All posts by Kate St. John

Just a Few Rare Geese

Greater white-fronted geese (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

23 December 2024

It seems that Pittsburgh missed waterfowl migration this fall with only a handful of the expected migrants landing on our rivers and lakes. Except for long distance migrants, waterfowl haven’t come at all.

Some ducks, geese and gulls only move south when ice overtakes their location. If they’re hanging out at Lake Erie near Presque Isle, the map of yesterday’s water temperature indicates they have no reason to leave. The water there is more than 40°F and the only ice is in small bays (black color on the map).

Great Lakes surface Temperature and ice cover as of 22 Dec 2024 (map from Great Lakes Environmental Research Lab)

There are a few rare geese, though, photographed and posted to eBird and embedded below.

There’s currently a Ross’s goose (Anser rossii) at North Park, noticeably small than the Canada geese it’s hanging out with.

Yesterday there was a brant (Branta bernicla) at Duck Hollow without any Canada geese to keep it company. So it hung out with ring-billed gulls.

And a flock of 16 greater white-fronted geese (Anser albifrons) who normally migrate west of the Mississippi and winter in Louisiana, southern Texas and Mexico have been hanging out with Canada geese in Butler County since 1 December.

These geese are called “white-fronted” because their foreheads are white.

Wondering why the ducks aren’t here? This 2021 vintage article explains why.

Seen Last Week: Snow and Elusive Crows

Snow in Schenley Park, 20 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

22 December 2024

In the run-up to the winter solstice the temperature dropped below freezing last week and the clouds moved in. Seen last week includes evidence of deer, snow and crows.

Evidence of deer: After the city parks bow hunt began in September the deer found other places to hang out including cemeteries and backyards. But we still see their evidence of their nighttime presence including this buck rub in Frick Park on 19 December.

Buck rub on a tree in Frick Park, 19 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

Snow fell on Friday and Saturday. In this video its starts out a bit furious and then tapers.

Snowing in Pittsburgh on 21 Dec 2024 (video by Kate St. John)

Our search for the Pittsburgh crow roost continues. We need to find as much of it as we can before the Pittsburgh Christmas Bird Count on Saturday, 28 December. So far we haven’t broken 10,000 but we know there are more than that.

Though crows prefer to spend the night in trees we’ve discovered they also roost on rooftops in Oakland where we cannot see and count them. Dang!

Last night Carol Steytler found some near the Pitt Field House. Not a huge number, but encouraging. Her video is dark; it was the middle of the night.

Please help us find the crows. Leave a comment to let me know where you see lots of crows after 4:00pm in the city limits. Tell me about …

  • Huge flocks of crows
  • Seen after 4:00pm or Overnight
  • Where are they? Provide specific location, street or landmark.
  • If flying, what direction are they going? I’ll map your contribution and triangulate.

Next week oughta be interesting.

Celebrating the Winter Solstice

Sunrise in Pittsburgh, 18 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

21 December 2024

Happy Winter Solstice! The days will be getting longer soon.

Most of us were asleep when the winter solstice occurred in Pittsburgh at 4:21 AM EST. We could not see it, even if we’d been awake, because today’s sunrise is at 7:39am EST. On this the shortest day we’ll have 9 hours, 16 minutes and 59 seconds of daylight.

In Britain, Stonehenge is aligned to mark the summer solstice at sunrise and the winter solstice at sunset. Nonetheless, Stonehenge holds their winter solstice celebration at sunrise every year. Here’s a video of last year’s celebrations.

Winter Solstice at Stonehenge in 2023

video embedded from The Independent on YouTube

BBC News describes this year’s event: Winter solstice celebrated at Stonehenge

Stonehenge is an even bigger feat of prehistoric engineering than we’d originally thought. In 2021 scientists learned that its igneous bluestones were imported from southwest Wales. This year a Welsh scientist discovered that its giant, partially buried, 6 ton altar stone came from Scotland! A truly cosmopolitan monument.

video embedded from BBC News on YouTube

No wonder people celebrate there.

Creatures of the Chilean Deep

Deep-dea glass squid, Chile Margin in Pacific Ocean (screenshot from Schmidt Ocean video below)

20 December 2024

This month Schmidt Ocean posted a beautiful deep sea video from their deep sea rover’s voyage off the Pacific coast of South America.

