Although northeast-central Mississippi didn’t get much icy
precipitation out of the much-hyped winter storm system, temperatures dropped
considerably—enough, apparently, to urge the neighborhood wild birds into a
kind of foraging frenzy the following day.
In our backyard, White-throated and Song Sparrows, Rusty Blackbirds,
Purple Finches, Hermit Thrushes, and other species busily searched for food
underneath the oak leaves that line the ground.
I thought back to winters in northwestern Arkansas, where, in contrast
to Mississippi, snows are a regular occurrence.
I saw my first American Tree Sparrows during one of those
winters—my first winter in Arkansas, when there was a record-setting blizzard (https://www.weather.gov/tsa/weather_event_2011feb1)
that dumped several inches of snow in late January and early February. The tree sparrows were feeding with Dark-eyed
Juncos on the snow-covered ground. It
was really neat to see.
One of my photos of American Tree Sparrows (with Dark-eyed Juncos). |
I remembered that I hadn’t submitted this record to eBird,
the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s online bird database (to which I am slowly, steadily
adding my older birding notes), so I pulled up my computer to do
that. The eBird checklist that loaded for
that region and season had American Tree Sparrow flagged as “rare,” which surprised
me for a second, because I knew plenty of other people in Arkansas who had seen
the species. But then I remembered:
American Tree Sparrows are often an irruptive species (http://www.tnwatchablewildlife.org/details.cfm?displayhabitat=grassland&sort=aounumber&typename=GRASSLAND%20AND%20SHRUB&uid=09081113200239105&commonname=American%20Tree%20Sparrow),
meaning that they move farther south, in larger numbers, when food sources up
north are too low. Like many ecological
concepts, bird species irruption is all too easy to oversimplify, but the gist
of it is that some species of trees have boom-and-bust seed-producing cycles,
with some years—i.e., the mast years—yielding particularly large crops. Birds that feast and raise lots of young on a
bountiful crop one year may find themselves in danger of starvation the next
year. What is there to do in such a
situation? Look for food elsewhere,
generally. American Tree Sparrows aren’t
the only ones to do this, of course. Red-breasted
Nuthatches, Pine Siskins, Red Crossbills, and Evening Grosbeaks are some of the
best-known examples of irruptive species.
But tree sparrows are on the list, and the winter of 2010-2011 was
apparently one of the ones in which they invaded the south in larger numbers
than usual. I hadn’t really realized it
before, but I was lucky to be in Arkansas during a major irruption year when I
could observe this species in my “yard” without much effort!
Satisfied with this information, I uploaded a couple of my
tree sparrow photos to my checklist, submitted it, and, to confirm my theory,
went to look at the eBird species graphs for American Tree Sparrow in Arkansas. Examining the line graphs of abundance from
various years, starting with 2010-2011, yielded some interesting results. The eBird site currently allows you to
compare up to five separate years in the abundance graph for a single
species. As you can see here, in Arkansas
in 2011, American Tree Sparrow numbers shot up dramatically.
Not my graph! Credit to Cornell Lab's eBird. |
Because species may have very different distributions and
dietary preferences/requirements, they are not all on the same cycle when it
comes to irruption. Red-breasted
Nuthatches in Mississippi, for instance, showed a population peak in the
2012-2013 winter, a smaller one in 2016-2017, and another one again this
winter, 2018-2019. (The graph shows Mississippi
populations only, and I didn’t include 2019, since we’re only a month into the
year.)
2010-2014, eBird |
2014-2018, eBird |
The Red-breasted Nuthatch that arrived in the backyard last October. |
If you look at the distribution
maps on eBird, some of the same general patterns can be detected. It’s a bit subtler on the distribution maps than on the line
graphs, but the dark purple spots of the maps—the areas with a greater
frequency of sightings—are definitely more noticeable in the southeastern
United States in the years 2012 and 2013, which were the years of one of the best recent
irruptive seasons for Red-breasted Nuthatches.
Red-breasted Nuthatch distribution graphs modified from eBird (https://ebird.org/). |
Predicting when the next irruption will occur
is relatively straightforward, I suppose, but only time will tell just how
extensive it will be. In the meantime,
overwintering wild birds, irruptive and non-irruptive alike, aren’t wasting a
second in their daily pursuit of finding enough food to survive the cold and
bleak conditions. Spring is on its way,
though, so they will be traveling back to their northern nesting territories
fairly soon, where, hopefully, they will find a plethora of food sources
awaiting them.
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