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April Trivia Question

What is the easternmost county with an accepted record of Varied Thrush?

Leave your answer here as a comment.  As always the first correct answer, and the best incorrect answer, will win a prize!

Last month’s winners were Roger Craik and Austin Saupe; the correct answer was British Columbia, the province that has held CBC records for high counts of many species, among them Golden-crowned Kinglet and Dusky Thrush.

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March Trivia Question

Congratulations to Elwood Hain for identifying Yellow Warbler as the most widespread breeding Dendroica in North America! Elwood wins a WINGS cap–and you can, too, if you’re the first to answer the new trivia question correctly:

Which state or province has tallied record high Christmas Count numbers of all the following species: Golden-crowned Kinglet, Dusky Thrush, Red-throated Pipit, and Brambling?

Leave your answer here as a comment. The first correct answer, and the wittiest, most cogent, or most startling incorrect answer, will win the cap everybody who is anybody’s wearing. 

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Answer to Trivia Question

What is the commonest sandpiper in North America?

Not all scolopacids are called “sandpiper,” and some of them don’t pipe sand at all. The commonest sandpiper in North America, for example, spends most of its time lurking in dark forests, where it is rarely seen except when it emerges for a twilight twirl around its aerial dance floor.

According to the figures cited in The Shorebird Guide, American Woodcock has a North American (and thus a global) population of about 5,000,000 birds; Semipalmated and Western Sandpipers–had I not known the answer, I might have guessed one of those species myself–each tally about 4,000,000 individuals.

Right now is the time to get out and listen for the evening twitterings of woodcock throughout the species’ breeding range. Participants in Paul Lehman’s March tour of Nebraska will probably be the first WINGS group to witness the sky dance this year, but any trip to the eastern half of the US or southern Canada has a good chance of encountering this secretive and startlingly abundant sandpiper.

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January Trivia Question

A factual question this time:

What is the most abundant sandpiper in North America?

Leave your answer as a comment below. The first correct answer will win a new WINGS cap.

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December Trivia Quiz: Answer(s)

As Michael Bowen was the first to point out, increasing size is the key to this riddle about hawk names. His suggestion–Crane–is a good one, giving us Sparrow (Hawk), Pigeon (Hawk), Duck (Hawk), Crane (Hawk).

Andy Jones kept it neatly within the family Falconidae with his proposal, Partridge (Hawk), an obsolete name for (among other species) Gyrfalcon.

Photo: James Lidster

Both answers count as correct, while Elwood Hain’s answer, Auk, wins the prize for the most compelling and most poignant series submitted: (Dusky Seaside) Sparrow, (Passenger) Pigeon, (Labrador) Duck, (Great) Auk.

My own answer? Goose. Falconers are said to have classed their birds by size, the smallest being the Sparrow Hawk, followed by Pigeon Hawk (Merlin) and Duck Hawk (Peregrine Falcon), all of them outweighed by the Goose Hawk–which we know as Goshawk.

Michael, Andy, and Elwood will all soon be sporting their stylish new WINGS caps.

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December Trivia Question

More a riddle this time than a question:

What is the next bird name in the series “Sparrow, Pigeon, Duck…”? There may be more than one defensible answer to this one, so explain your solution.

The first correct answer, and the “best” incorrect answer, will be rewarded with a modest prize from WINGS. Leave your answer as a comment to this blog entry!

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November Trivia Answer

Wild Turkey, Nebraska. Photo: Rick Wright.

Wild Turkey, Nebraska. Photo: Rick Wright.

The first Wild Turkeys brought to Europe were sent back from Mexico by Cortés in 1519. According to the Handbook of the Birds of the World, domestic turkeys were “well established” in Spain and in England by 1541–so well established, in fact, that the Jamestown colonists actually brought turkeys along with them when they sailed for Virginia in 1607, making that the first North American bird to travel west across the Atlantic.

Happy Thanksgiving!

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November Trivia Question

What was the first native North American bird species to be transported west across the Atlantic Ocean from Europe?

Submit your answer as a comment here at The Wingbeat. The first correct answer, and the wittiest, most cogent, or most startling incorrect answer, will win a dapper new WINGS cap. We’ll include our answer and the names of the winners in the December 2009 e-newsletter.

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October Trivia Question

Which North American breeding bird has been called “the horseshoe blackbird”?

Eastern Meadowlark, Nebraska. Photo: Rick Wright.

Eastern Meadowlark, Nebraska. Photo: Rick Wright.

The bird we now know as the Eastern Meadowlark was given the rather unimaginative name Alauda magna–”big lark”–by Linnaeus in 1758. The great Swedish taxonomist based his description on a painting by Mark Catesby, labeled “The Large Lark.”

Almost sixty years later, Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot moved the species to a new genus, Sturnella, thus creating the slightly nonsensical scientific name Sturnella magna, “big little starling.”

Vieillot’s description of the newly erected genus was also based on a painting, this time one in Buffon’s great Natural History. Buffon, abandoning the prosaic nomenclature of Linnaeus and Catesby, had called the bird “Merle à fer-à-cheval,” the horseshoe blackbird, a reference to the black necklace crossing the yellow breast.

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September Trivia Question

What common US bird has a taste for monarch butterflies?

We all learned in school that birds would avoid the foul-tasting monarch.

But not all birds are put off by the butterflies’ toxins, which the caterpillars concentrate while growing fat on milkweed.

Black-billed Cuckoos, Scott’s Orioles, and Purple Martins have been seen to capture and eat adult monarchs; Loggerhead Shrikes are said to hang the butterflies in the sun to let the poison break down.

But the uncontested champions among monarch eaters are Mexico’s Black-backed Oriole–and the familiar Black-headed Grosbeak.   Birds of these two species consume several hundred thousand monarchs on the wintering grounds in central Mexico.

Looks innocent enough....

Looks innocent enough....

One important introduced species is also apparently immune to the monarchs’ poison: the domestic chicken.

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