Small flowers, big diversity

August 8, 2013

Feay's prairie clover, Dalea feayi

Feay’s prairie clover, Dalea feayi

I like plant ecologists and botanists.  Some of my best friends over the years have leaned towards the botanical.  They have my sympathy, and my respect.  There are just too many plants to keep track of.  I’ve spent 30+ years in the terrestrial habitats typical of central and north Florida, and I still see plant species all the time about which I am totally clueless.  That contrasts sharply with  birds.  I’m not a twitcher or big lister; I don’t even know what my life list totals.  Not even in the ballpark, really.  I haven’t taken the time to tally them up in over a decade.   Still, I’m fairly confident that any bird I might ever encounter in Florida will be familiar to me somewhat, at least at a superficial level.  Not saying that I would be able to identify any bird correctly,  but at least I’d have a pretty good idea of what it was.  Even if I were to someday encounter something as bizarre as the Bosque Del Apache NWR Rufous-necked wood rail seen a few weeks back in New Mexico, I would at least recognize it as a rail.

Feay's prairie clover, Dalea feayi

Feay’s prairie clover, Dalea feayi

With plants though, I see stuff that mystifies me on a regular basis.  This happened a couple of weeks ago when I was birding in Juniper Prairie Wilderness and noticed an abundant roadside plant with profuse pink pom-pom clusters of flowers,  scattered all along the roadsides.   Absolutely could not miss seeing it.  But I had no clue what it was.  No recollection of ever seeing it before, which doesn’t necessarily mean that I hadn’t seen it before.   But it’s always something of a shock when this happens in a habitat or area I visit fairly frequently.  How could I have not noticed this incredibly apparent plant before?

Then comes the ID dance of uncertainty.  I learned plant taxonomy from Radford, Bell and Ahles’ classic  book,  Manual of the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas, so I know how to use a dichotomous key.   But I’ll do nearly anything to avoid it.  These days, the more appropriate manual for me is Wunderlin’s Guide to the Vascular Plants of Central Florida, but I’m even more averse to using that book.  At least Radford, Bell and Ahles supplemented their ubiquitous and sometimes interminable keys and descriptions with clear, accurate line drawings of many of the plant species;  the Wunderlin flora is all keys and text descriptions.   Even if I follow a key to what I think might be a correct ID, there’s no picture there to confirm it.  I’m left flummoxed and uncertain.

Feay's prairie clover, Dalea feayi

Feay’s prairie clover, Dalea feayi

I’m an image-oriented dude.  Dichotomous keys are to be used only as an absolute last resort when I can’t match the plant to a clear, preferably color, photograph of the species I’m seeking to identify.   The sad fact is that there is not one image-based field guide to the flora of Florida that comes anywhere close to complete coverage.   Identifying a new plant is a multi-step process.   Check the field guides I have available, and if I’m really lucky, it will be there.  If not, the ISB (Institute for Systematic Botany) website, but that’s only useful if I have a guess or two about family or genus to begin refining the search.  If all else fails, I fall back on my consulting botanist.    I like botanists and plant ecologists.

Carpenter bee, Xylocopa virginica.   Probably.

Carpenter bee, Xylocopa virginica. Probably.

Dalea feayi is the roadside plant in question.  It took me a couple of weeks and a couple of visits to Juniper Prairie to finally figure it out.  Shameful, but true.  I am at best a marginal  field botanist.  Dalea feayi is a small but conspicuous plant in the family Fabaceae, the legumes.   My first impression, though, was that it was a composite (in the family Asteraceae), partly because of the tightly packed heads of small pink flowers, and partly because it is a mid-late summer bloomer.  The diversity of composites blooming in Florida increases in the fall, and many of the fall-flowering species are pink, lavender, or purple.   Think Garberia, Liatris, Carphephorus, Vernonia, and so on.  But in fact, Dalea feayi, or Feay’s prairie clover, is a legume, which I eventually figured out by following the tortuous path described above.

