A Northwoods Almanac for 1/5 – 18, 2018
by John Bates
Trumpeter Swan 24Y
A
handful of trumpeter swans usually winter-over on the Manitowish River, and
this year it appears to be a small family of four: two adults and two cygnets.
During the Manitowish Waters Christmas Bird Count on 12/16, Mark Westphal took
a picture of this group just below Benson Lake, and one of the adult swans was
banded #24Y. I contacted the DNR to get the backstory on this bird and learned
that 24Y was banded as a cygnet on 9/6/2007 in Price County, so it’s 10 years
old.
photo by Mark Westphal |
It’s
unclear what 24Y’s gender might be – males are somewhat larger and heavier than
females, but otherwise look exactly alike (the only way to be certain is to
examine the bird’s vent, which is not exactly an option). It’s also unknown if
24Y has been a successful parent up to now, but trumpeters often begin breeding
at the age of three, so the two cygnets could be 24Y’s seventh brood.
Trumpeters usually mate for life, and they’re long-lived – 20 to 30 years in
the wild. So, 24Y may have another ten or more years of parenting ahead of him or
her. Currently, trumpeter swan #82K,
banded in Wisconsin, is the oldest banded swan in North America, and is now 27
years old.
Trumpeters
are the largest native North American waterfowl, weighing between 21 and 30
pounds and with a winspan over seven feet. Thus, they need a lot to eat during
the winter, and I’m always impressed that they can find enough food on the few
open sections of the Manitowish River. They eat a wide assortment of aquatic
vegetation (arrowheads, pondweeds, sedges, pickerelweed, rushes, smartweed,
cattails, bulrushes, milfoils, wild celery, wild rice, algae – you name it).
But given that most aquatic plants die-back in the fall, the swans likely
survive mostly on tubers that they dig up from the sediments.
The
literature says a thick layer of down protects them in subzero temperatures,
but as a human, I find it almost unimaginable that anything can stay warm
swimming around in -20 degree temperatures.
Few
birds exhibit the grace and beauty of a trumpeter swan, and what a gift that they
share their beauty with us all winter!
Latest Update on Snowy Owl Irruption
According to Ryan Brady,
bird monitoring coordinator for the DNR, as of 12/26 “approximately 202
individual snowy owls (give or take a bunch) have been detected, which far exceeds
those found in 2016-17 or '15-16, but is in line with the 210 and 156 found by
this date in 2014-15 and 2013-14, respectively. Only 11 of our 72 counties lack
reports this year . . . the influx of incoming birds does appear to be slowing
somewhat, as might be expected this time of year. Juveniles still
dominate, although several apparent adult males were photographed as well in
recent weeks. Finally, vehicle collisions remain a significant source of
mortality, for many of these birds are inexperienced hunters and unfamiliar
with a developed landscape.”
It
appears it’s not hunger that produces these mega-flights, but the opposite – an
amazing abundance of summer food. Large populations of lemmings, voles,
ptarmigan and other prey during the summer breeding season led to large
clutches of owl eggs and excellent survival of the chicks. But once winter
came and prey numbers dwindled, the young had no choice but to migrate south –
too many mouths for too little food.
Sightings – Pine Grosbeaks, Northern
Shrikes
A few days before
Christmas, Paul Strong in Hazelhurst reported seeing both a juvenile and an adult
shrike chasing birds at his feeders. A week later Paul also observed a hoary redpoll in a mixed flock of common
redpolls and pine siskins.
Mary
and I have 12 pine grosbeaks visiting our feeders as of 1/1/18. These
exceptionally pretty and vocal birds are circumboreal, nesting and usually
wintering in subarctic and boreal forests from Siberia in eastern Asia to
Scandinavia and, in North America, from eastern Canada to western Alaska. They migrate south only in winters triggered
by limitations in their foods. We didn’t see any the last two years at our
feeders, but now every morning, we’re treated to breakfast with a flock of pine
grosbeaks as companions.
pine grosbeak range map |
They
eat our sunflower seeds, but we’ve watched them many times eating crabapples
and highbush cranberries, too. In wilder winter circumstances than our back
yard, they feed primarily on a variety of buds and the seeds of mountain ash,
box elder, and ash.
Their
short and heavy conical bills allow them to nip off buds and the growing tips
of conifer branches, and to crush seeds.
male pine grosbeak photo by author |
female pine grosbeak photo by author |
Blue Moons
This
year, January offers us two full moons, one that already occurred on 1/1 and
the other on 1/31. Given that full moons occur every 29.5 days, February won’t
have a full moon, but will be followed in March by two full moons on the 1st
and 31st.
