Winter in Tucson is kind of magical for birders. Birds show up that would not have a chance at surviving year-round, or reproducing, here. But many parks and other nooks and crannies of habitat have enough resources for them in winter. It's warm enough that there is some insect life through the winter, and pockets of habitat have seeds and fruits left over from summer and fall.
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The part of Himmel Park hosting the Harris's sparrow |
At the beginning I said I wasn't necessarily out to chase rarities during this year of birding in Tucson. I would write about what an average birder could see in a year in Tucson. But I
have seen some unusual birds.
For example, I wrote about some Cassin's kingbirds in another post. And on the very first day of the year I went to Himmel Park to look for a Harris's sparrow. It was first seen December 29 by Scott Olmstead--his photos of it can be seen with his
eBird checklist. I found it in relatively short order. Harris's sparrow is a casual transient and winter visitor here.
Scott found this bird, he later told me, because he wanted to be out birding a lot. But his job didn't allow him to go on a lot of long trips. He was finding that he was seeing marvelous diversity of birds in locales within the urban area. He said Rio Vista Natural Resource Park was one of them. Indeed, according to eBird 25 species have been seen there so far in 2014--in just three weeks. Many of these species at Rio Vista were seen by Scott. They include a peregrine falcon and a somewhat rare winter broad-billed hummingbird. Some broad-billed hummingbird spend the winter in the vicinity of hummingbird feeders.
It was on a morning Scott had decided to try another spot--the relatively habitat-poor Himmel Park--that he found the Harris's sparrow. It would feed on the ground, sometimes with a white-crowned sparrow and sometimes with house sparrows, and then retreat into an oleander hedge (seen in the photo above).
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Broad-billed hummingbird, Tucson Audubon front yard January 24, 2014 |
I too saw a broad-billed hummingbird this winter. It has been hanging out in the front yard of the Tucson Audubon Society Offices and Nature Shop. There are feeders!
I have also seen a Lewis's woodpecker that was found in December in Reid Park. The are rare here in winter. And I have seen the black-and-white warbler that was found at Sweetwater Wetlands.
So far I have seen 70 species of birds in the greater Tucson area, and 21 species in my neighborhood.
By the way, you can see the Tucson locations I write about by going to eBird.org, clicking on "Explore Data" and using the "Hotspot Explorer." Put the name of the birding location in the box and hit enter! I will try always to use the name of the location that is used in eBird.
1 Gadwall - Anas strepera
2 American Wigeon - Anas
americana
3 Mallard - Anas platyrhynchos
4 Cinnamon Teal - Anas cyanoptera
5 Northern Shoveler - Anas
clypeata
6 Northern Pintail - Anas acuta
7 Green-winged Teal - Anas crecca
8 Canvasback - Aythya valisineria
9 Ring-necked Duck - Aythya
collaris
10 Common Merganser - Mergus
merganser
11 Ruddy Duck - Oxyura jamaicensis
12 Gambel's Quail - Callipepla
gambelii
13 Pied-billed Grebe - Podilymbus
podiceps
14 Neotropic Cormorant -
Phalacrocorax brasilianus
15 Great Egret - Ardea alba
16 Black-crowned Night-Heron -
Nycticorax nycticorax
17 Northern Harrier - Circus
cyaneus
18 Cooper's Hawk - Accipiter
cooperii
19 Red-tailed Hawk - Buteo
jamaicensis
20 American Coot - Fulica
americana
21 Black-necked Stilt - Himantopus
mexicanus
22 Spotted Sandpiper - Actitis
macularius
23 Rock Pigeon - Columba livia
24 Eurasian Collared-Dove -
Streptopelia decaocto
25 White-winged Dove - Zenaida
asiatica
26 Mourning Dove - Zenaida
macroura
27 Greater Roadrunner - Geococcyx
californianus
28 Great Horned Owl - Bubo
virginianus
29 Anna's Hummingbird - Calypte
anna
30 Costa's Hummingbird - Calypte
costae
31 Broad-billed Hummingbird -
Cynanthus latirostris
32 Belted Kingfisher - Megaceryle
alcyon
33 Lewis's Woodpecker - Melanerpes
lewis
34 Gila Woodpecker - Melanerpes
uropygialis
35 Ladder-backed Woodpecker -
Picoides scalaris
36 Northern Flicker - Colaptes
auratus
37 American Kestrel - Falco
sparverius
38 Prairie Falcon - Falco
mexicanus
39 Black Phoebe - Sayornis
nigricans
40 Say's Phoebe - Sayornis saya
41 Vermilion Flycatcher -
Pyrocephalus rubinus
42 Cassin's Kingbird - Tyrannus
vociferans
43 Plumbeous Vireo - Vireo
plumbeus
44 Common Raven - Corvus corax
45 Verdin - Auriparus flaviceps
46 Rock Wren - Salpinctes
obsoletus
47 Marsh Wren - Cistothorus
palustris
48 Cactus Wren - Campylorhynchus
brunneicapillus
49 Black-tailed Gnatcatcher -
Polioptila melanura
50 Ruby-crowned Kinglet - Regulus
calendula
51 Western Bluebird - Sialia
mexicana
52 Curve-billed Thrasher -
Toxostoma curvirostre
53 Northern Mockingbird - Mimus
polyglottos
54 European Starling - Sturnus
vulgaris
55 Phainopepla - Phainopepla
nitens
56 Black-and-white Warbler -
Mniotilta varia
57 Orange-crowned Warbler -
Oreothlypis celata
58 Yellow-rumped Warbler -
Setophaga coronata
59 Wilson's Warbler - Cardellina
pusilla
60 Abert's Towhee - Melozone
aberti
61 Chipping Sparrow - Spizella
passerina
62 Lincoln's Sparrow - Melospiza
lincolnii
63 Harris's Sparrow - Zonotrichia
querula
64 White-crowned Sparrow -
Zonotrichia leucophrys
65 Northern Cardinal - Cardinalis
cardinalis
66 Western Meadowlark - Sturnella
neglecta
67 Great-tailed Grackle -
Quiscalus mexicanus
68 House Finch - Haemorhous
mexicanus
69 Lesser Goldfinch - Spinus
psaltria
70 House Sparrow - Passer
domesticus