Ron Pittaway's Winter Finch Forecast 2008-2009
Red Crossbill, Hamilton Co., New York. Christopher Wood.
INDIVIDUAL FINCH FORECASTS
Pine Grosbeak: A mountain-ash berry specialist in
winter, Pine
Grosbeaks will stay north of most birders this winter because
mountain-ash berries are abundant in northern Ontario. A few
normally
get south to Algonquin Park, but they are unlikely farther south.
Purple Finch: This finch stays in the north only when
most tree
species have heavy seed crops. This fall most Purple Finches will
migrate south out of the province because overall tree seed crops
are
too low. A very few may winter in southern Ontario.
Red Crossbill: This crossbill comprises nine
ecotypes in North
America; each has cone(s) preferences related to bill size and
shape.
The Types are difficult to identify in the field. Types 2 and 3
and
probably 4 occur in Ontario. The white pine Type 2 is apparently
the
most frequently encountered Red Crossbill in the province (Simard
2007 in Atlas of Breeding Birds of Ontario). Since white pine has
abundant crops in most areas, expect Type 2s to be widespread in
small numbers. Hemlock Type 3 (subspecies sitkensis of AOU
Check-list
1957) prefers the small cones of hemlock and white spruce when
bumper
in Ontario. Type 3s should be absent from the province this
winter
because the hemlock crop is poor and the white spruce crop is
average. Other Types are possible this winter given the bumper
white
pine cone crop and good crop on red pine. The Red Crossbill
complex
very much needs further study.

White-winged Crossbill: This crossbill wandered widely
this past
summer searching for extensive spruce cone crops. Reports came
from
Alaska, Yukon, Hudson Bay Lowlands, Ontario, Quebec and many
northern
states such as Michigan and New York. Most kept moving but some
stopped and their singing suggested nesting but spruce cone crops
are
generally not large enough in most areas to support major
nestings.
The White-winged Crossbill specializes on the small soft cones of
black and white spruces and hemlock when bumper in Ontario. This
winter they should be widespread in small numbers in traditional
areas such as Algonquin Park. However, spruce cone crops are
generally low in most of Canada and as seed supplies are
exhausted
this fall and winter so a moderate southward irruption is
probable,
perhaps extending south into the central United States. Watch for
them on ornamental spruces and European larch.
Common and Hoary Redpolls: The Common Redpoll is a
white birch seed
specialist in the boreal forest in winter. White birch crops are
poor
in the northern two-thirds of the boreal forest, but seed
abundance
increases southward. In central Ontario, such as Algonquin Park,
crops on white and yellow birches range from fair to good. It is
uncertain whether the birch crop is large enough to stop the
southward movement in central Ontario about latitude 45 degrees.
Some
redpolls, including a few Hoarys, may get south to Lake Ontario
if
birch seed supplies run low.
Pine Siskin: A conifer seed specialist in winter, most
siskins should
leave the province this fall because the spruce cone crop is poor
in
the boreal forest. It is uncertain whether the huge white pine
seed
crop will keep some siskins in central and northern Ontario this
winter.
Evening Grosbeak: A conifer and hardwood seed
generalist in winter,
Evening Grosbeaks should make a small southward movement this
winter
because food supplies are probably sufficient in the north. Older
birders remember the 1970s when the Evening Grosbeak was a common
feeder bird. Their memory is based on the greatly inflated numbers
30
years ago in Eastern Canada due to huge outbreaks of spruce
budworm.
The last Algonquin Christmas Bird Count to have high numbers of
Evening Grosbeaks was in 1984 with 1474 individuals, which was
the
North American CBC record that year. A significant decline in
grosbeak numbers began in the mid-1980s because the size of
annual
budworm outbreaks decreased. Ontario's breeding population is
currently probably stable, subject to periodic fluctuations in
spruce
budworm (Hoar 2007 in Atlas of Breeding Birds of Ontario).
THREE IRRUPTIVE PASSERINES
Red-breasted Nuthatch: Movements of this nuthatch
are linked to cone
crop abundance, particularly spruce, white pine and balsam fir in
Ontario. Good numbers of Red-breasted Nuthatches should winter in
Ontario this year feeding on the bumper white pine seed crop and
good
spruce/fir crops in many areas such as Algonquin Park.
Bohemian Waxwing: Like the Pine Grosbeak, this waxwing is
a
mountain-ash berry specialist in winter. Mountain-ash crops are
excellent across northern Ontario (bumper around Lake Superior)
so
very few Bohemians will wander out of the boreal forest this
winter.
Some may get south into traditional wintering areas of central Ontario
such as Orillia, Peterborough and Ottawa where European mountain-ash
berries are in good supply.