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris.   Perhaps either C.  plumipes or quadrimaculata.

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris. Perhaps either C. plumipes or quadrimaculata.

And what a cool legume it is.  Like many composites, which generally produce a concentration of relatively small flowers packed into a compact inflorescence, Dalea attracts a wide range of insect visitors.   Some pollinators, some probably not.   Not every insect that visits a particular flower species is an effective pollinator for that plant.   Pollinator/visitor diversity and abundance are strongly related to two characteristics of the flower – the length of the flower tube or dish (corolla), and the energetic rewards available to the insect visitors.  Flowers with long, tubular corollas exclude insects with short mouthparts, like many bees, and restrict access to those with long, tubular mouthparts, like butterflies.  The small, open individual  flowers on a Dalea inflorescence are accessible to most nectar-feeding insects.   And though the amount of nectar available per flower can be minuscule (a few 1000ths of a microliter,  in some composites, for example), the concentration of many minute, low-reward flowers in a small space means that foragers can exploit tens, hundreds, or in some cases thousands of individual flowers with very little movement.   Lots of small volumes of nectar, coupled with low energy costs while feeding, combine to make foraging at these flowers an energy-yielding process, even for relatively large insects with greater energy demands.  For many nectar-feeders, a burst of easily metabolized, energy-rich nutrients (sugar, mainly) is the main goal of the behavior.

A duskywing skipper in the genus Erynnis.

A duskywing skipper in the genus Erynnis.

A big-headed fly (Family Conopidae) in the genus Physocephalus or Physoconops.  Probably.

A big-headed fly (Family Conopidae) in the genus Physocephalus or Physoconops. Probably.

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris.   Perhaps either C.  plumipes or quadrimaculata.

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris. Perhaps either C. plumipes or quadrimaculata.

The visitors pictured here represent just a small proportion of the complete range of diversity I saw during just an hour or so of photographing a big patch of Dalea.  Not photographed were many (> a dozen?) species of small bees that comprised the majority of visitors to these flowers.  More accessible and enticing to me, though, was the big stuff.   Butterflies and big bees and wasps.  Of particular interest this morning were the zebra swallowtails, which were perhaps the mellowest zebras I’ve ever had the good fortune to photograph.  These swallowtails, in my experience, are relatively infrequent flower foragers, compared to other swallowtails especially.  And they are little butterfly rockets – they zip from one flower to another when feeding, never stop fluttering their wings, and  typically don’t spend very long in one place.  But the zebras at Dalea on this day were amazingly approachable, and persistent when foraging  at a single plant cluster.  To which I say, cool.

Zebra swallowtail, Eurytides marcellusw

Zebra swallowtail, Eurytides marcellus

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris.   Perhaps either C.  plumipes or quadrimaculata.

A scoliid wasp (Family Scoliidae) in the genus Campsomeris. Perhaps either C. plumipes or quadrimaculata.

The other visitors that got me equally excited were the big black and yellow  Campsomeris wasps, in the family Scoliidae.  These handsome, and intimidating, wasps have a fascinating life-history strategy – they provision their young with beetle larvae, especially scarabs.  That’s not so unusual – lots of wasp groups paralyze prey of some type (spiders, caterpillars) and provision their nests with the living larder.  The Campsomeris wasps  are especially attractive to me simply because they are so big and colorful.  I’m pretty easily amused by big, bright colorful things.

In Search of Woodpeckers

August 8, 2013

Before January of this year, I had only seen red-cockaded woodpeckers on a handful of occasions. Okeefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Appalachicola National Forest, Withlacoochee State Forest – all relatively brief, distant sightings, all over a decade ago.  The species had developed for me a kind of mystique – a notion that these birds were elusive, aloof and difficult to observe.  I had read of field trips organized by birding festivals in central Florida to show birders this species, and they usually involved being in the field before sunrise, stationing the group near a nest cluster where the clan was roosting in old nest cavities, to catch the birds emerging from their overnight shelter before they began their extensive wanderings for the day.  I’m not one who enjoys birding with groups – to me it is best enjoyed by myself or with one or two friends.  I had mostly given up the idea of seeing or photographing red-cockadeds as a realistic goal.

