Monday, 27 April 2026

[cobirds] Osprey Nesting Platform Erection

Tomorrow, starting at about 9 am,  I'm having an Osprey platform erected on my property in Weld county directly across from the south shore of Highland Lake. People are welcome to come and watch and take photos if you like.

My address is 16778 County Road 5, Mead, CO 80542. I'm in Weld county just west of Mead and northeast of Longmont.

Pauli Smith

[cobirds] Mexican Ducks in summer

Hi CoBirders!

Perhaps there are few more dreaded phenomena in Colorado birding than late summer Anas duck identification. Mallards molt into their "alternate" plumage (it's still termed "alternate", even though the birds are dull) from roughly June-October, and during those months every pond in the state is teeming with brown-bodied, yellow-billed ducks that may or may not contain a smidgen of diazi DNA. I've been hearing about this problem for a while now (looking at you, Ted), and took the opportunity of a freeform statistics final project to do some analysis on the wonderful eBird data that you all have contributed to! I found that, despite no (known) seasonal movements in Mexican Ducks, they are reported almost half as often in late summer than they are elsewhere in the year. This pattern is extremely strong (p < 0.0001), holds true for all four states where MEDU are regular in the ABA (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorful Colorado), and is really quite striking (check out the boxplots and line chart at the bottom of this email for a visualization). 

Which brings me to the (slightly) chastising part of this email: male and female Mexican Ducks are eminently identifiable year-round - they look dramatically different from any worn or molting Mallard you could imagine. So why are we not finding them? The answer is that birders are lazy! (And yes, I'm including myself in that statement). We see a flock of five dozen Anas drifting through the heat haze at John Martin Reservoir in August and plop them on the eBird list as Mallard, but in December that one chocolate brown male with a yellow bill really pops, and bam - Bent County pulls another MEDU. (By the way, the disparity in reports of male and female Mexican Ducks must be wild - somebody wanna check that out? And I don't even want to think about the hybrids in summer...) Since Mexican Ducks aren't known to undertake seasonal movements, they should be out there, ready and waiting to be found by the first birder (that's you!) to take a closer look. (And if they do turn out to migrate or disperse in some way, more rigorous eBird data could help confirm that!). In sum - Mexican Ducks being overlooked in summer/fall is a real problem for eBird data, and the solution is wonderfully simple: just look for them!

Good birding!

Owen
Screenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.40.42 PM.pngScreenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.22.35 PM.png



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Re: [cobirds] Mexican Ducks in summer

Owen - from a review perspective this is a rather risky approach. Youth and exuberance can often confuse laziness with wisdom and caution. 

I have a completely different perspective from Montezuma County where MEDU are more abundant in our waterways than anywhere else in Colorado: the dip in the graph reflects careful birders and a solid, accountable review team. Not the other way around. Wise summertime submissions of MEDU/MALL easily fill the dip in the graph. 

And you did not mention the most problematic ID issue with local summertime Anas; young male MALL, not eclipse MALL, are typically quite dark and give a strong vibe for the MEDU-complex. Young male MALL are the primary confusion issue with summertime MEDU reports, not eclipse MALL. And both young and eclipse MALL are confusion issues for hybrids. Yes an experienced birder can separate them, but not usually as carefully as needed in a distant scope view.

A message from a review perspective to all observers is to always positively identity what you can, get the best documentation possible, and use extra caution when reporting MEDU and MEDUxMALL during non-breeding season. 

Mike Thompson 


On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 15:48 Owen Robertson <owen.k.robertson@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi CoBirders!

Perhaps there are few more dreaded phenomena in Colorado birding than late summer Anas duck identification. Mallards molt into their "alternate" plumage (it's still termed "alternate", even though the birds are dull) from roughly June-October, and during those months every pond in the state is teeming with brown-bodied, yellow-billed ducks that may or may not contain a smidgen of diazi DNA. I've been hearing about this problem for a while now (looking at you, Ted), and took the opportunity of a freeform statistics final project to do some analysis on the wonderful eBird data that you all have contributed to! I found that, despite no (known) seasonal movements in Mexican Ducks, they are reported almost half as often in late summer than they are elsewhere in the year. This pattern is extremely strong (p < 0.0001), holds true for all four states where MEDU are regular in the ABA (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorful Colorado), and is really quite striking (check out the boxplots and line chart at the bottom of this email for a visualization). 

