ECOC Checklist -
Introduction - Word Document (see below)
ECOC Checklist -
Birds of Essex County -
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ECOC Checklist -
Accidentals -
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The ECOC is dedicated to keeping a current Essex
County checklist online from now on for the convenience of all
birders, both local and visiting. The last formal revision of the
checklist was the 6th edition, printed in 1988. A thorough review and
overhaul, with new species added and seasonal abundance updated based
on the monthly sightings published in Bird Observer, has been underway
for several years and should be online and perhaps printed as well
sometime in 2008. The 1988 list is too outdated to place online; what
you see here is a partial revision completed in 2002. It is not up to
date but is more current than the 1988 list and will suffice until the
7th edition is completed. Your comments on the list, including
content, format, and ease of use, are welcome and may be directed to
the
webmaster.
Field List of the Birds of Essex
County, Massachusetts
Seventh Edition, 2002
This seventh edition of the Field List is an attempt to update and
continue to fully represent the diversity of birds visiting or
residing in Essex County, Massachusetts. Every effort has been made to
reflect, as accurately as possible, the occurrence of birds during any
given week of the year by means of bar graphs. Your critique and your
contributions are welcome for the benefit of future editions. It is
planned to keep this list up to date electronically so that a current
version is always available on a website.
The process to list the birds of Essex County began with Dr. Charles
Wendell Townsend, who published the first annotated list, The Birds of
Essex County, Massachusetts, in book form in 1905, and a supplement
thereto in 1920. It was from these lists that S. Gilbert Emilio and
Arthur P. Stubbs began to develop pocket-sized field lists to be
published by the Essex County Ornithological Club. The first came out
in 1921, with subsequent revisions by Gil Emilio up to 1940. In 1952,
Stuart Harris edited the fourth edition. Sarah P. Ingalls, then
Curator of Natural History at the Peabody Museum in Salem (now the
Peabody-Essex Museum), continued the tradition with the fifth edition
in 1975. The sixth edition, put together by several individuals in
1988, was a major reformatting and depended more heavily on documented
sight records, whereas the older lists were based primarily on
specimens.
Since the sixth edition, over 20 new species have been documented in
the county. In addition, the taxonomic order and nomenclature of the
American Ornithologists’ Union (AOU) has changed significantly, based
on both field studies and genetic research. In this seventh edition we
have incorporated these changes--mainly splits--but have dropped
escaped birds that may have acclimated but have yet to breed in the
wild within the county. These are Monk Parakeet [are we deleting this
one or not?], Canary-winged Parakeet, and European Goldfinch. Whooper
Swan, on the other hand, has escaped into the wild, has bred since
1996, and is included on the list as an introduced species.
In the sixth edition 398 species were listed: 316 in the regular list
and 82 in the appendix (the accidental species). The list now totals
418 species [number needs to be checked] that have been collected or
reliably reported in the county. Of these, 335 species [check number]
have been recorded more than ten times and are displayed in chart form
on the regular list with abundance codes for the various seasons (see
below). An additional 83 "accidental" species [check number] are again
listed in an appendix, with dates and locations of the few documented
specimens or sight records.
"Brewster’s" and "Lawrence’s" Warblers are not included in the list as
they are hybrids and not species. With regard to subspecies, many
(e.g., “Oregon” Junco and several races of Canada Goose, some of which
may eventually be recognized by the AOU as full species) deserve to be
treated in the list, but space limitations make this difficult and the
current pace of taxonomic changes makes it unwise in a list that is
updated every decade or two. Any taxonomic revisions will of course be
accounted for in the next edition of this Field List.
New species for the county since 1988, or which were overlooked in the
sixth edition, are Anhinga, Little Egret, Ross’s Goose [add to
appendix or not?], Cinnamon Teal, Mississippi Kite, Pacific Golden
Plover, Terek Sandpiper, Red-necked Stint, Little Stint, California
Gull, Bridled Tern, Ancient Murrelet, , Townsend's Solitaire, Spotted
Towhee, MacGillivray’s Warbler, Townsend’s Warbler, Smith's Longspur,
Painted Bunting, Brewer's Blackbird, Boat-tailed/Great-tailed Grackle,
and Brambling. In addition, many more species have been seen enough
times now to elevate them from the appendix to the regular list:
Pacific Loon, Eared Grebe, Western Grebe, Yellow Rail, Sandhill Crane,
American Oystercatcher, Franklin's Gull, Mew Gull, Atlantic Puffin,
Fish Crow, Common Raven, Northern Wheatear, Varied Thrush, Western
Tanager, Lark Bunting, and Hoary Redpoll. (Black-backed Woodpecker has
been reported more than ten times, but most sightings are very old,
and the authors felt that placing it in the main list would give a
false sense that it is regularly found. Thus it remains in the
appendix as an accidental. For the same reason, Western Meadowlark was
actually removed from the main list and returned to the appendix.)
Due to taxonomic splits, Bicknell’s Thrush, Nelson’s Sharp-tailed
Sparrow, and Bullock’s Oriole are separated from Gray-cheeked Thrush,
Saltmarsh Sharp-tailed Sparrow, and Baltimore Oriole, respectively.
However, because records of the two thrushes are generally inseparable
and the two species very difficult to distinguish, they are treated,
for the time being, as one entry in the list, “Bicknell’s/Gray-cheeked
Thrush.” The Eskimo Curlew remains on the list; it may well be
extinct, but there is still hope that it isn’t. (Long-extinct species
have not been included on the list since Townsend's time.) Finally,
the re-introduction of the Wild Turkey in Essex County beginning in
1988 has been a phenomenal success, and the species is a welcome
addition to the list following its extirpation two centuries ago.
