Moderator: DComeaux
Darren wrote:That's OK, this year you gonna need a stack of 'em, so be ready !
Darren wrote:That's OK, this year you gonna need a stack of 'em, so be ready !
Darren wrote:DC, see the taxidermy portion of this episode with Jeff Deblieux. Season 2, Ep 1 of DCD
https://www.themeateater.com/shows/duck-camp-dinners
MARSH BEAR wrote:DC - I love Cameron Parish
Darren wrote:think it's bad here? The story notes that whole Eagle Lake, TX region thing, talk about a massive shift/change there. Used to always here about the snows over there, and now totally different, and claiming that population shifted NE to AR?? Maybe some, sure. And some spread into the still-fewer LA wintering numbers.
SpinnerMan wrote:I saw your wing survey you posted earlier. I got asked for the first time to do that. Now I have to make sure I get some birds. Hopefully I get enough to make this interesting.
Darren wrote:think it's bad here? The story notes that whole Eagle Lake, TX region thing, talk about a massive shift/change there. Used to always here about the snows over there, and now totally different, and claiming that population shifted NE to AR?? Maybe some, sure. And some spread into the still-fewer LA wintering numbers.
Lreynolds wrote:Darren wrote:think it's bad here? The story notes that whole Eagle Lake, TX region thing, talk about a massive shift/change there. Used to always here about the snows over there, and now totally different, and claiming that population shifted NE to AR?? Maybe some, sure. And some spread into the still-fewer LA wintering numbers.
This is a little dated, but if you haven't already seen it, here is a video of band-recoveries of white-fronted geese banded in the same location in the Arctic from 1974-2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njUranK0czk
The band recoveries are summarized like we would radio locations during a season to estimate a home-range, with red being the core of the distribution. Remember, these birds were banded, almost all as molting adults, in the same location. But look at the shift in recovery distribution. The researchers recently published their findings in the Journal of Wildlife Management: https://wildlife.onlinelibrary.wiley.co ... jwmg.22401
Lreynolds wrote:Darren wrote:think it's bad here? The story notes that whole Eagle Lake, TX region thing, talk about a massive shift/change there. Used to always here about the snows over there, and now totally different, and claiming that population shifted NE to AR?? Maybe some, sure. And some spread into the still-fewer LA wintering numbers.
This is a little dated, but if you haven't already seen it, here is a video of band-recoveries of white-fronted geese banded in the same location in the Arctic from 1974-2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njUranK0czk
The band recoveries are summarized like we would radio locations during a season to estimate a home-range, with red being the core of the distribution. Remember, these birds were banded, almost all as molting adults, in the same location. But look at the shift in recovery distribution. The researchers recently published their findings in the Journal of Wildlife Management: https://wildlife.onlinelibrary.wiley.co ... jwmg.22401
DComeaux wrote:Not good. I'm just glad I was given the opportunity to see and participate in some of the good times with migration here in the state.
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