Which brings me to the (slightly) chastising part of this email: male and female Mexican Ducks are eminently identifiable year-round - they look dramatically different from any worn or molting Mallard you could imagine. So why are we not finding them? The answer is that birders are lazy! (And yes, I'm including myself in that statement). We see a flock of five dozen Anas drifting through the heat haze at John Martin Reservoir in August and plop them on the eBird list as Mallard, but in December that one chocolate brown male with a yellow bill really pops, and bam - Bent County pulls another MEDU. (By the way, the disparity in reports of male and female Mexican Ducks must be wild - somebody wanna check that out? And I don't even want to think about the hybrids in summer...) Since Mexican Ducks aren't known to undertake seasonal movements, they should be out there, ready and waiting to be found by the first birder (that's you!) to take a closer look. (And if they do turn out to migrate or disperse in some way, more rigorous eBird data could help confirm that!). In sum - Mexican Ducks being overlooked in summer/fall is a real problem for eBird data, and the solution is wonderfully simple: just look for them!

Good birding!

Owen
Screenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.40.42 PM.pngScreenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.22.35 PM.png



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[cobirds] Chico Basin Ranch Banding Station 4/27/2026 first day

Hi all!
Glad to be back in Colorado! The banding station was only operated 2.5 hours after we set up nets. Interesting when the wind picked up from the north @ 11:00,  the birds seemed to drop into the olive grove around noon. It was as if they were working their way north and the wind stopped them in their flight. This afternoon there was lots of Hermit Thrushes, White-crowned Sparrows and more Wilson's and Yellow-rumped Warblers everywhere. Hoping tomorrow will be a good day!

The first day we banded 12 new birds and caught a returning American Robin Male that was banded as an adult in spring of 2022. This bird is at least 7 years old! The bird was banded as an adult in 2022 so it was at least in its third year of life. Good for him!
Eight new species were banded including two warbler species Orange-crowned and Myrtle subspecies of Yellow-rumped Warblers.

12 New Birds Banded
Orange-crowned Warbler- 1
Myrtle (Yellow-rumped) Warbler -1
Yellow-rumped Warbler intergrade-1 -Had mostly Myrtle charatewististics but had some yellow wash on the throat and the facial markings were not as distinct as would be on a Myrtle subspecies.
Northern House Wren- 1
Lincoln Sparrow- 1
Gambel's White-crowned Sparrow- 3
American Robin- 2
Blue Jay- 2

1 Returning bird from spring 2022
American Robin

Remember if you want to bird or visit the ranch please register on the Aiken Website www.aikenaudubon.com. Stop by the banding station to share your sightings. I would love to hear what you have seen.

Have a good birding day,

Julie Shieldcastle
Chico Basin Ranch Bander
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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Re: [cobirds] Mexican Ducks in summer

Thanks Owen - With the limitations outlined below, experienced and inexperienced birders alike cannot reliably distinguish MEDU and hybrids from deceptive MALL without excellent looks and documentation. And experienced birders will more frequently report MEDU/MALL from May through October, when MALL plumage deteriorates.

I can think of several good reasons for a dip in MEDU reports that are not due to lack of effort:
  1. The plumage discussion mentioned below; leading to cautious reporting.
  2. The uncertainty of Mottled Duck in the mix of eastern ducks
  3. Harsh, high-angle spring and summer light producing miserable shimmer in long distance views. Compared with low-angle fall and winter light, which is generally more favorable in the scope.
  4. Seasonal behavior patterns of dabblers. It is far more feasible to find a MEDU outlier in a flock of dabblers concentrated in a one-acre feedlot pond which may be the only unfrozen water for miles. Contrasted with the scattered, widespread nature of dabblers from May-October.
  5. MEDU are expanding their range northward, making a comparison with long term fixed populations in AZ and TX moot. We do not have a handle on their seasonal movement but which does seem to resemble seasonal frequeny of MALL. The following graphs illustrate this point:
Check out the statewide frequency graph for MALL and how it resembles the same patterns as MEDU and MEUDxMALL.
image.png
image.png
image.png