There has been a growing dependence on sight records to establish
occurrence over the last few decades. Sight records of rare birds
listed here were reported in the journal Bird Observer, in Veit and
Petersen’s Birds of Massachusetts (1993), or in Griscom and Snyder's
The Birds of Massachusetts: An Annotated and Revised Check List
(1955). The nomenclature and taxonomic order follow the seventh
edition of the AOU’s Check-list of North American Birds (1998).
The chart format is repeated from earlier editions of the Field List
and has been adapted to facilitate future updates. The opposite pages
with columns for keeping lists, however, have been deleted to save
space, as the Field List is rarely used to keep daily records. Each
month is divided into quarters to represent the four weeks, with the
last week extending through the end of the month. The bar character
designates occurrence and relative abundance of the species for that
particular week of the year. We have tried to accurately represent
your potential for seeing a given species as a major criterion in
defining the codes. The codes are adapted from Peter Vickery’s
“Annotated Checklist of Maine Birds” (1978), but were redefined by the
authors of this Field List.
Thick bar: Common to abundant; large numbers reported every year. An
easy species to find in the proper habitat. For breeding birds: during
the breeding season, present in such numbers that one may find them
easily in the proper habitat, and the habitat itself is widespread.
Medium bar: Uncommon; small numbers reported every year. Less easy to
find, but regular in the proper habitat. For breeding birds: during
the breeding season one may find a few in the correct habitat, or a
concentration of birds in only a few particular localities where the
habitat is limited or the species is on or near the edge of its
breeding range.
Thin bar: Rare, averaging only one or very few reports per year,
whether breeding or not. Not necessarily reported every year and
sometimes unreported for several years in a row.
The numerals "1" and "2" in place of a bar signify that only one or
two reports exist for that week of the year. These are used primarily
when sightings occur at odd times, not contiguous with the normal
period of a species' presence. The symbol "+" is substituted for the
bar for irruptive species (Bohemian Waxwing and winter finches) whose
numbers can vary wildly from year to year, and for which bars
indicating abundance have little meaning. Breeding species are
boldfaced, and annotated with parentheses ( ) along the bar graph to
indicate the known period between egg-laying and young fledging. These
breeding chronologies are not always well known and can be improved
with more nesting-season observations and reports.
A code has been added next to the names of those species listed by the
Massachusetts Natural Heritage Program of the Division of Fisheries
and Wildlife as endangered (e), threatened (t), or of special concern
(sc) in the state. Sightings of these birds should be reported,
particularly during the nesting season. Please call the State
Ornithologist at 508-792-7270, or one of the authors of this Field
List. In addition, trend codes are added where populations have been
in flux, in an attempt to predict the likelihood of seeing a species
in the future. These are based on the perceived local population
trends of the various species in the most recent past. These codes are
printed at the bottom of every page of the regular list, as follows:
"e" means the species is federally or state-endangered.
"t" means the species is federally or state-threatened.
"sc" means a species of special concern (i.e., in trouble, but not yet
officially threatened).
"d" means the species has recently been declining in the county.
"i" means the species has recently been increasing in the county.
"f" means the species formerly nested but is not known to have nested
recently.
"n" means the species is a relatively new breeder in the county.
"o" means the species nests occasionally, but records are few and
evidence is hard to find.
"*" means the species is not native to the area but has been
introduced. In the case of the Northern Bob-white, the species was
native a century and more ago, but was extirpated; any birds since
then have been from introduced stock.
The pages of the appendix (the accidental species) are annotated with
a different set of codes. "A" [or whatever we use] means the report
has been accepted as valid by the Massachusetts Avian Records
Committee (MARC). "‡" [or whatever we use] means the report was not
accepted by the MARC. (Such records may still be valid, and many are
included in the appendix on that basis, or in some cases for their
historical interest.) Records not annotated either way were not
considered by the MARC, either because they were too old, or because
documentation was never submitted to it.
Numbers in the “Habitat” column refer to the following different
habitats in which each species may be found. The first number, where
more than one is given, represents the most typical habitat.
Habitat Codes:
0. Records too few to indicate habitat
1. Open sea east to Jeffreys Ledge and Stellwagen Bank
2. Coastal sea
3. Rocky shores and stone jetties
4. Beaches and dunes
5. Tidal flats and salt marshes
6. Bays and harbors
7. Rivers and streams
8. Fresh-water lakes, ponds, and impoundments
9. Fresh-water marshes and flooded fields
10. Swamps and/or bogs
11. Open fields and pastures
12. Thickets, hedgerows, edges, brushy fields, and orchards
13. Deciduous forest
14. Mixed deciduous/coniferous forest
15. Towns, gardens, parks, cemeteries, and yards
16. Throughout the county
17. Local hotspots during migration
The information presented here is the work of many individuals. Those
most actively involved were Jim Berry, Ipswich; Jim Brown, Boxford;
the late Richard Forster; Steve Haydock, Parker River National
Wildlife Refuge; Richard Heil, Peabody; Lawrence Jodrey, Rockport; Jim
MacDougall, Topsfield; Wayne Petersen, Massachusetts Audubon Society;
Jan Smith, Marblehead; Jerry Soucy, Rockport; and Tom Young, formerly
of Essex.
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