Georgia
Foxborough MA
Robert A & Georgia H Parker wrote:
> Sort of the same here south of Boston. No chickadees all summer, and
> they are our state (Massachusetts) bird! We have a lot of goldfinch and
> house finch, and titmouse and nuthatch appear daily, but nothing like
> what we saw at this time last year.....now and then a passing flock of
> grackles.....and the resident cardinals and bluejays, but that's it. Now
> if we could CHOOSE what would be missing, we would vote for the mourning
> doves!
Not here! I have only six mourning doves at the most to visit my feeders. Now
if anybody needs house sparrows, well, I have plenty to spare! I have not had
any starlings this summer. Which is ok. I did see a couple of them the other
day, so I guess they are coming back home to roost.
Sharon
North Central Arkansas
Birds frequently disappear from yards/feeders when natural food is
plentiful, which it is at this time of year if weather conditions have
been reasonable. Also, birds are migrating now, so the ones you had this
summer may have moved on without being replaced by others yet. Some
species that are present year-round are partial migrants, where the
individuals you see in the summer leave and other individuals from
further north replace them during the colder parts of the yer. West Nile
virus apparently does not actually kill most of the birds it infects, so
even if it is in your area, it is probably not responsible for the lack of
birds. Crows are particularly susceptable and die more often than most
other species, which is why the people testing for West Nile in some areas
want dead crows.
--
Katrina
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