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Friday, August 19, 2016

TRUMPETER SWANS: ADULTS & CYGNET, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

   The two all white swans with black bills are the adult. The juvenile swan or cygnet is the swan with light grey plumage and a pink bill with a black tip.







SEMIPALMATED PLOVER, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

    Even though the lighting was bad due to it being very cloudy and thus hard to determine colors (especially of the legs) we can ID this plover as a Semipalmated Plover due its dark back, complete black neck-ring and white stripe on its forehead,



FEMALE DOWNY WOODPECKER, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON


OSPREY IN NEST & ANOTHER EATING, NONQUON SEAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

   The Osprey on top of the post seems to be eating something, while its mate is at the nest.




FLOCK OF BONAPARTE'S GULLS, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

   This flock of Bonaparte's Gulls has gulls in various stages of their life.  August and September are generally the months when Bonaparte's Gulls molt from one stage of life to another. The Bonaparte's Gull obtains its adult-like plumage after one year.

   The gull at the top in the first and third photos with the brownish plumage and darker bars across the wing is a juvenile Bonaparte's Gull.  The next step is the 1st Winter Bonaparte's Gull.  A good example of this stage is the gull on the bottom of the third photo.  What distinguishes this as a 1st Winter gull is the fair amount of black on the gray wings and its dark ear-spot.

   The next stage after after the 1st Winter is the 1st Summer.  A good example of this 1st Summer stage is the gull in the middle of the first photo.  This Bonaparte's Gull has a black hood mottled with white and a black tail.    A nonbreeding adult Bonaparte's Gull is the middle gull in the fifth photo.  This gull has the black ear-spot and all pale gray (no black) wings of the nonbreeding adult.

   There do not in these photos seem to be gulls with the full black hood of the breeding Bonaparte's Gull, but their seem to be many which are in various stages of molting from breeding to nonbreeding plumage.

   








FEMALE BUFFLEHEAD, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

   We can ID this duck as a female Bufflehead by its distinctive oval white patch on its cheek and its grayish sides and underparts.


BREEDING PIED-BILL GREBE, NONQUON SEWAGE LAGOONS, PORT PERRY, ON

   We can ID this grebe as a breeding Pied-bill Grebe by its distinctive black ring on its pale stout bill.