By Beth Sullivan
Migrate: To pass periodically from
one region or climate to another, as certain birds, fishes or
animals.
March is a month of migration. In
many places the process began much earlier and will not stop until
everyone or everything is where it’s supposed to be, to breed and
raise young, and then it begins all over in reverse.
Now that the day lengths are
increasing, and daylight hours are nearly equal to night hours, many
creatures are being inspired to make their migration, usually in a
northward direction, back “home” here, to where they belong, in
our opinion.
In the month of March, I usually
begin my list of firsts: things like Peepers and Wood frogs are
important firsts. Those are checked off. The first Painted turtles
out on a log have been spotted. But they never ventured far. They
just stayed down and under all winter. They emerged recently to
greet the warmth, but will dig back underground in the face of the
cold that is surely coming in this fickle month.
The first Purple Martins have
arrived in places like Florida and Texas, but they will not reach
here until April. So I don’t get my hopes up for them for a while.
You will certainly be getting reports as soon as ours arrive.
Purple Martins have already begun housekeeping in Florida. Photograph by Dennis Main. |
March migrants
The migrants of March are the
Osprey, the Eastern Phoebe and the Tree Swallows, that I eagerly
await. For sure there are many more, but these have always been my
true indicators of spring. All three of these arrive within a week,
more or less, around the Vernal Equinox- the first day of spring. So
much, though, depends on the weather that either assists them or
keeps them grounded. If we get a nice southerly flow, they will all
catch the wind and arrive earlier. If we continue to be hit with
Nor’easter type storms, they will hunker down where they are and
wait.
Interesting to note though, even as
we eagerly anticipate the first sightings of these new arrivals, we
sometimes overlook those migrants who slip away quietly from our
area, to return farther north to their own breeding grounds.
Sometimes it’s hard to remember the last Hooded Merganser I saw on
a cove, or, come later into March and April, when I no longer hear
the Juncos twittering in the bushes.
The bird I really wait for is the osprey, sometimes showing up for St. Patrick's Day. |
This Phoebe in Florida, is a real sign of spring in New England, but won't arrive until it warms up and are there are insects to eat. Photograph by Dennis Main. |
Tree Swallows will arrive in a few weeks. Photograph by Rick Newton. |
Sometimes it's hard to remember when the last Hooded Merganser took off from our icy coves to return north. |
Another kind of migrant
There is another interesting group
of migrants: people, know as snow-birds - those who leave the colder
climates, not necessarily to breed and nest of course, but to escape
the cold and enjoy the climate farther south.
What is also pretty funny to think
about, is that many of the birds that leave here in the winter, end
up in the same area as our snow-bird friends. Those Osprey, Phoebes
and Tree Swallows, as well as Egrets, Herons and many Warblers are
all down south with our friends and likely will return around the
same time.
Also, thanks to population shifts,
many southern birds have expanded their range north, so birds such as
the Tufted Titmouse, Carolina Wren and Red Bellied Woodpecker have
only recently, relatively speaking, become established here in
Connecticut.
We may never
see Wood Storks or White Ibis here in Connecticut, but that’s OK. I
am always most eager to see that first Osprey of March and welcome
them back to their nests here. And I will look forward to seeing
friends return as well.
The Red Bellied Woodpecker only arrived in this area from farther south within the last four decades. Photograph by Dennis Main. |
Some birds like these White Ibis, will probably never expand their range this far north, but who knows what climate change will bring. Photograph by Alan Brush. |
Photographs by Beth Sullivan unless
otherwise indicated.
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