Young barred owl hunting alongside SR19 in Ocala National Forest.

Young barred owl hunting alongside SR19 in Ocala National Forest.

In January I visited the Riverside Island tract of Ocala National Forest for the first time, prompted by Bill Pranty’s description of the red-cockaded nesting population there in his essential book, A Birder’s Guide to Florida .  All of my misimpressions about these fascinating little woodpeckers were exploded that morning.  I’ve been back to that site three times since, and on each occasion have had crippling views of not just the birds, but have also been fortunate enough to watch at some length the antics of these high-spirited birds as they wend their way through the forest like a traveling circus.  They are like no other woodpecker I’ve seen.

Disturbed sandhills habitat, dominated by turkey oak (Quercus laevis).

Disturbed sandhills habitat, dominated by turkey oak (Quercus laevis).

Yesterday, my friend and naturalist extraordinaire John Serrao and I returned to Riverside Island, and once again were treated to the spectacle of red-cockaded woodpeckers.  As you travel north on Forest Road 11, you pass through several variants of sandhills, one of the favored habitats of RCWOs.  Some areas, recently planted with new longleaf pine after harvest in the fairly recent past, are like pine plantations anywhere – uniform, ordered and relatively uninteresting.  Others have few or no longleaf pines, and are dominated by scattered turkey oaks, some quite impressive.  The typical nesting habitat of red-cockaded woodpeckers though, is the more mature tracts of sandhills, featuring large longleaf pines with an open understory and ground cover comprising wiregrass and other herbaceous flora.  The red-cockaded nest cavity trees, which tend to occur in clusters, are marked by the forest service with bands of white paint at their base.   There are numerous such nest tree clusters visible from FR11 in the Riverside Island tract.  It is in those areas where I’ve seen the woodpeckers in the past.

Sandhills habitat with longleaf pines.

Sandhills habitat with longleaf pines.

Thursday was one of those mornings that challenged my assertion that summer birding in Florida tends to be relatively boring; the summer doldrums strike birders everywhere, but are particularly noticeable in Florida with its relatively low breeding bird diversity.   On our drive north on SR19, we passed a young barred owl hunting the roadside from a large Forest Service sign cautioning hunters to be careful with firearms and fire.  This patient bird didn’t mind a couple of crazed photographers on the opposite side of the road capturing photons at a frantic pace, nor the big logging trucks that regularly roared by like locomotives.    He even dropped to the ground once while we were watching in an unsuccessful stoop, but returned to a new perch at the forest’s edge to resume his hunt.  He was still there when we drove off.  Traveling up FR11, once we had left the scrub habitat and passed into the turkey oak savannah, we saw in relatively short order a very tolerant red-tailed hawk juvie hunting from a skeletal turkey oak snag, a less congenial American kestrel warping away from us, and WOODPECKERS.  We began seeing red-headed woodpeckers regularly, and at one point stopped to photograph one that had flown into a picturesque pine snag right by the road.   Another red-head was nearby, calling back and forth with our target bird.

Red-headed woodpecker

Red-headed woodpecker

Quarrelsome red-headed woodpeckers

Quarrelsome red-headed woodpeckers

It was while we were working the red-heads that we first heard the traveling circus.  Red-cockaded woodpeckers, at least on all of the occasions I’ve seen them at Riverside, are incredibly vocal birds when they are foraging as a clan.  We heard the sputters and twitters of the clan in the distance, well before we saw them.    They headed in our direction, and in short order we were amidst a flock of at least 6 birds that maintained their nearly constant vocalizations and frenetic activity for the 15 minutes or so they stayed in the area.   The sociality of these birds is completely unlike any other woodpecker I’ve seen.  I commonly see other species traveling in pairs,  including flickers, pileateds, red-bellieds and downys.   Around my feeders at home, I sometimes get family groups of red-bellieds visiting early in the summer, with at times 2 or 3 fledglings following and harassing the parents.  In the red-bellieds, however, the patience of the parents for their fitness units is limited.  After a relatively brief time, the interaction between parents and offspring turns from nurturing to antagonism, with the adults attempting, with considerable resistance from the kids, to drive their offspring away.

