Saturday, May 14, 2022

Nesting, Incubating, Courtship and HATCHING … All Happening Now!

photo by Tom Hanna


LEAST TERNS

Lindsay Addison, our NC Audubon Coastal Biologist was on the beach May 13 and confirmed that about 60 Least Tern nests were lost this week.  There were 84 before the nor’easter and only 23 afterwards.  Lindsay thinks the storm and possibly the Ruddy Turnstones were the most likely reason.  The Ruddy Turnstones should be migrating soon so hopefully they will not remain an issue to both the Least Terns and Black Skimmers. 

The Ruddy Turnstones look for opportunities for the nesting birds to be disturbed and off their nests and then peck the eggs open.  We have seen a number of the Ruddy Turnstones walking through the colony and also eating eggs.


photo by Joseph Daniels



photo by Joseph Daniels

photo by Joseph Daniels










And to prove that rain and some hungry Ruddy Turnstones will not deter the birds here is a photograph that Lindsay took on Friday, May 13 of our first evidence of a Least Tern chick.  She estimates this chick to be 2-3 days old.

photo by Lindsay Addison

COMMON TERNS

We have at least 5 nests, with additional pairs courting, and the Common Terns are being very attentive and continue the couple bonding with feeding behaviors while incubating.  The Common Terns are becoming very protective and aggressive to protect their eggs if beachgoers are too close to the posting.   The Ruddy Turnstones may also have disturbed some of their nests as evidenced by his Common Tern egg that had clearly been predated... perhaps by a gull.

photo by Joseph Daniels



 








Common Tern aggression often
 includes being attacked from above!
photo by Tom Hanna










Ruddy Turnstone
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Ruddy_Turnstone/lifehistory#


BLACK SKIMMERS

Black Skimmers are the last species to start nesting at the colony. Last Saturday (5/7) there were 15-20 that had initiated nests, but they also are the least apt at protecting their nests from the Ruddy Turnstones. Some nests remain and the majority of the pairs are still courting and scraping (making the depressions where they lay their eggs). Look for continued nest initiation throughout May.

After three years of our banding program, we are seeing more and more banded skimmers returning to the colony.  Use binoculars to scan their lower legs but always remember to stay back from the string and make sure you are not causing the birds to be nervous. Even stepping off a nest briefly could result in a Ruddy Turnstone pecking an egg!

photo by Joseph Daniels

AMERICAN OYSTERCATCHERS

Incubation continues by the oystercatchers and Lindsay confirmed the two nests are still nicely hidden within the dunes as of May 13.  We expect the hatching of chicks around Memorial Weekend. 

Martin West, one of our new WBBS, captured a photo of Royal Terns in courtship display and fish presentation on May 13 and one of the Royal Terns had a white “field readable” band on its right leg.  Marlene reported the band to reportband.gov and learned the Royal Tern was banded as a chick in 2018 in Hampton, Virginia.  Very cool!



Saturday, April 30, 2022

More Birds Arriving Every Day

photo by Martin West



Migration is underway and groups of birds have been arriving consistently since April 15. 

Our Audubon NC Coastal Biologist Lindsay Addison did a nest check on the south end the morning of 4/28.  Lindsay’s nest checks provide us with specific numbers and nesting updates to report.


AMERICAN OYSTERCATCHERS – Both pairs of Oystercatchers now have nests! 

Oystercatcher banded EMY and mate who are seen on the inlet side have now nested.   EMY is the adult Oystercatcher that had a successful fledging last year.  Oystercatcher banded CT4 and mate, newly banded CFO, have been seen on the ocean side.  CT4 nested last year but lost the chicks within days.

banded EMY


newly banded CFO
Photo by Martin West

banded CT4

















Remember the birds may practice making scrapes during courtship, but scrapes are only considered “nests” once they have eggs in them.


BLACK SKIMMERS – Black Skimmers have been arriving in groups since 4/14.  The count was 312 on Saturday 4/23, 357 on 4/24 and 383 on 4/27. 

