Tag Archives | Lassen Volcanic National Park

Spotted Sandpipers Dance to Their Own Tune

Spotted Sandpiper

If you stroll along the river much this winter you’ll likely see a brown bird the size of a handspan doing the same thing.  But you might notice that, unlike you, it is busy poking about the shoreline for insects and crustaceans, and its hind end bobs up and down almost incessantly. The bird may stop bobbing to fly skittering away from you, low over the water’s surface, showing white wing-stripes through its gray-brown topside.  This bouncing bird is the spotted sandpiper.

Now don’t expect the spotted sandpiper to have spots this time of year.  Spots are a dress-up item for the breeding season, dark dots boldly decking the bird’s white breast and belly, and their brown backsides, too.  For now, though, they live their lives plainly–unadorned brown and white, always over or along water, and with just their tail-bobbing to provide some flair.

Spring, however, brings more than spots to these little shorebirds.  They are one of the handful of species who break the breeding pattern common to birds and large fauna in general.

Most sandpipers breed in the Far North, where the twenty-four hour sun spurs explosive growth of plants and lichens, and the hordes of insects that feed on them.  Those insects are food for millions of birds, and crucial to their efforts to feed their young.  That environment is rich, but only briefly so.  Winter encroaches at it from both ends.  To nest there, sandpipers have evolved young who develop fast.  They lay large eggs; the chicks emerge precocial, ready to run and feed themselves.  To guide and protect their chicks through their brief, busy childhood, parents bond for at least a season, and sometimes for multiple seasons.

But spotted sandpipers, those bobbing birds along our riverbank, have spread their nesting grounds to include not just the Far North but rivers, mountain lakes and meadows, flats and shorelines throughout Canada and most of the US.  They are the most widespread sandpiper on the continent.  This gives them a longer nesting season than their Arctic cousins.  But the females still lay those large precocial eggs, each egg 20% of its mother’s weight.  They don’t produce more than four for a single nest; the physical toll seems to be too high.

Spotted Sandpiper Nest with Eggs

To take advantage of the longer warm season, perhaps the birds could raise two broods, as many songbirds do. But nature finds many ways to solve life’s puzzles.  Spotted sandpipers maximize their reproduction by having the females focus on egg-laying and the males focus on child-rearing.

At breeding season, female spotted sandpipers establish breeding territories which they vigorously defend from other females and where they court up to four males with elaborate swooping displays and strutting.  Over a 6-7 week breeding season, they lay an average of eight eggs but as many as twenty, with never more than four in a nest.  The total number of eggs seems to be determined by the availability of food and males.  For their part, the males separately tend and protect, even from one another, their individual nests and hatchlings.

Biological changes have evolved to support this reproductive process.  At breeding season, females undergo a sevenfold increase in their testosterone, promoting their active courting and territory defense.  Males produce high levels of prolactin, a hormone that promotes parental care-giving.

While nature has pioneered this reproductive technique, nature does not guarantee the success of any particular strategy.  Like many species, spotted sandpipers, despite being widespread, have declined over 50% in the last fifty years.  What comes next for them remains unknown.

Another unknown is the function of sandpiper tail-bobbing.  Guesses range from the mildly plausible – say, aiding in balancing on rough terrain – to the absurd – say, pumping body oils over their feathers to improve waterproofing.  That latter reckoning is imaginative, but completely lacks physiological evidence.  Since convincing explanations still elude us, the hypothesizing is wide open.  Have at it!

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Lassen Volcanic National Park Campout

Good news! Beginning Friday, May 29th, Lassen Volcanic National Park will increase access with the opening of the 30-mile park highway, Butte Lake road, Warner Valley road, and all hiking trails (except Bumpass Hell). NOTE: When recreating, the public should follow California State guidance, practice Leave No Trace principles, avoid crowding, and avoid high-risk outdoor activities. We advise bringing a face covering on the odd chance you may find yourself in an area where social distancing is not possible. Learn more about how you can recreate responsibly at Lassen Volcanic at go.nps.gov/lavo/RR.

We have enjoyed the birding and camping at the Lost Creek Group Campground for several years, so we are scheduling this event again this year in conjunction with Altacal Audubon. Group Camp sites #5 and #6 have been reserved for the nights of Friday, June 26 and Saturday, June 27. We are inviting the Redwood Region, Peregrine, Mendocino, Plumas and Redbud Chapters to join us.