Red-cockaded woodpecker

Red-cockaded woodpecker

Red-cockaded woodpecker

Red-cockaded woodpecker

Not so with the red-cockadeds.  They define family values.  The clan travels as an organized unit, moving in a coordinated fashion with nearly constant vocal signaling among clan members.  Especially curious to me is their wing-flash behavior.   Fairly frequently, individuals who have just landed will hold their wings extended directly above their back for just a split-second.  Clearly this is a signal or form of communication between flock members, but I have no idea what exactly is being communicated.  Nonetheless, it is a distinctive and delightful display.

Part of the clan.

Part of the clan.

Red-cockaded woodpeckers

Red-cockaded woodpeckers

The wing flash.

The wing flash.

While we were watching the red-cockaded clan, they were joined in the immediate area by a pileated woodpecker and a pair of downy woodpeckers.   If we could have added a flicker and a hairy woodpecker or two, we would have run the table on Florida’s breeding woodpeckers from one spot.  Something to hope for, but it seems unlikely.  While flickers are local and not always easily found, they are widespread, and common around the Riverside area.  Hairy woodpeckers, however, have become my remaining Florida picid nemesis.  I can’t find those birds to save my soul.

Ratty birds

August 7, 2013

Two things strike me about this time every year when I go out to look at or photograph birds.  The first is that this is the worst time of year to watch birds in Florida.  Diversity is at the low point in its annual cycle, though that is changing every day as new migrants move into the state.  The second is that many passerines look pretty miserable at this time of year.

Carolina wren

Carolina wren

The reason for the first phenomenon, the low diversity of breeding birds in Florida, is a bit of a mystery.   The reason for the second is a little clearer.  Many birds are in the midst of their post-nuptial molt, in which they replace the plumage they wore for their reproductive activities for a new set of feathers that will last them until next year’s breeding season.  While absolutely necessary, molt isn’t a pretty thing.

Molt is quite a complicated phenomenon.  Among different species there is tremendous diversity in the patterns and timing of molt, and the resulting plumages.  In some groups of birds, like gulls, it can take several years for an individual to acquire the definitive adult plumage.  Each of the immature plumages can differ subtly from the others, making identification a challenge.  Even in smaller birds with more accelerated life cycles, which may molt into their first alternate (breeding) plumage at a little less than one year of age, there are major differences in the timing of molt between species, and even between individuals of the same species.  Below, for example, is a Carolina wren I photographed today that was traveling with the molting individual above.

Carolina wren

Carolina wren

The wren above is likely a young bird, hatched earlier in the summer.  The gape, a bit of soft tissue  looking something like lips, is visible at the base of the bill.  The color of the breast is a little paler than the adult pictured above as well.  While this juvenile wren is showing a smidgen of dishevelment, to my eye it is a vast improvement over the slovenly looking adult.  So individuals of the same species can be on different molt schedules.

Here are some pine warblers I photographed today that look like they are just coming off of a three-day bender.  These are young-of-the-year birds that are just acquiring their first basic (adult non-breeding) plumage.

Pine warbler

Pine warbler

Immature pine warbler molting from its dull juvenal plumage into its first adult plumage.

Immature pine warbler molting from its dull juvenal plumage into its first adult plumage.

Pine warbler

Pine warbler

Not all passerine species are looking so disreputable, though.  Here’s a red-eyed vireo photographed this morning, followed by a prairie warbler from a few days ago.

