We've entered the 3rd quarter of the year and thus far I have spotted 86 Bird Species and 23 Mammal Species. I may still pick up an owl or two by the end of the year. I probably expect another mammal or two (best chances being Ringed Seal, Coyote, Muskrat, Beaver, or Collared Lemming...Wolverine, Lynx, Wolf, or River Otter...exciting possibilities, but less likely). I have managed this year to spot all three of Alaska's Bear Species with a Polar Bear sow and two one year old cubs along the shoreline east of Utgiagvik. So as far as individual animals, I've seen at least seven individual Brown Bears (across two dozen different sightings), three individual American Black Bears (two different sightings), and three Polar Bears (one sighting). In addition to Alaska's largest carnivores, I've also spotted Alaska's smallest! Two Ermine sightings so far this year...one of a winter coated animal down in Moose Pass, Alaska and one of a summer coated animals along the Upper Hillside area of Anchorage. I was hoping most of all this year to spot a Bison, but planned excursions to the Copper River Valley and Donnelly Dome regions of eastern Alaska did not happen...maybe next year.
Here is my List:
Birds -
1. Rock Pigeon - Columba Livia
2. American Wigeon - Mareca Americana
3. Bohemian Waxwing - Bombycilla Garrulus
4. Black-capped Chickadee - Poecile Atricapillus
5. Red-breasted Nuthatch - Sitta Canadensis
6. Common Redpoll - Acanthis Flammea
7. Mallard - Anas Platyrhynchos
8. Black-billed Magpie - Pica Hudsonia
9. Common Raven - Corvus Corax
10. European Starling - Sturnus Vulgaris
11. Bald Eagle - Haliaeetus Leucocephalus
12. American Dipper - Cinclus Mexicanus
13. Hairy Woodpecker - Leuconotopicus Villosus
14. Downy Woodpecker - Dryobates Pubescens
16. Willow Ptarmigan - Lagopus Lagopus
17. Common Goldeneye - Bucephala Clangula
18. Common Merganser - Mergus Meganser
19. Snow Bunting - Plectrophenax Nivalis
20. Pacific Wren - Troglodytes Pacificus
21. Northern Pintail - Anas Acuta
22. Long-tailed Duck - Clangula Hyemalis
23. Greater Scaup - Aythaya Marila
24. Northwestern Crow - Corvus Brachyrhynchos Caurinus
25. Glaucous-winged Gull - Larus Glaucescens
26. Common Loon - Gavia Immer
27. Black-legged Kittiwake - Rissa Tridactyla
28. Pelagic Cormorant - Urile Pelagicus
29. Red-breasted Merganser - Mergus Serrator
30. Trumpeter Swan - Cygnus Buccinator
31. Barrow's Goldeneye - Bucephala Islandica
32. Harelquin Duck - Histrionicus Histrionicus
33. Herring Gull - Larus Smithsonianus
34. Iceland Gull - Larus Glauciodes
35. White-winged Scooter - Melanitta Deglandi
36. Surf Scooter - Melanitta Perspicillata
37. Marbled Murrelet - Brachyramphus Marmoratus
38. Canada Jay - Perisoreus Canadensis
39. Tree Swallow - Tachycineta Bicolor
40. Boreal Chickadee - Poecile Husonicus
41. American Robin - Turdus Migratorius
42. Sandhill Crane - Antigone Canadensis
43. Mew Gull - Larus Brachyrhynchus
44. Bonaparte's Gull - Chroiocoephalus Philadelphia
45. Bufflehead - Bucephala Albeola
46. Gadwall - Mareca Strepera
47. Canada Goose - Branta Canadensis
48. Cackling Goose - Branta Hutchinsii
49. Ring-necked Pheasant - Phasianus Colchicus
50. Dark-eyed Junco - Junco Hyemalis
51. Red-necked Grebe - Podiceps Grisegena
52. Rusty Blackbird - Euphagus Carolinus
53. Greater White-fronted Goose - Anser Albifrons
