine’s Day morning. The female (Mom) repeatedly called for the male (DAD) and he responded by bringing in a fish and nesting material. Then we gave a collective “a-h-h-h” as they mated – quite appropriate for the day.
– Will Cook

[Some readers might wince with our designating breeding male and female bald eagles as “Mom” and “Dad,” and describing their behavior in terms of human behavior. These are wild animals and while such roles seem to mimic our own, we recognize that they see the process in ways we cannot imagine. Still, it  offers a comfortable frame of reference. – Tom Lake]

Gray fox2/14 – East Fishkill, HRM 66: We had a visit tonight from a beautiful gray fox. We had not seen one here in a year and it was a break from all the red foxes we have had in our yard this winter (we are hoping the red foxes will have kits). The gray fox was checking out the food I had put out for the birds, as do the opossums and raccoons. The fox had no tail and I hate to think what had happened to it. Other than its lack of a tail, the fox looked very healthy. All the foxes look so beautiful against the white snow. (Photo of gray fox courtesy of Diane Anderson)
– Diane Anderson

2/14 – Yonkers, HRM 18: In early afternoon, students from the Bronx Collaborative High School helped us do some out-of-season seining at the Center for the Urban River at Beczak. While our six hauls of the net each came ashore empty, we felt as though we had given them an introductory experience as to how researchers and educators collect data. We reminded them that for scientists “no data is still data.” The river’s salinity measured 7.0 parts-per-thousand and the water temperature was 3.0 Celsius (37 degrees Fahrenheit).
– Elisa Caref, Jay Muller

2/15 – Hyde Park, HRM 82: As I watched the various birds at the bird feeders this morning as well as some gray squirrels on the ground, a chipmunk showed up to feed on the bird seed. That seemed early for a chipmunk. Forget the groundhog seeing his shadow, I’m convinced my chipmunk was a more reliable indicator that spring is close. Yesterday I was treated to a mink on my property near the Fallkill Creek. It scurried into a pile of saplings I had taken down in the summer.
– Brenda Sramek

2/16 – Mohawk River, HRM 157: There were hundreds of blackbirds in the flooded fields on Niska Isle this morning. They included at least 400 red-winged blackbirds, six common grackles, and two calling rusty blackbirds. Hungry robins were eating the sumac bobs along the bike path. I also listened to a starling do a spot-on imitation of an eastern meadowlark’s “spring-is-here” song.
– Tom Williams (Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club)

[Niska Isle is a peninsula along the Mohawk River in the town of Niskayuna. Niska Isle was a highly defensible hillock for native peoples, located at the junction of the Lisha Kill and Mohawk River and may have been the site of an Indian village (probably Haudenosaunee). A trail led from the Indian village to the Norman’s Kill and Helderberg Escarpment, the location of well-known quarries and hunting grounds. Tom Lake]

2/16 – Dutchess County, HRM 77: As I was driving on Salt Point Turnpike I caught sight of a very white bird in a corn field. I slowed down – this season we’re all on the lookout for snowy owls. It was a single snow goose in a flock of at least 30 Canada geese no more than 30 feet off the road. At this point on the road there are corn fields on one side and a cow farm on the other. Often a single snow goose means a left-behind bird due to injury or illness. However, this one appeared to be fit enough, poking around in the cornfield.
– Elisa Shaw

2/16 – Manhattan, HRM 1: Under cloudy skies and in relatively warm air, we checked our collection gear in Hudson River Park at The River Project’s sampling station on the lighthouse tender Lilac at Pier 25. Checking our fish traps, we were greeted by an assemblage of crustaceans: amphipods, isopods, grass shrimp (Palaemonetes sp.), mud crabs, and a few adorable juvenile spider crabs!
– Siddhartha Hayes, Toland Kister, Siri Dolce-Bengtsson


WINTER-SPRING 2018 NATURAL HISTORY PROGRAMS

Saturday, February 24 – 1:00 p.m.
The Changing Ecology of the Hudson River Flyway
Tom Lake, Hudson River Estuary Program’s Consulting Naturalist
Five River Environmental Education Center, Delmar
Hosted by the Audubon Society of the Capital Region with Southern Adirondack Audubon
For information, e-mail John Loz