11 Dec 2024: After 55 days of exploration, the #ChileMargin2024 expedition team is heading home. Researchers have been exploring along a margin where a submerged continental shelf extends from the country’s west coast and drops steeply and suddenly into the Pacific Ocean.

video description from Schmidt Ocean on YouTube
video embedded from Schmidt Ocean on YouTube

Did you see the rocks and cliffs in the video? If you could see the entire formation without the ocean in the way, it is actually a very steep mountain range from the bottom of the trench to the top of the Andes, more than 15,000 meters or about 49,300 feet(*) with squids at the bottom and birds at the top.

This area is so deep because the Nazca Plate is subducting under the South American Plate, causing the Andes to rise and the Peru-Chile Trench to plunge deeper.

Nazca Plate is subducting under the South American Plate (map from Wikimedia Commons)

And who is the creature with the big eyes and cockatoo crest? Learn more in this short video from Schmidt Ocean on Instagram.

(*) The Himalayas are 8,849 meters (29,032 feet).

Schmidt Ocean Institute is a 501(c)(3) private non-profit operating foundation established to advance oceanographic research, discovery, and knowledge, and catalyze sharing of information about the oceans. 

About Schmidt Ocean Institute

Where’s Willow?

Willow ptarmigan, Feb 2009 (photo by G MacRae via Flickr Creative Commons license)

19 December 2024

Though this willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus) thinks he’s hiding his all-white plumage makes him painfully obvious in a snowless landscape.

There are three species of north country ptarmigans (Lagopus) — willow, white-tailed and rock ptarmigans — that change their plumage with the seasons in order to stay camouflaged against the ground. They’re white in winter to match the snow, brown in summer to match vegetation, and mottled as the seasons change. Their molt cycle worked well until climate change made winters shorter.

White-tailed ptarmigan, 23 Jun 2022, Alberta (photo by Dan Arndt)

Fourteen years ago, in 2010, I blogged about the willow ptarmigan’s superior winter camouflage in Where’s Willow? and he was hard to find in the snowy landscape.

Willow ptarmigan in 2000 (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Seven years ago, in 2017, I looked again. His camouflage still worked.

White-tailed ptarmigan, 25 Nov 2017 (photo by Dan Arndt via Flickr Creative Commons license)

But climate change is making winter is shorter. Snow cover does not begin as early as it used to the fall and it melts earlier in the spring. The ptarmigans’ molt cycle is still on the old schedule so he’s no longer camouflaged when the seasons change. You can see this rock ptarmigan easily from far away.

Rock ptarmigan, Svalbard, 1 July 2014 (photo by Allan Hopkins)

In 2021 ptarmigans were already in decline when scientists in British Columbia, Canada studied the effect of climate change on their native ranges in the province. Their answer is sobering in A genus at risk: Predicted current and future distribution of all three Lagopus species reveal sensitivity to climate change and efficacy of protected areas.

By 2080 all three ptarmigan species will have to move up in elevation and further north in latitude to find the climate they need to survive.

Summary of average current and future predictions for shifts in elevation, latitude and range size for the genus Lagopus in BC. … with size of pie charts being proportional to the relative value of current and future species’ range

So where will the willow ptarmigan be in 2080 in BC? Three possibilities are shown below.

Modelled potential distribution of willow ptarmigan in B.C. for current (top-left) and future scenarios (2080s) under habitat and various climatic projections. … Future models highlighted similar suitable areas with most resilient locations being in the higher latitude Cassiar Mountains and to the east (Canadian Rockies). © OpenStreetMap contributors

Willow will be in far fewer places than he is now (current range at top left).

Read more at: A genus at risk: Predicted current and future distribution of all three Lagopus species reveal sensitivity to climate change and efficacy of protected areas. Diversity and Distributions, 27, 1759–1774. by Scridel, D., Brambilla, M.,de Zwaan, D. R., Froese, N., Wilson, S., Pedrini, P., &Martin, K. (2021)

The Crows’ Tale of Two Cities

Crows on the treetops at dusk (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

18 December 2024

Winter crows are incredibly persistent. Year after year they return in large numbers to the same city, even if the city harasses them. Some cities harass their winter crows, some celebrate them. This is a Tale of Two Cities from the winter crows’ perspective — Rochester, New York and Lawrence, Massachusetts.

But First. Large winter roosts of 10,000 to 100,000 birds is normal behavior for crows. Dr. Douglas Wacker described why at his Olympic Peninsula Audubon presentation in Nov 2024 (see below, parentheses added). Large roosts have:

  • Safety in numbers (low odds of predation)
  • Early warning system (many eyes on the lookout)
  • Thermoregulation (warmth)
  • Exploit a resource (we all share)
  • Share information (catch up with your friends).