Now check out MEDU/MALL:
image.png

The peak frequency of MEDU/MALL reports occurs during the lull of MEDU and MEDUxMALL reports - mas o menos. From my perspective, that's awesome hand-in-glove data. It strikes me that collectively, we aren't really missing anything. MEDU researches using our data will be aware of reporting limitations during nonbreeding season and can connect the dots on either side.

With all that said, I fully support encouraging "well-documented and unimpeachable Mexican Duck records" around the clock. Amen to that. The best way to do that in my mind is to educate folks on ID points and the data will fall into place naturally. 

Thank you for bringing up the issue, it's very interesting.

Mike


On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 6:08 PM Owen Robertson <owen.k.robertson@gmail.com> wrote:


Mike,


Thanks for your response. I want to clarify that I’m not in favor of reckless/undocumented Mexican Duck reports - such a program would not improve this gap in data I’m describing. I’m simply saying that in addition to overreporting of MEDU, underreporting (as a result of a lack of observer effort) is perhaps an even greater problem. There will always be Anas ducks that trip us up (the Waneka bird last year is a great example) no matter how well-photographed they are, or how many experienced observers chase them, but such birds will be problematic regardless of season. Conversely, the many well-documented and unimpeachable Mexican Duck records that Colorado possesses should be acceptable as such in June just as much as in January. And similarly, a dubious Mexican Duck in January should not be accepted simply because it is January - Mallard molt timing is variable, and odd plumages can occur at any time of year. I firmly believe that the kind of data gap we see in late summer is fixable - perhaps not to the levels of certainty that we have about MEDU in other times of year, but it is not unimprovable. This improvement, in my opinion, can most strongly begin with observers taking the time to thoroughly check Anas flocks in summer, documenting oddballs, and reporting them - either as MEDU, a hybrid, or as MEDU/MALL (or, perhaps, Anas sp.). If errors are made in identification, they can be corrected, but a lack of effort is not so easy to remedy. If experienced observers can separate MEDU reliably (albeit with care) from odd Mallards, then our goal should be to get birders out there checking duck flocks and learning about the ID, rather than giving up the ghost from the start. Perhaps we’re in total agreement about that, but treating an ID like something that cannot be done, or is reserved for those with decades of experience, is (in my opinion) deeply harmful, both to the Colorado birding community and to the eBird data we’re both striving to improve.


Best,


Owen




On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 6:11 PM Mike Thompson <mt@reardonsteel.us> wrote:
Owen - from a review perspective this is a rather risky approach. Youth and exuberance can often confuse laziness with wisdom and caution. 

I have a completely different perspective from Montezuma County where MEDU are more abundant in our waterways than anywhere else in Colorado: the dip in the graph reflects careful birders and a solid, accountable review team. Not the other way around. Wise summertime submissions of MEDU/MALL easily fill the dip in the graph. 

And you did not mention the most problematic ID issue with local summertime Anas; young male MALL, not eclipse MALL, are typically quite dark and give a strong vibe for the MEDU-complex. Young male MALL are the primary confusion issue with summertime MEDU reports, not eclipse MALL. And both young and eclipse MALL are confusion issues for hybrids. Yes an experienced birder can separate them, but not usually as carefully as needed in a distant scope view.

A message from a review perspective to all observers is to always positively identity what you can, get the best documentation possible, and use extra caution when reporting MEDU and MEDUxMALL during non-breeding season. 

Mike Thompson 


On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 15:48 Owen Robertson <owen.k.robertson@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi CoBirders!

