Past couple days have been very rainy in Alabama, but I did manage to make a trip out to Wood Duck Preserve, which I visited last fall and saw a host of wood warbler species. With it being a cool gray morning, I was mainly visiting to finally add some more waterfowl to my list this year (the only species I had seen so far was Canadian Geese, unsurprisingly). Anything else would have been a bonus.
To my surprise, I was able to add not just 7 birds to my count, but 3 lifers! On the lake was a large flock of Bufflehead and, nearby, a flock of Ring-Necked Ducks. Using my binoculars, I noticed that two of the male Ring-Necks had much brighter white sides than the others, which were more of a light gray - not Ring-Necks at all, but Lesser Scaups. It is possible that there were more than those 2 males, but I didn't have my scope and identification of the females at such a distance would have been impossible. While I was in the blind, I heard a skulking in the reeds and out popped a Swamp Sparrow, another lifer for me. These birds aren't particularly rare in this area but they are very shy - any movement even in the blind sent it shooting back into the cattails. The final lifer bird was an Orange-Crowned Warbler I managed to call out in a dense thicket of brush. Not uncommon, but it can be an easy bird to miss with its olive-gray colors.
The other goal while I was there was to find some reptiles or amphibians. I heard plenty of frogs but the vegetation was too thick for me to get to where they were. I did start turning over logs and stumps, which, in the south, may not be the smartest thing with our timber rattlers and copperheads - however, I did manage to find two Northern Slimy Salamanders, my first amphibians for the year! I'm hoping that this week in Birmingham we'll get some rain and warmer temperatures so I can try and find some migrating Spotted Salamanders. Other neat finds from this trip were the first swallows (Northern Rough-Winged) and butterflies (Spring Azure) of the year.
Birds:
45. Wood Duck (Aix sponsa) – 3/02/24
46. Ring-Necked Duck (Aythya collaris) – 3/02/24
47. Lesser Scaup (Aythya affinis) – 3/02/24
48. Bufflehead (Bucephala albeola) – 3/02/24
49. Northern Rough-Winged Swallow (Stelgidopteryx serripennis) – 3/02/24
50. Swamp Sparrow (Melospiza georgiana) – 3/02/24
51. Orange-Crowned Warbler (Leiothlypis celata) – 3/02/24
Amphibians:
1. Northern Slimy Salamander (Plethodon glutinosus) – 3/02/24
Invertebrates:
7. Marsh Crane Fly (Tipula oleracea) – 2/18/24
8. Eastern Carpenter Bee (Xylocopa virginica) – 2/25/24
9. American Cockroach (Periplaneta americana) – 2/27/24
10. Odorous House Ant (Tapinoma sessile) – 2/28/24
11. Common Earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris) – 3/01/24
12. Common Eastern Bumblebee (Bombus impatiens) – 3/02/24
13. Common Woodlouse (Armadillidium vulgare) – 3/02/24
14. Spring Azure (Celastrina ladon) – 3/02/24
Note: For any American Zoochatters out there on this thread - on the subject of turtles. For anyone who counts reptiles, how do you identify freshwater turtles? More often than not it's just their head poking out of the water or them laying half-submerged on a log - with some turtles (Softshell, snapping) this is easy enough, but what about sliders/cooters/painted turtles? Is it a matter of eyeballing it, or are there clear distinguishing features for the different species?