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Calgary Christmas Bird Count Final Results

Posted by Bob Lefebvre

The counting and correcting is done, and here are the final results of the 2021 Calgary Christmas Bird Count (CBC). I helped out with the Feeder watchers again this year. Matthew Wallace coordinated the count and finalized the results. Lara Fitzpatrick created the spreadsheets that organized the data. It was a fun learning experience for us, and many emails were exchanged and many hours spent in Zoom meetings.

First, watch this summary video of the count results presented by Matthew:

The 2021 count was held on Sunday December 19. The temperature ranged from about -13 C to -10 C, with some light snow and winds of 10 to 20 kph. So the conditions were pretty good.

We had good participation this year, with 136 people out in the field (pretty much as many as we could manage with Covid protocols and the number of leaders we had) and 177 Feeder Watchers counting in their yards at 125 addresses (we can definitely add more Feeder Watchers).

Bohemian Waxwings
Bohemian Waxwings seen on the 2021 Calgary CBC. Photo by Arthur Wieckowski

The final total on count day was 73 species, plus another four species seen during Count Week (December 16-22) but missed on Count Day. The total number of individual birds recorded was 71,468. (All numbers have been corrected to account for possible double-counting.)

Field ObserversFeeder Watchers
70 species36 species
65,640 birds5,828 birds
Great Horned Owl
Great Horned Owl, December 19, 2021, Tsuut’ina Nation, Calgary. Photo by Matthew Wallace

Below is the bird list and the number of each species reported:

Cackling Goose4
Canada Goose18,954
Trumpeter Swan5
Tundra Swan1
Wood Duck3
Gadwall1
Mallard17,251
Green-winged Teal1
Canvasback2
Redhead18
Ring-necked Duck5
Greater Scaup2
Lesser Scaup5
Harlequin Duck4
Bufflehead144
Common Goldeneye554
Barrow’s Goldeneye3
Hooded Merganser2
Common Merganser86
Ruddy Duck1
Sharp-tailed Grouse3
Gray Partridge58
Ring-necked Pheasant11
Rock Pigeon (Feral Pigeon)1,450
Eurasian Collared-Dove2
American Coot1
Wilson’s Snipe1
Sharp-shinned Hawk4
Northern Goshawk6
Bald Eagle55
Rough-legged Hawk6
Great Horned Owl9
Snowy Owl1
Northern Saw-whet Owl1
Belted Kingfisher3
American Three-toed Woodpecker2
Downy Woodpecker264
Hairy Woodpecker41
Pileated Woodpecker4
Northern Flicker419
Merlin24
Gyrfalcon1
Northern Shrike8
Blue Jay138
Black-billed Magpie2,529
American Crow65
Common Raven649
Black-capped Chickadee2,218
Mountain Chickadee7
Boreal Chickadee7
Golden-crowned Kinglet2
Red-breasted Nuthatch199
White-breasted Nuthatch114
Brown Creeper17
American Dipper3
European Starling326
Townsend’s Solitaire18
American Robin82
Bohemian Waxwing15,676
Cedar Waxwing11
House Sparrow7,394
Pine Grosbeak79
House Finch2,015
Common Redpoll294
Hoary Redpoll2
White-winged Crossbill41
Pine Siskin50
American Tree Sparrow3
Fox Sparrow1
Dark-eyed Junco91
White-crowned Sparrow1
White-throated Sparrow9
Song Sparrow2
Other: Sp./Slash/Hybrid5

The four Count Week birds were Varied Thrush (a continuing backyard bird that failed to show on Count Day), a Killdeer seen in Griffiths Wood Park, a Prairie Falcon seen in the east end on December 18th, and a Greater White-fronted Goose reported and photographed on the Elbow River at Sandy Beach, also on December 18.