54. Snow Goose - Anser Caerulescens
55. Glaucous Gull - Larus Hyperboreus
56. Lapland Longspur - Calcarius Lapponicus
57. Yellow-rumped Warbler - Setophaga Coronata
58. Orange-crowned Warbler - Leiothlypis Celata
59. Red-tailed Hawk - Buteo Jamaicensis
60. Savannah Sparrow - Passerculus Sandwichensis
** Wild Turkey - Meleagris Gallopavo
61. Tundra Swan - Cygnus Columbianus
62. Swainson's Thrush - Catharus Ustulatus
63. Northern Shoveler - Spatula Clypeata
64. Semipalmated Sandpiper - Calidris Pusilla
65. Red-necked Phalarope - Phalaropus Lobatus
66. Pacific Loon - Gavia Pacifica
67. Arctic Tern - Sterna Paradisaea
68. Parasitic Jaeger - Stercorarius Parasiticus
69. King Eider - Somateria Spectabilis
70. Pine Siskin - Spinus Pinus
71. Varied Thrush - Ixoreus Naevius
72. Pine Grosbeak - Pincola Enucleator
73. Belted Kingfisher - Megaceryle Alcyon
74. Arctic Warbler - Phylloscopus Borealis
75. Violet-green Swallow - Tachycineta Thalassina
76. American Pipit - Anthus Rubescens
77. Peregrine Falcon - Falco Peregrinus
78. Golden Eagle Aquila Chrysaetos
79. Pectoral Sandpiper - Calidris Melanotos
80. Long-tailed Jaeger - Sterocorarius Longicaudus
81. Red-throated Loon - Gavia Stellata
82. Semipalmated Plover - Charadruis Semipalmatus
83. Black Guillemot - Cepphus Grylle
84. Brant - Branta Bernicla
85. Merlin - Falco Cloumbarius
86. Spurce Grouse - Canachites Canadensis
87. Common Eider - Sometria Mollissima
Mammals-
1. Singing Vole - Microtus Miurus
2. Canadian Lemming - Lemmus Trimucronatus
3. Northern Red-backed Vole - Myodes Rutilus
4. Northern American Porcupine - Erethizon Dorastum
5. Arctic Ground Squirrel - Urocitellus Parryii
6. American Red Squirrel - Tamiasciurus Hudsonicus
7. Snowshoe Hare - Lepus Americanus
8. Feral Rabbit - Oryctolagus Cuniculus Domesticus
9. Little Brown Bat - Myotis Lucifugus
10. Ermine - Mustela Erminea
11. Sea Otter - Enhydra Lutris
12. Harbor Seal - Phoca Vitulina
13. Steller Sea Lion - Eumetopias Jubatus
14. Arctic Fox - Vulpes Lagopus
15. Red Fox - Vulpes Vulpes
16. American Black Bear - Ursus Americanus
17. Brown Bear - Ursus Arctos
18. Polar Bear - Ursus Maritimus
19. Moose - Alces Alces
20. Caribou - Rangifer Tarandus
21. Muskox - Ovibous Moschatus
22. Mountain Goat - Oreamnos Americanus
23. Dall Sheep - Ovis Dalli
**The "Wild Turkeys" were feral domestics (even if their coloring and behaviors are very natural). For a few years I've heard stories of Turkeys in the Lazy Mountain and the Springer Loop areas of Palmer, Alaska. The birds are also present along the Turnagain Arm at seal-level, although I have never seen them. This year I managed to spot and photograph a flock in the Springer Loop area of Palmer. They are mainly found on private land, but appear to be breeding and lasting through the winters (which in Palmer...are not much worse than what the birds might experience their northernmost ranges in the Lower 48 or Canada. Birds on public land usually won't make it through the season during which hunters are targeting hares and upland game birds.
The Ring-necked Pheasant was part of a population established at sea-level along the north shore of Kachemak Bay. The Golden Eagle was the most exciting sighting this year for me. The Pacific Wrens, were my favorite sighting, as I spotted them roosting in a cabin along Beluga Slough in Homer, Alaska.