LOOK WHO’S HERE! Migration in Full Swing

A pair of Tree Swallows (Tachycineta bicolor) look a bit annoyed by the paparazzi! Photo by Paul Birtwistle.

Birdsong is echoing deep in the woods, rippling down from the treetops, popping out in quick calls from leafy shrubs, and rising out of deep grass in our Oakland Township parks. The Wednesday Bird Group found it exciting, almost overwhelming at times, trying to keep up with the number of species at Cranberry Lake Park and Bear Creek Nature Park in early May. We hushed each other to listen to bird song. We exclaimed and pointed (“Look! 9 o’clock on the left of that flowering bush!”) And we stared down at our apps hoping for identifications. It’s been a wonderful, friendly scramble to identify these brightly colored visitors.

Text and some photos by
Cam Mannino

I couldn’t possibly show you all of them, though I’d love to! We heard or saw sixty-one species at Cranberry Lake Park and forty at Bear Creek Nature Park, for heaven’s sake! So I’ve divvied up some of the birds we enjoyed into two groups: “Just Passing Through” and “Summer Visitors.” My photographer friends, Bob Bonin, Paul Birtwhistle, Aaron Carroll, and Eva Mutzenmore as well as generous contributors at inaturlist.org have graciously shared some of their photos and I’ve added mine. So just sit back and relax with the glorious beauty that spring brings to Michigan each year. Or visit our parks, binoculars around you neck and phone app or guidebook in hand, to meet these colorful visitors!

Just Passing Through…So Look Now Before They’re Gone!

Not all migrators breed and raise their families here in Southeast Michigan. Many just stop here for a day or two to snag some insects and rest up a bit before taking to the night skies to move farther north. It’s quite a journey for any bird, but especially the small warblers like those in the following slideshow. They arrive here from Central and South America or the Caribbean and keep going farther north, some as far as northern Canada!

Summer’s Avian Visitors Here To Raise Young

Lucky for us, many migrators spend their summers with us here in Oakland Township. I’m always glad to see and hear familiar birds whose presence I’ve missed in the winter. They’re not on vacation, of course. They’re here on the serious business of breeding: finding a mate, building a nest, and raising young. All summer long we watch them to-ing and-fro-ing from their nests to feed the noisy, open beaks of their begging nestlings and fledglings. Adult birds keep dropping thousands of caterpillars and insects into those beaks until the young learn the ropes themselves. So this summer, keep an eye out in our parks for the bevy of beauties in the slideshow below that grace us throughout a Michigan summer.

Birds Aren’t the Only Ones Showing Up!

As small, light green leaves emerge high in the canopy, life asserts itself in a wide variety of ways. Early spring wildflowers lead the way in early May, many completing their whole life cycle quickly in order soak up sunlight in the woodlands before the trees leaf out. Here’s a sampling of what I’ve seen at just Bear Creek Nature Park and Cranberry Lake Park this May.

Wildflowers:

At Cranberry Lake, a bird group member discovered a flower that I’d never seen before, Northern Star Flower (Trientalis borealis). This little beauty bloomed with a group of other Northern Star Flowers right near the lake in the habitat that guidebooks describe as its favorite – a moist area, often with mosses, in clusters. What a delightful new addition to the pleasures of May!

Northern Star Flowers are perennials that can be present in both spring and summer. Look for them in clusters within moist woods with lots of moss. Photo by Aaron Carroll

Insects! (Buzz..flutter…zoom…):

On warm days, out come the insects that lure so many migratory birds to moist Michigan in the spring. Here’s a short slideshow of some of the ones I’ve seen in early May.

Down at Bear Creek’s Center Pond, two Eastern Pondhawks (Erythemis simplicicollis) soared in tandem around the pond after mating. I happened to catch them with my camera as the female dipped her abdomen in the water to spread some of her fertile eggs. (Sorry for the motion blur!)

A male Eastern Pondhawk clasps the female during mating and supports her that way as she releases her fertile eggs into the water.

And Oh, We’re Joined by Others Emerging into the Sunlight.

Adult turtles stretch and bask in warm sunlight after a dark, cold winter in the depths of our wetlands. These adults overwinter by burrowing into the mud bottoms of a pond or lake and lowering their metabolism in order to preserve oxygen, a process called brumation in reptiles. Occasionally they swim very slowly under the winter ice. So when spring comes, these cold-blooded creatures need to stretch out their necks and legs, and bask in sunlight as often as they can to warm up. Can’t you just imagine how delightful that must feel?

Oh, and one glamorous fungus fruited out from a tree, too. A mushroom disperses the spores of the fungus which exists under the wood’s surface. The Dryad’s Saddle mushroom (Cerioporus squamosus) generally grows on stumps and logs; it’s role in the ecosystem is to process dead wood, releasing the wood’s nutrients back into the soil. Occasionally, though, it can be parasitic on live trees . Though it’s sometimes referred to as the Pheasant’s Back Mushroom, I prefer the image of a dryad, a nymph of Greek mythology, riding off on this fancy mushroom saddle – but on what creature, I wonder?

The Dryad’s Saddle mushroom helps decompose dead wood, particularly of elm, silver maple and box elder. Photo by Cam M.

There’s Something Restful about Beauty…

Members of the Wednesday Bird Group appreciating the birds! Photo by Cam

Nature isn’t always beautiful. Like human life, the lives of plants and animals are subject to mortal ills: disease, injury, even violence, and ultimately death. But despite the challenges, nature keeps offering us gratuitous beauty in each season, throughout every year. Beauty isn’t just in the eye of us beholders, is it? It’s also in our ears, noses, and finger tips as we take in the world around us. Birds bring us song and a rainbow of colors as they attract their mates. Wildflowers delight us with scents, colors and shapes as they invite butterflies to pollinate them. Meadow grasses dance in a summer breeze while dispersing their seed. Water sparkles and ripples as it slakes the thirst of wildlife. And here we are, if we choose, right in the midst of it!

We didn’t earn or create nature’s beauty. We just receive the gift of it that let’s us simply be for a time, so we can return refreshed by nature’s beauty and variety. And with that gift comes a responsibility to pass on as much of it as we can to the future. And as you know, reader friends, that’s the reason for and the very heart of stewardship. I feel lucky to be part of caring for nature. And since you’re here exploring, you care too. Thank you!

The Eastern Bluebird (Sialia sialis), a year-round resident, always provides an irresistible bit of gratuitous beauty for me. Photo by Paul Birtwistle.

3 thoughts on “LOOK WHO’S HERE! Migration in Full Swing

  1. Cam, you are an amazing nature commentator and documentarian! I didn’t know how many bird species were flitting about in those two parks. And such beautiful language of descriptions! And reminding us at the end about our responsibilities to steward what is out there…so important. Thank you so much for your beautiful, outstanding nature prose. Louise

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  2. I enjoyed this blog so much!  Great pictures and variety of subjects, and I loved the last paragraph!  Blanche

    • Thank you, Blanche! My friends had such a trove of great bird shots that I just had to do this one. I’m so glad you liked the conclusion. Your opinion means a lot since you’re one of the most experienced birders I know! See you at Bear Creek next week, I hope!

      Cam

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