Some of the notable birds this year were the two swan species and the Ruddy Duck (all continuing at Carburn Park), the three Sharp-tailed Grouse seen in the Tsuut’ina Nation in the SW, a Wilson’s Snipe and Snowy Owl at Carburn, a White-crowned Sparrow in the Weaselhead, and a Gyrfalcon.

We also had one species that had never been reported in the 69 previous Calgary counts – a Fox Sparrow in the yard of one of our Feeder watchers. This brings our cumulative total of all species reported on Calgary CBC’s to 143.

Fox Sparrow
Fox Sparrow, Calgary. Photo by Bob Lefebvre

Matt Wallace, the count coordinator, has used the data to create some very interesting maps. (The maps below, and many more, will be posted on the Nature Calgary site when they are all complete.)

The Count Circle is divided into Sections, and here you can see how many species were found in each Section, and how the geography of the city influences species density.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Number of Species seen in each Section.

Due to the open water here, we get a lot of Mallards and Canada Geese overwintering. We also often have big flocks of Bohemian Waxwings in the winter. As a result, we tend to get really high numbers of total individual birds reported. This year, 71,468 individual birds were counted. This is one of the highest totals (and possibly the highest) of any of the CBC’s in Canada this year. It is far higher than the totals for the Edmonton or Toronto counts, for example.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Total number of individual birds seen in each Section.

Below is a map that shows all the Feeder Watcher addresses (the white dots). Some areas have quite a few, but we can definitely use more!

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Distribution of Feeder Watcher addresses within the Count Circle.
Black-capped Chickadee
A Black-capped Chickadee photographed by a Feeder Watcher, Calgary, December 19, 2021. Photo by Raman Brar

It’s interesting to look at some individual species. Bald Eagles:

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
The 55 Bald Eagles reported on the Calgary CBC.
Bald Eagle, Calgary, December 19, 2021. Photo by Arthur Wieckowski

The Eagles are concentrated along the lower stretches of the Bow River, where they feed mostly on sick or injured Mallards.

Here is the Mallard map:

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Mallards on the Calgary CBC.

Note how closely the Mallard distribution mirrors that of Bald Eagles. Mallards rest on the river, and go out to farmer’s fields to feed. There was also a huge concentration of 6,000 birds in the bit of open water at the northeast corner of Elliston Lake. Perhaps this is a safe place for them to rest, where there are fewer eagles around to prey on them than along the Bow.

The Canada Goose numbers were even higher than the Mallard numbers, with a similar distribution.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Canada Goose distribution on the Calgary CBC.

Black-billed Magpies are probably the most visible bird in Calgary, as they are found in all habitats and are very vocal. Many residents find them too aggressive and noisy to be likeable, but they are fascinating, beautiful, and intelligent birds. Like other urbanophiles (American Crows, House Sparrows, House Finches, and Rock Pigeons for example), they are doing very well in the urban environment.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Black-billed Magpie distribution.

The total number of Magpies reported on the CBC continues on a long-term upward climb:

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data

As in the Magpie example above, we can use the CBC data to produce graphs of long-term trends of the overall results and of the numbers of individual species. The next graph shows that the number of participants and party-hours has steadily increased over time, as has the total number of birds recorded, but the number of species seen each year has plateaued.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data

The 73 species we had this year is the third-highest total ever, but it is line with a pretty flat graph since the mid-1980’s:

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data

Below is an interesting graph that shows the number of Sharp-tailed Grouse reported. We had three this year, and three in 2016. But that’s it for the last twenty-plus years. They used to be found on Nose Hill and other areas at the city’s edge. But Nose Hill is now surrounded by development and the city has expanded to most edges of the Count Circle.

Calgary Christmas Bird Count data
Sharp-tailed Grouse, Tsuut’ina Nation, Calgary, December 21, 2021. Photo by Chris Durtnall

The results of the Calgary Count and several other nearby CBC’s were presented at the January meeting of Nature Calgary’s Bird Study Group. The meeting was recorded, and a replay will soon be available on the Nature Calgary site here.