Lindsay was able to identify 3 Black Skimmers that were banded as chicks on the south end of Wrightsville Beach in 2019 and returned this year.  How cool is that???

Note the fish in the mouth of the mating skimmer.
Photo by Martin West

Photo by Martin West



Photo by Camille Daniels

COMMON TERNS – Seven pairs of Common Terns were on the beach on 4/28.  Courtship and mating continue.


Photo by Martin West





LEAST TERNS –  A large group of Least Terns is now present and in the air regularly on the south end!  It appears that several Least Terns are nesting on the ocean side.

Courtship activities including fish presentations, scraping, and mating continue!


Photo by Camille Daniels






Being on the beach is exciting now as so many birds are present and very active. 


BIRD WALKS START NEXT MONDAY 

Free bird walks to the south end nesting area will be available for the public every Monday at 9 AM beginning, this Monday, May 2 until mid-August.  Join us!  Invite your friends & family!!  We will meet at the gazebo at Beach Access 43.

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Birds are starting to arrive at the south end of Wrightsville Beach!

 

As the sun was rising early this morning (4/14/2022) the birds could be seen and heard as we walked onto the beach.

We were greeted by Black Skimmers, Least Terns, Common Terns, two pairs of American Oystercatchers and Willets. It is a great time to head to the beach and watch as our birds arrive and begin their courting behavior. Then they will make a scrape (which becomes a nest as soon as eggs are laid).  We  look forward to seeing adorable new chicks running around the beach in a few weeks.

Black Skimmers

To the birder, mention of “Black Skimmer” brings to mind a bird in elegant repose or effortless flight. Watching them at a nesting colony, from a respectful distance, will uncover additional behaviors. Resting skimmers often put their entire bodies, including head and bill, on the sand, probably to keep cool and to give their neck muscles a break from supporting their large bills. When napping in a flock, skimmers tend to remain standing, and the birds on the outer edges of the flock tuck their bills into the wing on the outer side, keeping an eye out for danger. During the nesting season, skimmers are quite active and are surprisingly agile when walking. Their various displays, like those of terns, can be entertaining to watch. Newly formed pairs sometimes fly in tandem, fluttering up together and flying around the nesting area. They also parade through the area together with necks outstretched and bills held up. Males are protective of their small territories (around the nest) and guard females against interlopers, often using warning displays such as tossing the head upward, standing upright, or facing downward with the tail cocked upward. Sometimes, skimmers open the bill, exposing a reddish gape. Some of these warnings are accompanied by soft, barking calls. Courting males usually present a fish to the mate; copulation is accompanied by a wing-flagging display on the part of the male.

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Black_Skimmer/lifehistory



photo by Tom Hanna

Least Terns

Least Terns nest in colonies. Pairs are monogamous and often stay together over multiple nesting seasons. Pairs form or renew their bonds in spring on the nesting grounds or on “courting grounds” that can sometimes be quite far from the colony site.

Males defend preferred display sites, often on logs or some other elevated perch, and females likewise choose a favored location to await courtship. Males bring a small fish back to a group of terns, calling, and several terns then follow him in the air, gliding and then landing with stiff wings. The male then presents the fish to the female, who usually consumes it. This courtship feeding continues well into the nesting period and during incubation. Pairs also perform courtship displays while on the ground, raising and lowering bills and bodies, much like larger tern species.

Females select the nest site, and both sexes defend it, or at least a small space around it (perhaps 3–10 feet), by launching attack flights against intruders or predators and calling loudly, sometimes defecating. Both parents tend the chicks, taking turns foraging and tending them at the nest site. After chicks fledge, Least Terns gather into flocks for foraging and migration. Their flight is strong and direct, on stiff, jerky, rapid wingbeats. 