Species expected include Osprey, Pileated Woodpecker, White-headed Woodpecker, Black-backed Woodpecker, Williamson’s Sapsucker, Vaux’s Swift, Common Nighthawk, Bufflehead, Gray Jay, Brown Creeper, American Dipper, Mountain Bluebird, Yellow Warbler, Western Tanager and Cassin’s Finch.
We will bird Manzanita Lake and vicinity on Saturday morning. The rest of the itinerary is open and will depend on the interests of the participants. Folks can either camp at Lost Creek or drive up for either or both Saturday and Sunday. Campers can arrive at the campsite at a time of their choosing on Friday after 1pm. Saturday day trippers should meet at the Loomis Museum parking lot at Manzanita Lake at 8:00 am. Day trippers for Sunday, June 27th, will meet at the campsite at 8:30 am.

Lost Creek has primitive facilities; pit toilets and no electricity. Potable water is available. During this time of Covid-19 it is important to follow all CDC guidance, including social distancing. This would include no carpooling other than with those in your own household.

Note: Lassen Park Entrance Fees

Stay 6 feet away from others (“social distancing”) and take other steps to prevent COVID-19

If a park, beach, or recreational facility is open for public use, visiting is okay as long as you practice social distancing and everyday steps such as washing hands often and covering coughs and sneezes. Follow these actions when visiting a park, beach, or recreational facility:

  • Stay at least six feet from others at all times. This might make some open areas, trails, and paths better to use. Do not go into a crowded area.
  • Avoid gathering with others outside of your household.
  • Wash hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, especially after going to the bathroom, before eating, and after blowing your nose, coughing, or sneezing.
  • Bring hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol to use if soap and water are not available.

Contact Larry Jordan, 949-5266 or email Webmaster@WintuAudubon.org for other particulars.

Here is a map to the Lost Creek Group Campground: https://bit.ly/2XDom6t

Details and updates on park operations will continue to be posted on their website at nps.gov/lavo/planyourvisit/conditions.htm

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Aw, nuts! -A Pine Forest and a Bird

Clark's Nutcracker

Clark’s Nutcracker photo courtesy David Bogener

When Thomas Jefferson commissioned Lewis and Clark to explore the West, the president, a man with informed intelligence and curiosity, hoped the explorers might find new animals in that wild land. Of course they did not find the mastodon, mammoth, or “large lion-like creature” that Jefferson imagined from the new science of fossil research. But they did find numerous animals previously unknown to science, including grizzly bears, mountain goats, pronghorn antelopes, prairie dogs, and two bird species that now bear the explorers’ names.

Both of those birds live in our area, but to see one of them we’re best to hustle to the mountains now, before the snow flies and bars our way.

White Pine Lassen Volcanic National Park

Clark’s nutcrackers live near timberline, and even their winter retreat downslope usually keeps them well above snowline. They’ve got the chops for that wintry life.

These birds are seed-eaters. Throughout the summer and fall they gather high-calorie pine nuts, tens of thousands of them, that they hide hither and yon over their miles of range. The energy-loaded seeds allow nutcrackers to survive winter conditions that send other birds to Baja.

But of course they can’t just choose to live on pine nuts at timberline. They have to have the right adaptations.

Clark's Nutcracker

Let’s start with the bill. When William Clark first described the bird in 1805 he noted its robust bill and called it a “Bird of the woodpecker kind.” But the nutcracker is actually a corvid, closely related to jays and crows, not a woodpecker. Its powerful bill is used not for pounding through wood but for hacking into pine cones and the nuts inside them.

After extracting the seeds, the nutcrackers need to hide them for later consumption. Like ground squirrels, they have pouches in their mouths to hold the seeds for transport. Ground squirrels’ pouches are in their cheeks. Nutcrackers’ are under their tongues. They tuck scores of pine nuts into this pouch and then hide them over many square miles across their mountain homes.

Of course, if they are going to make a living by hiding seeds, the birds have to be able to find them. Nutcrackers routinely cache 30,000 pine nuts a year. They are able to find the vast majority of them, with their memory only starting to fail after six or seven months–that is, after winter is past and spring begins to bring a new supply of food to their homes.