Perhaps there are few more dreaded phenomena in Colorado birding than late summer Anas duck identification. Mallards molt into their "alternate" plumage (it's still termed "alternate", even though the birds are dull) from roughly June-October, and during those months every pond in the state is teeming with brown-bodied, yellow-billed ducks that may or may not contain a smidgen of diazi DNA. I've been hearing about this problem for a while now (looking at you, Ted), and took the opportunity of a freeform statistics final project to do some analysis on the wonderful eBird data that you all have contributed to! I found that, despite no (known) seasonal movements in Mexican Ducks, they are reported almost half as often in late summer than they are elsewhere in the year. This pattern is extremely strong (p < 0.0001), holds true for all four states where MEDU are regular in the ABA (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorful Colorado), and is really quite striking (check out the boxplots and line chart at the bottom of this email for a visualization). 

Which brings me to the (slightly) chastising part of this email: male and female Mexican Ducks are eminently identifiable year-round - they look dramatically different from any worn or molting Mallard you could imagine. So why are we not finding them? The answer is that birders are lazy! (And yes, I'm including myself in that statement). We see a flock of five dozen Anas drifting through the heat haze at John Martin Reservoir in August and plop them on the eBird list as Mallard, but in December that one chocolate brown male with a yellow bill really pops, and bam - Bent County pulls another MEDU. (By the way, the disparity in reports of male and female Mexican Ducks must be wild - somebody wanna check that out? And I don't even want to think about the hybrids in summer...) Since Mexican Ducks aren't known to undertake seasonal movements, they should be out there, ready and waiting to be found by the first birder (that's you!) to take a closer look. (And if they do turn out to migrate or disperse in some way, more rigorous eBird data could help confirm that!). In sum - Mexican Ducks being overlooked in summer/fall is a real problem for eBird data, and the solution is wonderfully simple: just look for them!

Good birding!

Owen
Screenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.40.42 PM.pngScreenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.22.35 PM.png



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Re: [cobirds] Mexican Ducks in summer


Mike,


Thanks for your response. I want to clarify that I’m not in favor of reckless/undocumented Mexican Duck reports - such a program would not improve this gap in data I’m describing. I’m simply saying that in addition to overreporting of MEDU, underreporting (as a result of a lack of observer effort) is perhaps an even greater problem. There will always be Anas ducks that trip us up (the Waneka bird last year is a great example) no matter how well-photographed they are, or how many experienced observers chase them, but such birds will be problematic regardless of season. Conversely, the many well-documented and unimpeachable Mexican Duck records that Colorado possesses should be acceptable as such in June just as much as in January. And similarly, a dubious Mexican Duck in January should not be accepted simply because it is January - Mallard molt timing is variable, and odd plumages can occur at any time of year. I firmly believe that the kind of data gap we see in late summer is fixable - perhaps not to the levels of certainty that we have about MEDU in other times of year, but it is not unimprovable. This improvement, in my opinion, can most strongly begin with observers taking the time to thoroughly check Anas flocks in summer, documenting oddballs, and reporting them - either as MEDU, a hybrid, or as MEDU/MALL (or, perhaps, Anas sp.). If errors are made in identification, they can be corrected, but a lack of effort is not so easy to remedy. If experienced observers can separate MEDU reliably (albeit with care) from odd Mallards, then our goal should be to get birders out there checking duck flocks and learning about the ID, rather than giving up the ghost from the start. Perhaps we’re in total agreement about that, but treating an ID like something that cannot be done, or is reserved for those with decades of experience, is (in my opinion) deeply harmful, both to the Colorado birding community and to the eBird data we’re both striving to improve.


Best,


Owen




On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 6:11 PM Mike Thompson <mt@reardonsteel.us> wrote:
Owen - from a review perspective this is a rather risky approach. Youth and exuberance can often confuse laziness with wisdom and caution. 

I have a completely different perspective from Montezuma County where MEDU are more abundant in our waterways than anywhere else in Colorado: the dip in the graph reflects careful birders and a solid, accountable review team. Not the other way around. Wise summertime submissions of MEDU/MALL easily fill the dip in the graph. 

