Chipping Toward Fall Migration

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We’re rounding the corner into fall, and birders are already hearing the calls of migrant birds as they pass overhead at night. Here’s Lab researcher Lewis Grove’s first post in our series covering the exciting fall migration season:

LGAugust has a reputation for being a slow month for woodland birding. The dawn chorus has dried up into just a trickle of singing—a vireo here, a warbler there—and it’s nothing like the early morning cacophony of early summer.

But there are still plenty of birds—and even some genuine migration—filling the quiet woodlands of August.

You might think fall migration is still a month or more off, along with changing leaves and frosty mornings, but the great movement starts just after the summer solstice. Shorebirds take off from the rocky arctic coasts; Broad-winged Hawks drift lazily south from the boreal forest; and songbirds, those ebullient vocalists who fill our spring and early summer mornings, begin to long for warmer climes. Many are embarking on their first fall migration, heading for locales they’ve never seen and relying on instincts honed over millions of generations.

Of course, most of the action happens at night, where it’s hard to see but easy—and fascinating—to hear. Last spring on this blog we began listening to some of the nocturnal flight calls of migration. And while spring is a perfectly fine time to start in on flight calls, the real action is now.

For the next few months the traffic over our heads will pick up tremendously. A river of birds will fly south, swollen with millions of young-of-the-year. Some nights may resemble a noisy highway, with hundreds of flight calls streaming down per hour.

For more than two weeks already, observers around the country have been hearing big flights of Yellow Warblers, Veeries, and Chipping, Brewer’s, and Vesper sparrows. This fall we’ll highlight commonly heard species and give you tips on when, where, and how to best appreciate the wonder of nocturnal migration. It can be a bit daunting at first, as unidentified short calls drift down from a dark sky; but once you’ve grasped it, we think you’ll agree that it’s the best way to appreciate an amazing natural phenomenon!

New to the world of flight calls? Get up to speed with audio and video tutorials from last spring’s migration:

Let’s Go Birding at Night… Blindfolded and

How to See a Sound That’s a Half-Second Long,

and check back regularly this fall for the latest on what’s flying over your house.

(Image: Yellow Warbler in flight by Jim Gilbert from Birdshare)

5 Comments

  1. sandy
    Posted September 4, 2009 at 10:10 am | Permalink

    We live in NE Pennsylvania and haven’t seen a robin for about two weeks. Usually, there are at least eight robins in our yard. We wonder if this is the sign of an early winter.

  2. christine
    Posted September 24, 2009 at 6:59 pm | Permalink

    I live in SE MN, I haven’t seen a robin since mid-July whats the deal????

  3. derrick
    Posted November 17, 2009 at 7:14 pm | Permalink

    I live in Arkansas and there is an unusual amount of robins all around our town. I have never seen so many swarming like this. They cover the trees like leaves.

  4. Katherine Knotts
    Posted January 14, 2010 at 12:39 am | Permalink

    The Robins arrived in St. Augustine two days ago and they ate a lot of berries prior to their arrival. How long can I expect them to stay? I am trying to figure out when I can wash my car. Am I right in assuming that they are on their migration south? They are all in the trees and not on the ground. We are expecting rain Saturday. Will they stay for the worms?

  5. Posted January 20, 2010 at 5:33 pm | Permalink

    We;ve live in central for 14 years. Never have we seen any robins,but this year they are here in huge flocks and every morning and evening thy’re here by the hundreds. Was wondering what’s going on. A happy robin watcher.Jean

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