Thursday, August 29, 2019

July 7 - Tawas Point: Dipping on Cerulean Warbler and Little Gull


I woke again around 6 a.m. and ate a quick breakfast at the Lapeer Best Western before driving out to the Lapeer Game Management Area, where Cerulean Warblers have been recently reported on eBird, and walked along the roads and access trails to Watz Lake.
Once again, I “dipped” on the Ceruleans.  But, it was a pleasant walk along the roads of the Michigan woodlands.
Gray Catbirds were pretty common, here
Green Heron
After spending the morning there, I got in the car and drove north on Highway 23 to Tawas Point State Park, where a Little Gull has been seen somewhat regularly.  The State of Michigan charges a non-resident day use fee of $9, but it might be worth it to see a “Lifer”?
  If, indeed, the bird isn't avoiding the recreational users!

I'm just jealous I wasn't windsurfing . . .
I walked from the lighthouse on out to the tip of the peninsula, and back along the foredune on the lake side.  There were several flocks of gulls, and I spent quite a while scoping through the ones on the beach, as well as offshore.
Noooo!  Don't walk through the gull flock and scatter the birds . . .
But once again, I “dipped” on the Little Gull, which is today’s current “target species”.  I am not doing well at this.
But, ya gotta love the duckling on the Mama Merganser's back!
Also, this evening, I noted that I had totally missed that there’s a Little Egret – a European species – that has been seen in Maine.  I had been 75 miles from where it has been seen since the middle of June!  This is a testament to my poor planning and poor research for doing a “Peregrination” year . . .
The trails were flooded in several areas . 
There were a lot of Northern Leopard Frogs along the pathways, no doubt due to the high water levels in Lake Huron.
Taxonomic Note: This species was placed in the genus Lithobates by Frost et al. (2006). However, Yuan et al. (2016, Systematic Biology) showed that this action created problems of “paraphyly” in other genera.  (Paraphyletic groups do not include all of the descendants of a single common ancestor. This means that while the group has a common ancestor, we are artificially ignoring a subset of its descendents.)  Yuan et al. recognized subgenera within Rana for the major traditional species groups, with Lithobates used as the subgenus - rather than genus - for the Rana palmipes group.  The taxonomy seems all very unsettled.
Rana (or Lithobates, or something . . .) pipiens
Anyway, after scoping through the gull flocks for nearly two hours,
I bagged it and headed north and west toward the town of Grayling, and checked into the Motel 72, where Douglas, the Albanian clerk, signed me in for the night.  Tomorrow, my goal is to walk through the Jack Pine stands, looking for a warbler species I’ve not seen before.
Bonaparte's Gull is small, but it's not a Little Gull
Lapeer State Game Area eBird Checklist is Here
Another Lapeer State Game Area eBird Checklist is Here

Tawas Point State Park eBird Checklist is Here
My favorite Timothy is 1 Timothy 5:23 . . .

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