Red-eyed vireo

Red-eyed vireo

Prairie warbler

Prairie warbler

Admit it – those are some damned dapper little birds.  Why the difference?  Both of these species are neotropical migrants.  They leave the temperate latitudes in the fall to travel to the tropics (though a few prairie warblers will spend the winter in Florida).  Most migrants complete their post-nuptial molt before they begin their long-distance migration.  The extraordinary migratory flights of these birds demand a fresh plumage and all the aerodynamic advantages afforded by those new feathers.

Carolina wren

Carolina wren

Carolina wrens and pine warblers, on the other hand, are permanent residents.  They breed and overwinter in the state.  In many resident species, individuals maintain the same home ranges throughout the year.  This allows them the luxury of a more extended period of molt.  Molting is an expensive process – it requires a lot of energy and protein to produce a new set of feathers.   Molting and migrating simultaneously just isn’t practical for birds that must journey thousands of miles.

 

Missing Migrants

August 3, 2013

Sunrise at Lake George Conservation Area near Seville, FL

Sunrise at Lake George Conservation Area near Seville, FL.

After the impressive numbers of migrant warblers at Juniper Prairie a few days ago, I optimistically went looking for more this morning at Lake George Conservation Area, just west of Seville.  As is often the case when dealing with migrant passerines in Florida, though, it’s hard to predict from one day to the next what will turn up.

I left home a little after 6 to be at a small wet prairie on Combie Road in time for sunrise, at 6:46.  I barely made it, flying up Aces Rd in the post-dawn twilight to get there in time.  Sunrises can be unpredictable, too.  Not enough clouds on the horizon or particulates/vapor in the air to make ithis one really colorful or dramatic.  Once the sun rose above the treeline, it was bright yellow and overpowering.

A small wet prairie among the flatwoods.  The yellow flowers in the foreground are Polygala rugellii.

A small wet prairie among the flatwoods. The yellow flowers in the foreground are Polygala rugellii.

Bachman's sparrow carrying  prey back to the nest.

Bachman’s sparrow carrying prey back to the nest.

Still it was worth getting up to be there.  While I was jockeying around trying to find the best vantage point from which to shoot the sunrise, a blue grosbeak was singing from the mixed habitat to the west.  A few minutes later, I heard a Bachman’s sparrow singing at the wet prairie on Combie Rd.  I spotted and watched the sparrow sitting in a small pine for several minutes, singing a very soft subsong; he was carrying both a wolf spider and a cricket in his bill, and was still carrying them when he flew off.

Young eastern towhee still sporting juvenal plumage.

Young eastern towhee still sporting juvenal plumage.

Birds were immensely less impressive on this day compared to Ocala National Forest a couple of days earlier.  Nearly all were resident breeding species.  A few prairie warblers were the only migrants I saw. Mostly it was a morning to enjoy the habitat, the flora, and the non-avian fauna. Pluchea foetida, for example, was an attractive composite that I’d never noticed before.

Pluchea foetida

Pluchea foetida

The most interesting part of Lake George Conservation Area this morning,though, was Silver Pond Road, one of many roads in the area I hadn’t explored before.  I followed it for a couple of miles until it started to get dodgy.  About a mile in it became the boundary between the conservation area to the west, and pasture and mixed habitat on private property to the east.  Mostly I saw the same resident species I had been seeing all morning, but I did find some red-headed woodpeckers.  It’s always a welcome pleasure to find new sites for red-headed woodpeckers, which seem to be on the increase in Volusia County.

Zebra swallowtail nectaring at Diodia teres (I think).

Zebra swallowtail nectaring at Diodia teres.

The other interesting sighting on Silver Pond Rd was one or two zebra swallowtails, very fresh, nectaring persistently on Diodia growing in the road margins. These seem like very small flowers for a relatively large lep like a swallowtail, but he (they?) kept going back to them. I was driving like an idiot, zipping up the road a piece trying to anticipate the next nectaring spot, then scrambling to get the camera on target before they flew on.  I was only semi-successful.