And you did not mention the most problematic ID issue with local summertime Anas; young male MALL, not eclipse MALL, are typically quite dark and give a strong vibe for the MEDU-complex. Young male MALL are the primary confusion issue with summertime MEDU reports, not eclipse MALL. And both young and eclipse MALL are confusion issues for hybrids. Yes an experienced birder can separate them, but not usually as carefully as needed in a distant scope view.

A message from a review perspective to all observers is to always positively identity what you can, get the best documentation possible, and use extra caution when reporting MEDU and MEDUxMALL during non-breeding season. 

Mike Thompson 


On Mon, Apr 27, 2026 at 15:48 Owen Robertson <owen.k.robertson@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi CoBirders!

Perhaps there are few more dreaded phenomena in Colorado birding than late summer Anas duck identification. Mallards molt into their "alternate" plumage (it's still termed "alternate", even though the birds are dull) from roughly June-October, and during those months every pond in the state is teeming with brown-bodied, yellow-billed ducks that may or may not contain a smidgen of diazi DNA. I've been hearing about this problem for a while now (looking at you, Ted), and took the opportunity of a freeform statistics final project to do some analysis on the wonderful eBird data that you all have contributed to! I found that, despite no (known) seasonal movements in Mexican Ducks, they are reported almost half as often in late summer than they are elsewhere in the year. This pattern is extremely strong (p < 0.0001), holds true for all four states where MEDU are regular in the ABA (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorful Colorado), and is really quite striking (check out the boxplots and line chart at the bottom of this email for a visualization). 

Which brings me to the (slightly) chastising part of this email: male and female Mexican Ducks are eminently identifiable year-round - they look dramatically different from any worn or molting Mallard you could imagine. So why are we not finding them? The answer is that birders are lazy! (And yes, I'm including myself in that statement). We see a flock of five dozen Anas drifting through the heat haze at John Martin Reservoir in August and plop them on the eBird list as Mallard, but in December that one chocolate brown male with a yellow bill really pops, and bam - Bent County pulls another MEDU. (By the way, the disparity in reports of male and female Mexican Ducks must be wild - somebody wanna check that out? And I don't even want to think about the hybrids in summer...) Since Mexican Ducks aren't known to undertake seasonal movements, they should be out there, ready and waiting to be found by the first birder (that's you!) to take a closer look. (And if they do turn out to migrate or disperse in some way, more rigorous eBird data could help confirm that!). In sum - Mexican Ducks being overlooked in summer/fall is a real problem for eBird data, and the solution is wonderfully simple: just look for them!

Good birding!

Owen
Screenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.40.42 PM.pngScreenshot 2026-04-27 at 5.22.35 PM.png



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[cobirds] Last appeal to adopt a route for the Breeding Bird Survey

Hi CoBirders,

I posted here a couple of times earlier this season to invite new volunteers to adopt a survey route for the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS). The survey season is just a month away, and it is not too late to get involved. Colorado hosts 136 BBS survey routes distributed all across the state. There are currently just eight Colorado routes are open for a new volunteer surveyor (see list below). Five of these are on the Eastern Plains, where our grassland bird populations are undergoing notable declines. It would be wonderful to have more of these routes surveyed to help provide info on population changes there. And there are three routes in south-central Colorado needing coverage. 

Requirements for participation are: (1) access to transportation to complete a survey, (2) good hearing and eyesight, and (3) the ability to identify the breeding birds in the area by sight and sound. Knowledge of bird songs and calls is extremely important, because most birds counted on the surveys are detected by sound. A BBS survey requires about five hours to complete, plus travel to and from the route location.

Can you volunteer to adopt a survey route? Contact me directly if you are interested in a route or have questions.

David Suddjian, Littleton
BBS Colorado Coordinator

Route # Route Name County Location
17-43 Gordon Creek Washington
17-44 Bethune Kit Carson
17-55 Alamosa Conejos, Alamosa
17-153 Rio Grand Res Mineral, Hinsdale
17-214 Kirk Kit Carson
17-314 Burlington Kit Carson, Yuma
17-321 Sheridan Lake Kiowa, Prowers
17-324 South Fork Rio Grande

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