Blue Jay: Good numbers of jays will winter in central
Ontario because the red oak acorn crop is good and beechnut crop is
fair in central Ontario. Many other fruits and berries are abundant.
Therefore this fall's flight should be average or smaller along the
shorelines of Lakes Ontario and Erie.
BOREAL RAPTORS
Northern Goshawk: A small flight is possible this
fall because high
snowshoe hare populations have declined in much of northern
Ontario.
However, grouse numbers (Ruffed, Spruce, Sharp-tailed) are
generally
good so they may buffer the decline in hares.
Boreal Owl: Small mammal populations have crashed
across northern and
central Ontario. In Quebec, Pascal Cote of Observatoire d'oiseaux
de
Tadoussac expects a flight of Boreal Owls this fall and winter
following their 4 year cycle linked to red-backed voles. Southern
Ontario may get Boreal Owls and other northern forest owls this
winter.
WHERE TO SEE FINCHES
A winter trip to Algonquin Park is a birding
adventure. The park is a mix of boreal and hardwood habitats only
a
three hour drive north of Toronto. Kilometre distances are marked
from the west entrance. Watch carefully for crossbills and other
finches in early morning eating road salt and sand. Two excellent
birding spots are the Spruce Bog Trail at km 42.5 and the gate
area
on the Opeongo Road about 4 km north from km 46 on the highway.
Watch
and listen for finches, Gray Jay, Boreal Chickadee, Spruce Grouse
and
Black-backed Woodpecker. The Visitor Centre and restaurant at km
43
are open only on weekends in winter. An observation deck overlooks
a
spectacular bog and black spruce forest. The feeders attract
Evening
Grosbeak, Pine Grosbeak, Common Redpoll and other finches
depending
on the winter. Gray Jays frequent the suet feeder and sometimes a
pine marten or fisher goes to the suet. Eastern Canadian Wolves
(Canis lycaon) are seen occasionally from the observation deck
feeding on road-killed moose put out by park staff. Arrangements
can
be made to view feeders on weekdays. For information call the
Visitor
Centre at 613-637-2828.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: I thank staff of the Ontario
Ministry of Natural
Resources (OMNR) and birders whose reports allow me to make
annual
forecasts: Dennis Barry (Durham Region), Ken Corston (OMNR
Moosonee),
Pascal Cote (Tadoussac, Quebec), Shirley Davidson (OMNR Minden),
Bruce Di Labio (Ottawa to Moosonee), Carrolle Eady (Dryden),
Cameron
Eckert (Yukon), Bruce Falls (Brodie Club, Toronto), Brian Fox
(OMNR),
Marcel Gahbauer (Alberta), Michel Gosselin (Canadian Museum of
Nature), Skye Haas (Michigan), Charity Hendry (Ontario Tree Seed
Plant), Leo Heyens (OMNR Kenora), Tyler Hoar (Laurentians and
Northeastern Quebec), Peter Hynard (Haliburton County), Jean Iron
(Northeastern Ontario/James Bay), Christine Kerrigan and Peter
Nevin
(Parry Sound District), Richard Pope (Lake Superior), Bruce
Mactavish
(Newfoundland), Erwin Meissner (West Sudbury District), Scott
McPherson (OMNR), Brian Naylor (OMNR North Bay), Larry Neily
(Ottawa), Stephen O'Donnell (Parry Sound District), Fred Pinto
(OMNR), Betsy Potter (Wilson, New York), Gord Ross (OMNR
Moosonee),
Rick Salmon (OMNR Nipigon), Don Sutherland (OMNR), Eve Ticknor
(Ottawa), Ron Tozer (Algonquin Park), Declan Troy (Alaska), Mike
Turner (OMNR Minden), Stan Vasiliauskas (OMNR), Mike Walsh (OMNR
Muskoka/Parry Sound), Ben Walters (Northeastern Ontario), Alan
Wormington (Point Pelee), Matt Young whose posts on New York
State
listservs were informative, and Kirk Zufelt (Sault Ste Marie). I
thank Ron Tozer for ongoing discussions on winter finches and
Jean
Iron for proofing the forecast.
PREVIOUS FINCH FORECASTS archived at Larry Neily's website.
http://www.neilyworld.com/pittaway-old.htm
The recently published ATLAS OF BREEDING BIRDS OF ONTARIO 2007
has
detailed peer-reviewed information and maps on boreal winter
finches.
I highly recommend it.
http://www.birdsontario.org/atlas/index.jsp
Contributed by:
Ron Pittaway, Ontario Field Ornithologists
Minden and Toronto, Ontario