Once crows find a good location, described here, they all come together in the same place.

Thousands of crows come to Rochester, New York every winter where they prefer to roost in Washington Square with its well lit, mature trees.

Washington Square, Rochester NY at dusk (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

The city doesn’t like the crow mess so every year they hire USDA to harass the crows for three nights. USDA’s goal is to “break up the roost” into smaller units. Rochester made the New York Times this week for their harassment techniques.

Dec 2024 video embedded from 13WHAMTVNEWS, Rochester, on YouTube

From the crows’ perspective, smaller units won’t provide safety in numbers so the crows will reconvene somewhere. But where? Will the new location cause trouble, too?

Rochester could choose a more permanent solution by “thinking like a crow.”

Penn State University used to have a big crow problem in the center of campus. In 2009, with the help of crow expert Margaret Brittingham, they picked a location away from people where they wanted the crows to roost. Since crows want to sleep with the lights on, Penn State floodlit a remote set of trees and harassed the crows away from the people zone. The crows moved to the floodlit site and abandoned central campus. Not only that, the crows passed on information about the new roost from crow to crow year after year and continued to use the new roost, not the old one. Ta Dah! Read more at Penn State relocates its winter crows.

Tens of thousands of crows visit Lawrence, Massachusetts every winter but as far as I can tell they have never been harassed there. Instead the roost is celebrated as a tourist attraction, described on the Winter Crow Roost website and YouTube channel.

Nov. 18, 2024: Join us for an unforgettable evening on Crow Patrol under clear skies (55°F, NW winds at 15 mph) as we explore the Merrimack River staging area east of Rt. 495. Witness the incredible sight of American and Fish Crows vocalizing and converging into tree tops in a wild, dramatic display at the east end of Island Street.

Don’t miss this breathtaking show of nature in action! Watch now and share with friends who love the beauty and mystery of wildlife.

description of video at Winter Crow Roost on YouTube
video embedded from Winter Crow Roost, Lawrence, MA on YouTube

So from the crows’ perspective, you’d rather choose Lawrence, MA over Rochester, NY.

(*) p.s. Rochester’s crows are never going to switch to Lawrence MA. They come from different parts of the continent: Lawrence = Atlantic coast. Rochester = interior and south of Hudson Bay.

His Winter Cache Bloomed 32,000 Years Later

Arctic ground squirrel with stuffed cheeks, Russia (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

17 December 2024. Old news from 2012 with a recent update.

Food is scarce in the arctic during winter and early spring, so arctic ground squirrels (Urocitellus parryii) fatten up for hibernation and cache food for later use.

Arctic ground squirrel in Russia, eating flowers and seeds (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

When they wake up in April they have seeds in their cache to fall back on before the arctic blooms.

32,000 years ago, during the Ice Age, a ground squirrel stored food in his midden that he never ate. If everything had remained frozen no one would have known about his cache, but climate change is melting glaciers and ancient ice. Eventually the squirrel’s cache was exposed.

Melting glacier (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Twelve years ago Russian scientists collected the squirrel’s cache and found intact seeds within so they cultivated them in the lab. The fertile seeds grew into a 32,000 year old plant, the oldest on Earth.

After they published their findings they continued their research and cultivated more seeds, identifying them as Silene linnaeana in 2021. This is the same genus as bladder campion.

screenshot from Molecular taxonomic identification of a Silene plant regenerated
from Late Pleistocene fruit material at researchgate.net

Here’s a sample blooming in the Sahka Republic of Russia in June 2023 (from iNaturalist).

Silene linnaeana (photo from iNaturalist.lu)

What will happen to this squirrel’s cache 32,000 years from now?

Arctic ground squirrel (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Peregrines Ignite the Magic in Murmurations

Shark-shaped murmuration at Rigg near Gretna, Scotland (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

16 December 2024

This giant shark snout in the sky is a flock of thousands of common starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) flying at dusk near Gretna, Scotland. As starlings gather to roost their tight flocks, called murmurations, wheel and turn in unison making beautiful patterns in the sky.

Closeup of common starlings in a murmuration (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Sometimes the flock makes a recognizable shape like the hawk-bird in this video. They aren’t trying to do this. It just happens. Wow!

(video embedded from Stuart McNeil on YouTube)

Under pressure from a predator, starlings intentionally fly closer together and shape-shift into giant blobs, making it impossible for the predator to lock on to a single bird as prey.