The next Calgary CBC will be on Sunday December 18, 2022. If you haven’t taken part before and are interested in participating, either as a Field Observer or a Feeder Watcher, email me at birdscalgary[at]gmail.com.

Many thanks to Matt Wallace for all his hard work in organizing the count and producing the maps, to Lara Fitzpatrick, who created the spreadsheets that captured all the data, and to the photographers.

Here is a link to an article about the Calgary Count results on CBC news, including a video interview.

Be sure to subscribe to Matthew’s Citizen Blitz channel on YouTube to keep informed about upcoming citizen science events in Calgary – and to see more great nature videos!. You can also follow him on Twitter (atcitynatureyyc) and on Instagram (atcitizenblitz).

Mapping Tools for the 2020 Birding Challenge

By Andrew Hart

In the new year there will be an eBird challenge in Calgary in which participants try to see as many species as they can within the city limits. See this post for information about the challenge. To join, send your name, ebird name, and email address to Howard Heffler at: hheffler[at]shaw.ca. 

It is usually easy to tell if the spot where you are birding or have birded is inside the city limits, particularly if your location is an existing eBird HotSpot. But if you are near the city boundary and birding at a new location, it can be difficult to tell if the spot is inside or outside the city.

There are two mapping tools available to help with this aspect of the challenge. Each tool works on both a desktop and a tablet/smartphone.

Google Maps Tool

To access this on a desktop simply click on this link. This will bring up Google Maps, as below.

Calgary map

The YYC2020 area shows up as a lighter area bounded in blue.

To facilitate easier access in the future you can choose to bookmark this location in your browser.

To access on a smartphone/tablet the process is similar, and there are probably several ways to do it.  First ensure that you have the Google Maps app installed on your smartphone.

The way I have found most convenient is to generate an email with the link embedded.  You can then click on the link in the email to get the map, as below.  As with the desktop version you can then zoom in and out.  If you are in the field you can immediately check to see if you are in the city limits or not. If you are at home and checking to see if a location you have already birded at is inside the city limits, just compare your location from the eBird location map to this boundary map.

I have created an email subfolder YYC2020 on my phone with this (so far the only) email in it so that I can rapidly find the relevant email and click on it.

You can also set this up as a favourite in your smartphone browser.  I think this is more complicated, and how to do it depends on your actual smartphone and preferred browser.  There are  too many options to describe each one here.

Google Earth Tool

This requires that Google Earth Pro is installed on whichever device(s) you are going to use. It also requires setting up the City boundary as one of “My Places” in Google Earth.

The City boundary is defined in a Google Earth add in file named “Calgary City Boundary.kml”.  This is  available on the Nature Calgary YYC2020 webpage.

To access this tool on a desktop :

  • Download the kml file from the Nature Calgary website and save it in a convenient folder on your desktop. The file link is at the bottom of this page on Nature Calgary’s site.
  • Open Google Earth Pro
  • Use file open and navigate to the location where you saved the kml file
Calgary map
  • Open the kml file and you will see the Calgary City boundary saved under “temporary places” in the menu on the left.  You will also see a view showing the city limits overlaid with a brown colour.  The precise view you will get depends on exactly which layers you have switched on in the lower part of the left hand menu.
Calgary map
  • Next, to ensure you see this the next time you open Google Earth just drag the City Boundary.kml folder up in to the “My Places” folder. 
Calgary map
  • That completes the set-up.
  • Next time you open Google Earth simply click on the “Calgary City Boundary” link under My Places.

To set it up on a smart device the procedure is somewhat similar.