I saw one hiker on that road, the only human I saw in the entire morning.  And that’s not a bad thing.

 

Juniper Prairie Warblers

July 31, 2013

Prairie warbler.

Prairie warbler.

There is hardly a month of the year when some birds aren’t migrating or engaged in some kind of nomadic or post-breeding movement in Florida.   Almost as soon as the last of the transient spring migrants have left the state (bobolinks and some of the shorebirds come to mind) sometime in mid-May, the first of the southerly moving birds begin to appear.   Still, summer birding in Florida tends to be relatively low in diversity, and mostly restricted to early or late in the day when the birds are most active and the temperature and humidity are at least somewhat tolerable.   Particularly for passerine birds, my favorites, Florida is dramatically and perplexingly low in breeding species.  So it’s always a great joy to me when “fall” passerine migration begins in earnest in late July and early August.  For some species, like yellow warblers, the peak of migration comes well before true fall, as delimited by the autumnal equinox, begins.    But I don’t see yellow warblers that much unless I happen to be in the right kind of habitat.   American redstarts, waterthrushes, and black-and-white warblers are also likely to appear as part of the vanguard of fall migration.  But it is the prairie warblers that really say to me that migration has begun.  They can be abundant at times, and very broad in their choice of habitat.  I saw my first prairie warbler of the season in my backyard on July 30, and that prompted me to hit the field on the 31st to look for these lovely little birds and their compatriots.

Juniper Prairie Wilderness in the Ocala National Forest has become one of my favorite places to look for passerines in the last couple of years.  This huge tract (roughly 14,000 acres) is bounded on the south by SR40, on the east by SR19, on the north by FR (Forest Road) 46, and on the west by FR33; within that huge expanse there are no fire roads or other access for motorized vehicles.   Hiking trails crisscross the wilderness and its mosaic of habitats, which include huge expanses of scrub in a variety of seral stages, “islands” of sandhill habitat dominated by longleaf pine, and a confusing array of aquatic, semi-aquatic, and seasonal wetlands that form in the depressions and basins characteristic of areas influenced by Karst topography.  This is the landscape written about by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings in The Yearling; the area around Pat’s Island (one of the habitat islands of longleaf pine-dominated sandhills) was home to a small community of folks who farmed, hunted, and otherwise scratched a living from these often harsh habitats up until the 1930’s.

Extensive tract of oak scrub  in Juniper Prairie Wilderness.  New growth of Rusty Lyonia (Lyonia ferruginea) is very obvious right now.

Extensive tract of oak scrub in Juniper Prairie Wilderness. New growth of Rusty Lyonia (Lyonia ferruginea) is very obvious right now.

My birding in the wilderness is done almost entirely from the roads, though, since hiking trails through mostly soft sand are not particularly welcoming to my people.  In particular, FR46, which follows the northern boundary of the wilderness, is my favorite road for birding Juniper Prairie Wilderness.  In the approximately 5-mile stretch between SR19 and its intersection with FR33, it passes through a variety of types of scrub and some areas of open sandhills.  The older tracts of scrub, dominated by even-aged stands of sand pine, are typically lower in both bird and plant diversity than the more extensive areas of recently burned, harvested, or disturbed scrub, characterized by a rich variety of scrubby oaks and other sclerophyllous shrubby vegetation.

Juvenile Florida scrub jay surrounded by new growth of Rusty Lyonia (Lyonia ferruginea).

Juvenile Florida scrub jay surrounded by new growth of Rusty Lyonia (Lyonia ferruginea).