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Least_Tern/lifehistory#behavior



Common Terns

Like other terns, Common Terns are buoyant and graceful fliers, flying with rowing wingbeats. They forage over open waters singly, in small groups, or in large flocks with hundreds of terns. They also join feeding groups of Arctic Terns, Roseate Terns, and Laughing Gulls. Common Terns are gregarious and breed in colonies. They court each other in the air and on the ground. In flight the male crouches while the female passes over him until they descend to the ground in a zigzag glide. Courting continues on the ground with the male tipping his head down and holding his wings down and out from the body while walking around the female, who points her head upward. The male starts offering food to the female, eventually feeding her almost exclusively as the pair bond is cemented. Pairs are socially monogamous, but some may seek additional copulations outside the pair, a behavior known as extra-pair copulation. Although they are social terns they aggressively defend their territories. Intruding birds are first met with a "bent posture"; adults tip their heads down and hold their wings down and out. Intruders that continue to approach are met with a more aggressive posture with the bill pointed upward and wings held down and out. When posturing fails, adults attack any intruder be it a chick or another adult, often wrestling and fencing with their bills. If humans enter the breeding colony they often dive towards them, peck their heads, and defecate on them.

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Common_Tern/lifehistory


American Oystercatchers

American Oystercatchers are monogamous and sometimes maintain a pair bond for many consecutive years. Their courtship in early spring is boisterous, with courting birds pacing quickly over the sand in unison, giving a piping call that increases in tempo, and pivoting in arcing patterns around the beach, sometimes taking to flight in pairs. A courting pair often attracts neighboring pairs to begin this display, and sometimes as many as three pairs come together in what scientists call the Piping Ceremony. Copulation often follows this display. The size of a pair’s territory probably depends on local conditions and ranges in size from about 1.7 to 5.3 acres. They sometimes establish territories within a colony of terns, Black Skimmers, or Brown Pelicans. Pairs stay very near one another for the breeding season. Male and female take turns incubating the eggs, and both defend eggs and young, driving away intruders (including other oystercatchers) with calls, chases, and aggressive flight. Young birds can dive and swim underwater to escape predators. After the nesting season the adults and young disperse, often to different locations, for the winter, and younger birds often spend one or more years away from their natal area before returning.


Willets

Willets nest in cordgrass, saltgrass, and beachgrass near saltmarshes and on sand dunes, and on bare ground or in short vegetation sheltered by barrier dunes. A pair searches for nest sites together, typically with the male leading the female through the habitat and making trial scrapes for the female to evaluate.

The male Willet initiates nest building by scraping out a small depression with his feet and breast in the grass, on beach sand, or on bare ground. If nesting in grass, the female then pulls in surrounding vegetation to hide the nest site, lining the grass nest cup with finer grasses and pebbles. If built on bare ground, the birds bring grass from a distance to line the scrape. The finished nest is just over 6 inches across and 2 inches deep.

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Willet/lifehistory



As courtship continues we will keep our blog updated and let you know when our pairs are sitting on eggs!

Our weekly Monday morning FREE bird walks will begin May 2.  They begin at 9 a.m. and leave from the gazebo near Access 43 at Jack Parker Boulevard.  




Friday, April 1, 2022

Wrightsville Beach Bird Stewards Welcome the 2022 Nesting Season

Least Terns were seen on Wrightsville this week and the timing of installing the posting around the south end nesting area for the 2022 season was perfect!

About 25 excited Wrightsville Beach Bird Steward volunteers showed up for the laborious task of getting the posts set up. It was truly a labor of love and we are looking forward to welcoming our nesting birds back soon. 







Signs are designed by the 5th students at the Wrightsville Beach School
and sponsored by the Harbor Island Garden Club.

A lot of wrack (organic material that is cast up onto the beach by surf, tides, and wind)
needed to be raked out of the nesting area to provide the sandy beach preferred by our
nesting birds such as Least Terns and Black Skimmers.



Looking forward to seeing lots of birds in this area.

There were about 80 posts to install which required
some very hard work by our crew!


After the posts were in, string needed to be wrapped around
to provide the symbolic fence we use to remind our
beach guests not to enter the nesting area.

Two American Oystercatchers came to oversee our work!



And now that the nesting season has begun please remember .......


So welcome back! We will keep our blog updated as the birds arrive.