Clark's Nutcracker Feeding Young

Clark’s Nutcracker Adult Feeding Young

Their favorite nut, a high-nutrition preference they share with grizzly bears, comes from tree-line whitebark pines. These pine nuts have a higher concentration of calories than chocolate. With such a rich supply of energy, nutcrackers are able to give their young a head start on life. Rather than waiting for spring thaws to bring green shoots and the food source of buzzing bugs, nutcrackers begin to nest in the heart of winter, while mountain storms still howl. The energy locked into pine nuts keeps them going strong. But that energy must be passed on to the young. In most corvids, only the female tends the nest. But to successfully warm their eggs in the chill mountain world, male nutcrackers also help. They develop what typically only females do– a brood patch, an unfeathered area on their breast, that allows their warm skin to nestle right against their precious eggs. Once the eggs hatch, the young are fed the pine nuts directly.

Clark's Nutcracker Juvenile

Clark’s Nutcracker Juvenile

Of course the effect of nutcrackers’ success at high-altitude living doesn’t stop at the tips of their bills or their black and white tails. Whitebark pines have co-evolved with the birds and become highly dependent on them for seed dispersal. Unlike many common pine seeds, whitebark nuts don’t grow “wings” to help spread them on the wind. They count on nutcracker wings, and it is estimated that nearly all tree-line whitebark pines are planted by nutcrackers.

Unfortunately, whitebark pines are declining throughout the west. Their cones are typically opened only by nutcrackers, squirrels, and fire, so fire suppression has inhibited their reproduction. Also, warmer temperatures are spreading pinebark beetles, which are turning expanses of pine forests into matchsticks–a rather unpleasant solution to overzealous fire suppression. Most powerfully for the whitebark pines, blister rust, a fungus imported from Europe, is killing five-needled pines on a massive scale.

Fortunately, we are successfully addressing some attacks on this subalpine ecosystem. Some trees show blister rust resistance, and foresters are working to get their seeds dispersed. In Germany, foresters are putting out acorn buckets for jays to plant, and similar efforts are contemplated for whitebark pines and nutcrackers. So far the nutcrackers in most of our mountains are maintaining their populations despite the whitebark pine decline, so they may well be of service in sustaining the high-elevation ecosystems.

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Wintu Audubon Outing to Lassen Volcanic National Park

Fall birds at Manzanita Lake!  Lassen Park Biologist Mike Magnuson will lead a walk around Manzanita Lake, where we can expect nutcrackers, woodpeckers, and always a surprise from a  variety of gleaners, raptors, and finches. Possibilities include Evening Grosbeak, Cassin’s Finch and Golden-crowned Kinglet! Pack a lunch and meet at Kutras Park at 7am to carpool, or meet Mike at the Loomis Museum parking lot at 8am.

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Lassen Volcanic National Park Campout

We have enjoyed the birding and camping at the Lost Creek Group Campground for several years, so we are scheduling this event again this year in conjunction with Altacal Audubon. Group Camp site #5 has been reserved for the nights of Friday, July 26 and Saturday, July 27. We are inviting the Redwood Region, Peregrine, Mendocino, Plumas and Redbud Chapters to join us.

Species expected include Osprey, Pileated Woodpecker, White-headed Woodpecker, Black-backed Woodpecker, Williamson’s Sapsucker, Vaux’s Swift, Common Nighthawk, Bufflehead, Gray Jay, Brown Creeper, American Dipper, Mountain Bluebird, Yellow Warbler, Western Tanager and Cassin’s Finch.

We will bird Manzanita Lake and vicinity on Saturday morning. The rest of the itinerary is open and will depend on the interests of the participants. Folks can either camp at Lost Creek or drive up for either or both Saturday and Sunday. Campers can arrive at the campsite at a time of their choosing on Friday after 1pm. Saturday day trippers should meet at the Kutra’s Park meeting place at 8:00 am Saturday morning to car pool. Day trippers for Sunday, July 28, will meet at the campsite at 9:00 am.

Lost Creek has primitive facilities; pit toilets and no electricity. Potable water is available. Contact Larry Jordan, 949-5266 or email Webmaster@WintuAudubon.org for other particulars.

Here is a map to the Lost Creek Group Campground: https://www.google.com/maps/place/Lost+Creek+Group+Campground/@40.5590624,-121.5242673,15.8z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x54cd4fb1f550b4fd:0x8cc25a97e9853917!8m2!3d40.5619139!4d-121.5176124

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