When you first enter the extensive tracts of Juniper Prairie scrub, a couple of miles west of FR46’s  intersection with SR19, the vastness of this low-stature prickly-looking habitat is stunning.  On first sight, it never struck me as a habitat that would harbor large numbers of birds.  This is the stage of scrub succession that is ideal for Florida scrub jay breeding, and to be sure the jays are here in big numbers.  It’s not uncommon to see and hear both scrub jays and blue jays very close to each other, though the blue jays tend to stick closer to the older tracts of scrub consisting mostly of sand pine.  Surprisingly, though, the density and diversity of mixed species flocks of smaller passerines in the oak scrub barrens can be astounding.  This is where I saw my only black-throated gray warbler several years ago, moving with a flock of more typical fall migrants.

Wednesday morning’s trip did not disappoint, though I found nothing as sensational as a black-throated gray warbler.  I came looking mainly for prairie warblers, and found them in numbers.   Nearly everywhere I stopped in the low oaky scrub habitat and looked, listened, or called for birds, I found them.  It wasn’t unusual to see 3-5 prairies traveling together as a group, often in the company of chickadees and titmice, the core members of many mixed-species flocks.  I didn’t keep count of precise numbers, but my guesstimate would be that I saw several dozen prairies.  Most were the more dully colored females or immatures; I don’t think I saw a single male showing full alternate (breeding) plumage, with the brilliant yellow underparts with prominent dark streaking and bold black semicircle under the eye.  Still, splendid little birds all.  And curious.

Inquisitive prairie warbler in scrub oak (with revolute leaf margins, CB!).

Inquisitive prairie warbler in scrub oak (with revolute leaf margins, CB!).

I regularly use playback of screech owl calls and mobbing vocalizations of a variety of passerines, along with the low-tech practice called “pishing”,  to entice birds into viewing range.   Several of the prairie warblers attracted using these techniques perched within 10-15’ of my car window, intensely curious and motivated to find the virtual predator that was provoking such a commotion.  In addition to the prairie warblers, a couple of other early season migrants/post-breeding wanderers were lured in – I saw a couple of yellow-throated warblers and one female-plumaged American redstart.   The resident breeding species were out in force as well – tufted titmice, Carolina chickadees, eastern towhees, white-eyed vireos, northern parulas, northern cardinals, Carolina wrens, blue-gray gnatcatchers, great crested flycatchers, and both blue and Florida scrub jays all made an appearance at one or many locations.   I saw, and heard, several family groups of scrub jays along this stretch of FR46 as well, with most containing several gray-headed juveniles.   Typical of the big-brained corvids, they seemed to be constantly on the move, exploring and soaking up important information about the habitat in which they will mature and eventually breed.

PRWA_07312013-40_Ocala NF Juniper

 

PRWA_07312013-31_Ocala NF JuniperOpen areas of the oak scrub, particularly those with some standing snags remaining from old mature sand pines, were filled with woodpeckers as well.  Red-headed woodpeckers are abundant in this area, as are northern flickers, downys and red-bellieds.  I even kicked up a couple of raptors, including a red-tailed hawk and an American kestrel.  I’m guessing the kestrel was of the paulus subspecies, the resident race that breeds in Florida.

A recently burned tract of scrub just beginning to regenerate.  This is where I saw the American kestrel, presumably a breeding bird.

A recently burned tract of scrub just beginning to regenerate. This is where I saw the American kestrel, presumably a breeding bird.

Prairie warbler in scrub oak.

Prairie warbler in scrub oak.

American redstart.

American redstart.

Yellow-throated warbler.

Yellow-throated warbler.

Vast expanses of oak scrub and flocks of lovely passerines –  what a great combination.  And between now and the peak of fall migration, which by my reckoning occurs in the latter half of October, it will just get better.

Welcome to Volusia Naturalist

Tiger Bay State Forest, Woody Tract.

                                                   Tiger Bay State Forest, Woody Tract.

Thank you for visiting my site and reading my drivel.  Blog posts will cover a range of natural history topics.  Many will be reports of my field excursions in and around Volusia County, while others will be more specific posts about particular subjects that interest me.

Larger versions of all photographs can be viewed by clicking on them.