The
last time two blue moons happened in the same year was 1999, an event that
occurs every 19 years (remember to look for them in 2037)!
January's blue moon on the 31st will also feature a total
lunar eclipse, the only lunar or solar eclipse over Wisconsin this year. Northwoods
viewers will be able to see it early in the morning very low in the western
sky. The eclipse will start at 5:48 a.m. and totality will begin at 6:51.
Unfortunately, moonset and sunrise occur only 33 minutes later, so much of the
eclipse will be washed out in the morning light.
Also of note,
both of the January full moons are “supermoons,” appearing about 7% bigger
than normal. And because the moon will turn a reddish-orange color, a
total lunar eclipse is often called a blood moon. So, it will be a full blue
supermoon eclipse.
The “blue” in a
blue moon comes to us from over 400 years ago when the phrase “once in a blue
moon” was said to indicate how rare an event might be. But in 1883, the moon
did appear blue when the Indonesian volcano Krakatoa exploded and its dust
turned sunsets green and the moon blue all around the world for nearly two
years. And in 1951, huge fires in western Canada billowed out so much smoke
that the moon turned bluish in northeastern America.
So, a blue moon
indicates something rare in general, and something specifically rare
astronomically. But it also has come to mean the second full moon in a month,
the apparent result of an obscure article in Sky and Telescope magazine in 1946 and then an NPR program in 1980
where that article was read aloud. So, the term is part folklore, part historical
fact, and part just something that has caught on through media use.
Radiative Balance
Why
isn’t the coldest day of the year on winter solstice when we have the least
amount of light? And why do average winter temperatures continue to fall until
late January? Well, it’s all about the earth’s energy balance. So far this
winter, the earth has been radiating more energy back into space each day than
it receives from the sun, so we’re still losing heat and getting colder. This
is because over the course of the year, the earth’s land surfaces, oceans, and
atmosphere absorbed an immense amount of energy which is still being radiated
back to space. We’ll continue
radiating out more heat than we receive until late January when the “radiative
balance” will be reached, and we then begin receiving more energy than we lose.
Temperatures, on average, then will slowly begin to rise.
Quaking Aspen – Winter PHS
Quaking aspens are the most common trees in the Northern
Highlands area, but they also grow out west at elevations as high as 10,000
feet and thrive in cooler climates far to our north. Like other true cold
weather species, quaking aspen (or “popple”) has evolved ways to adapt to
intense winter conditions, including an ability to photosynthesize through its inner
bark. In winter, when other
deciduous trees are mostly dormant, quaking aspens can keep producing sugars. Trees
growing in more northern latitudes tend to have greener bark with higher
chlorophyll levels, a character of quaking aspens, as an adaptation to cold
winter temperatures.
quaking aspen range map |
Most
northern trees are conifers, holding tight onto their leaves (needles in this
case) as a means of withstanding long winters and short summers. Quaking aspens
are one of the very few deciduous trees to thrive in the otherwise mainly
evergreen northern environment, and it’s thought that their ability to photosynthesize
through their bark accounts in part for their ability to compete.
Celestial Events
If you’re looking for planets in
January, you have to get up before dawn – none are visible at the easier
viewing time after sunset. Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn are all visible in the
east-southeast before first light. On 1/6, look before sunrise for Mars just
below Jupiter. Before dawn on 1/11, look for both Jupiter and Mars to be four
degrees south of the waning crescent moon. And also before dawn on 1/15, Saturn
will be two degrees south of the crescent moon.
On 1/8, the sun rises one minute
earlier for the first time since June 10, 2017. And by 1/13, we’ll reach 9
hours of daylight – now our days are growing longer by two minutes every day.
New moon on 1/16.
Thought for the Week
“Winter comes a shimmer of hoarfrost, a mist of snowflakes from a
scudding cloud a roaring wind with a barbed-wire edge. It comes as a fragile
film of ice needles on the pasture pond or woodland brook. It comes in the
brittle cold silence of night, the sun-dazzle or sullen overcast of day, echo
of those ages when ice locked up the northern hemisphere 10,000 years at a
time, reminder that the long cold and the deep ice can come again . . . And yet
winter blankets the tender root and bulb, relaxes the fevered urgency of growth
and fruition, brings rest and renewal, provides a time for summaries. It is the
essential pause in the throbbing of the great, eternal rhythms of life.” Hal
Borland, Seasons
Please share
your outdoor sightings and thoughts: call 715-476-2828, e-mail at manitowish@centurytel.net, snail-mail at 4245N State Highway 47,
Mercer, WI, or see my blog at www.manitowishriver.blogspot.com.
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