Starling murmuration at Eyemouth, UK

Can you see the peregrine at top right, above, and to the left below?

The only way for a peregrine to catch dinner is to break the blob. He rushes the flock, trying to separate a few starlings away from the group. The blob gets even tighter!

Peregrine pushes a starling murmuration at Eyemouth, UK (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Watch a peregrine shape-shift the starlings and ignite the magic in a murmuration.

(video embedded from John Downer Productions on YouTube)

This Week: Find The Roost

Crows stream by in Oakland, 4 Nov 2016 (photo by Kate St. John)

15 December 2024

For stirring winter wildlife spectacles in our own backyard it’s hard to beat Pittsburgh’s winter crow roost. Once you’ve seen them you can’t help but wonder: How many crows are there? In less than two weeks, if we’re lucky, we’ll find out.

On Saturday 28 December volunteers will fan out across the 7.5-mile radius Pittsburgh Christmas Bird Count (CBC) circle to tally all the birds they see in 24 hours. It’s the perfect time to count crows but it takes a team to do it. How do we count crows?

First, Find the Roost. Top Priority this week.

The best way to find all the crows in one place at one time is to count them entering, exiting or perched at their massive communal roost. But they change their roost often in late December. I need your help finding it.

Let me know where you see lots of crows after 4:00pm in the city limits. Tell me about …

  • Huge flocks of crows
  • After 4:00pm or Overnight
  • Where are they? Provide specific location, street or landmark.
  • If flying, what direction are they going? I’ll map your contribution and triangulate.
When To Count? Dusk.

For the CBC we (the crow count team) arrive in the target area around 4:15pm (45 mins before sunset) and count until it’s too dark to see, around 5:45pm (45 mins after sunset). Most of the crows come in after 5:20pm.

If we’re not sure where the roost is (oh no!) we follow the crows by car to the point where they congregate. This is a nerve wracking activity because crows do not fly the street grid.

If we know where the roost is (ideal!) we assemble at various vantage points to view the roost.

Estimate!

Are we counting every single crow? No way!

  • Estimate the number of crows in a particular patch of sky or a section of the roost, then multiply by the number of patches. This takes practice. Try it out this week.
  • Count by 10s or — when it’s intense — by 100s.
In Flight
Crows streaming overhead on their way to the roost, 1 Nov 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

If you’re on a crow flight path after 4:00pm you can count them as they go by. However, a vantage point underneath the stream (photo above) is basically impossible to count.

Find a straight edge boundary and count them as they pass the edge. The edge in this photo is a signpost. A sparse flock like this could be counted by 10s.

Crows flying to the roost, 4 Nov 2013 (photo by Kate St. John)

For the CBC we don’t want to double count so we find the roost and note the flight paths. If the flight paths have good vantage points we count there. This takes additional volunteers.

In 2023 you all sent great tips on where to find the crows so we were able to count them flying across the Monongahela River to the roost at Duquesne University. Alas they don’t roost at Duquesne anymore.

Count The Roost

If there are good vantage points at the roost, we wait until they’ve settled and count them there. This worked well in 2017 at the Oakland roost around Heinz Chapel and Carnegie Library.

Crows roosting near Heinz Chapel on the night of the supermoon, 1 Dec 2017 (photo by Kate St. John)
How You Can Help

Top priority this week is to Find the Roost. See instructions above. Stay tuned for opportunities to join the Crow Patrol.

p.s. For a really good guide on crow counting, check out Winter Crow Roost Counting Guide from Lawrence, Massachusetts.

Seen This Week: Color + a Major Lunar Standstill

Orange! at Phipps Conservatory, 12 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

14 December 2024

Color! Avoiding this week’s coldest weather, Charity Kheshgi and I visited Phipps Conservatory during their annual Holiday Magic flower show. This time I was captivated by summer colors. Orange! Yellow!

Yellow! at Phipps Conservatory, 12 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)

A Major Lunar Standstill is coming up tomorrow.

The Full Moon on December 15, 2024, will rise and set at its most extreme northerly points on the horizon—the result of a once-every-18.6 years “major lunar standstill.”

Time And Date: Look Out for December’s Extreme Full Moon

How odd that just days before the winter solstice, when the sun stands still and rises and sets at its southernmost point, the moon is standing still at its northernmost point.

Watch for it tomorrow. Here’s the moon this morning with Jupiter to its left.

Jupiter and the Moon on their way to setting in the west, 14 Dec 2024 (photo by Kate St. John)