Saturday, March 3 – 5:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Fragmented & Forgotten: Tracing the Tannery Brook
Original maps of the Tannery Brook, paired with historic maps, images and text will visualize changes in and around the stream over time.
Presented by Emily Vail and Jiamin Chen
The Lace Mill, East Gallery
165 Cornell Street, Kingston
For information, Emily Vail

Wednesday, March 14 – 5:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Workshop: Green Infrastructure in Kingston
Presented by Emily Vail, Amanda Lavalle and Steve Noble
The Lace Mill, East Gallery
165 Cornell Street, Kingston
To register, please contact Emily Vail

HUDSON RIVER MILES

The Hudson is measured north from Hudson River Mile 0 at the Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan. The George Washington Bridge is at HRM 12, the Tappan Zee 28, Bear Mountain 47, Beacon-Newburgh 62, Mid-Hudson 75, Kingston-Rhinecliff 95, Rip Van Winkle 114, and the Federal Dam at Troy, the head of tidewater, at 153. The tidal section of the Hudson constitutes a bit less than half the total distance – 315 miles – from Lake Tear of the Clouds to the Battery. Entries from points east and west in the watershed reference the corresponding river mile on the mainstem.

TO CONTRIBUTE YOUR OBSERVATIONS OR TO SUBSCRIBE

The Hudson River Almanac is compiled and edited by Tom Lake and emailed weekly by DEC’s Hudson River Estuary Program. Share your observations by e-mailing them to trlake7@aol.com.

To subscribe to the Almanac (or to unsubscribe), use the links on DEC’s Hudson River Almanac or DEC Delivers web pages.

Discover New York State Conservationist – the award-winning, advertisement-free magazine focusing on New York State’s great outdoors and natural resources. Conservationist features stunning photography, informative articles and around-the-state coverage. Visit the Conservationist webpage for more information.

USEFUL LINKS

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration online tide and tidal current predictions are invaluable when planning Hudson River field trips.

For real-time information on Hudson River tides, weather and water conditions from twelve monitoring stations, visit the Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System website.

Information about the Hudson River Estuary Program is available on DEC’s website at http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4920.html.

Smartphone app available for New York outdoor enthusiasts!
DEC, in partnership with ParksByNature Network®, is proud to announce the launch of the New York Fishing, Hunting & Wildlife App for iPhone and Android. This FREE, cutting-edge mobile app gives both novice and seasoned outdoorsmen and women essential information in the palm of their hands. Powered by Pocket Ranger® technology, this official app for DEC will provide up-to-date information on fishing, hunting and wildlife watching and serve as an interactive outdoor app using today’s leading mobile devices. Using the app’s advanced GPS features, users will be able identify and locate New York’s many hunting, fishing and wildlife watching sites. They will also gain immediate access to species profiles, rules and regulations, and important permits and licensing details.

NY Open for Hunting and Fishing Initiative
Governor Cuomo’s NY Open for Fishing and Hunting Initiative is an effort to improve recreational opportunities for sportsmen and women and to boost tourism activities throughout the state. This initiative includes streamlining fishing and hunting licenses, reducing license fees, improving access for fishing and increasing hunting opportunities in New York State.
In support of this initiative, this year’s budget includes $6 million in NY Works funding to support creating 50 new land and water access projects to connect hunters, anglers, bird watchers and others who enjoy the outdoors to more than 380,000 acres of existing state and easement lands that have gone largely untapped until now. These 50 new access projects include building new boat launches, installing new hunting blinds and building new trails and parking areas. In addition, the 2014-15 budget includes $4 million to repair the state’s fish hatcheries; and renews and allows expanded use of crossbows for hunting in New York State.
This year’s budget also reduces short-term fishing licenses fees; increases the number of authorized statewide free fishing days to eight from two; authorizes DEC to offer 10 days of promotional prices for hunting, fishing and trapping licenses; and authorizes free Adventure Plates for new lifetime license holders, discounted Adventure Plates for existing lifetime license holders and regular fee Adventure Plates for annual license holders.

Copies of past issues of the Hudson River Almanac, Volumes II-VIII, are available for purchase from the publisher, Purple Mountain Press, (800) 325-2665, or email purple@catskill.net

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