Weather has properly turned towards spring in the last two weeks, and as a result migration is on full throttle. Most of the migrants that should be here have now arrived, and the butterflies are out as well. Took long enough!
Mammals:
7. Gray Fox (
Urocyon cinereoargenteus)
8. Big Brown Bat (
Eptesicus fuscus)
Birds:
91. Common Yellowthroat (
Geothlypis trichas)
92. Northern Pintail (
Anas acuta)
93. Merlin (
Falco columbarius)
94. Bullock’s Oriole (
Icterus bullocki)
95. Western Kingbird (
Tyrannus verticalis)
96. Hammond’s Flycatcher (
Empidonax hammondi)
97. Hooded Oriole (
Icterus cucullatus)
98. Rufous Hummingbird (
Selasphorus rufus)
99. Black-headed Grosbeak (
Pheucticus melanocephalus)
100. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (
Polioptila caerulea)
101. Wilson’s Warbler (
Cardellina pusilla)
102. Greater Yellowlegs (
Tringa melanoleuca)
103. Cassin's Vireo (
Vireo cassini)
104. MacGillivray’s Warbler (
Geothlypis tolmiei)
105. Black-throated Gray Warbler (
Setophaga nigrescens)
106. Willet (
Tringa semipalmata)
Fish:
1. Largemouth Bass (
Micropterus salmoides)
--. Western Mosquitofish (
Gambusia affinis) - unclear whether a established or routinely stocked population
Invertebrates:
8. Pipevine Swallowtail (
Battus philenor)
9. European Paper Wasp (
Polistes dominula)
--. Blue spp (
Celastrina spp) - didn't get a good enough look to try and identify it.
--. Crane Fly spp - thought it would be more straightforward than it turned out.
8-106-5-1-1-9