  • Install Google Earth Pro on your smart device
  • Install the kml file on your smart device
  • There are a number of ways to do this
  • If you already have the file on your desktop then save the file to a cloud location that is accessible to your smart device.  Typically iCloud or Onedrive.
  • Then download the file from the cloud location to your smartphone .
  • Now open Google Earth (Pro) and open the “Projects” drop down menu from the three bar menu at top left.
  • Press “open” and then “Import kml file”
  • Browse to where your kml file is located.  The iCloud screenshot below is one example
  • Tap on the relevant file
  • Bring it in to Google Earth (by tapping)
  • You will now see the city boundary as a brown overlay
  • If you want to check your own location then tap the three white dots at top right.
  • Next tap my location at the bottom, and you will see your location.
  • Note that unlike Google Maps Google Earth does not continuously update your location.  If you move and want to check again then you have to reset your location
  • If you do not have access to the file on a desktop then access the file on the Nature Calgary website from your smart device and save it to your smart device.  Then follow the same steps described above.

If you have any questions about the challenge contact:

  • Howard Heffler: hheffler[at]shaw.ca
  • Andrew Hart: andrewhart[at]shaw.ca
  • Bob Lefebvre: wbird7[at]gmail.com
  • Gavin McKinnon: gmckinnonbird[at]gmail.com

Birding Locations: Queen’s Park Cemetery

Posted by Bob Lefebvre

Northern Goshawk, Queen’s Park Cemetery, January 28, 2017. All photos by Tony LePrieur, all taken at Queen’s Park Cemetery..

One of the smaller and perhaps underappreciated birding locations in Calgary is Queen’s Park Cemetery, located just northwest of Confederation Park near 4th Street and 40 Avenue NW.

Queen’s Park Cemetery.

The cemetery contains a great number of spruce trees, so it attracts many of the species that prefer to feed in or on those trees, such as the winter finches. Many other species of birds and mammals can also be found there, due to the presence of a creek which stays open year-round. The creek runs along the north end, and is bordered by the thickest growth of trees in the cemetery, both coniferous and deciduous.

Detail, north end of Queen’s Park Cemetery, showing the trees which border the creek.

Within the cemetery parking is limited, and it is best to park outside and walk in, or pull completely off one of the roads to park while allowing other vehicles room to pass. Stay away from funeral processions and ceremonies, of course.

The best birding tends to be where the trees are thickest, though you can find Black-capped Chickadees and Red-Breasted Nuthatches wherever there are trees. Crossbills also tend to move around the park (and into the surrounding neighbourhoods). In some years, Brown Creepers and Golden-crowned Kinglets are very common. A stroll along the roads can usually turn up a few of these in the winter.

Brown Creeper, November 15, 2015.

Golden-crowned Kinglet, November 1, 2015.

Black-capped Chickadee, November 1, 2015.

Pine Siskin, October 25, 2015.

The water that flows through the north end draws many birds to drink, feed, and bathe.

Sharp-shinned Hawk, January 15, 2017.

Sharp-shinned Hawk, January 15, 2017.

Another Sharp-shinned Hawk (or the same one from ten months before?), March 6, 2016.

Sharp-shinned Hawk, March 6, 2016.

Queen’s Park is one of the best places to find crossbills. This year there are few in the city, but White-winged Crossbills have been reported there recently.

White-winged (left) and Red Crossbills, November 15, 2015.

Also November 15, 2015.

Common Redpoll, October 25, 2015.

 Dark-eyed Junco, October 25, 2015.

Black-billed Magpie and Great Horned Owl, October 25, 2015.

This may be the same young Northern Goshawk as in the first photo, taken a week earlier, January 22, 2017.

Queen’s Park Cemetery is home to several mammal species as well. Coyotes den there, and White-tailed Jackrabbits and Eastern Gray Squirrels are common.

White-tailed Jackrabbit, December 18, 2016.

White-tailed Jackrabbit, January 22, 2017.

Coyote, January 15, 2017.

So far, eighty-two bird species have been reported here on eBird. That is a pretty good total for a park that isn’t on the river. Sightings in the past week include Rough-legged Hawk, Golden-crowned Kinglet, Brown Creeper, White-winged Crossbill, and Pine Siskin. Get out and add to the total!