Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999

An inventory of breeding birds associated with wetlands and upland habitats in the St. Louis River system from Duluth and Superior to Jay Cooke State Park was completed during the summer of 1999. A total of 39 wetland areas, each a minimum size of 1 hectare, and 9 forest areas consisting of a total...

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Main Authors: Niemi, Gerald J, Solin, Jeremy, Watters, Deborah, Wolter, Peter T.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Duluth 2000
Subjects:
UMD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187267
id ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/187267
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivminnesdc:oai:conservancy.umn.edu:11299/187267 2023-05-15T15:56:22+02:00 Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999 Natural Resources Research Institute Technical Report Niemi, Gerald J Solin, Jeremy Watters, Deborah Wolter, Peter T. 2000 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187267 en eng University of Minnesota Duluth NRRI Technical Report;NRRI/TR-00-34 http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187267 Breeding birds Bird monitoring St. Louis River Minnesota Wisconsin Wetlands Natural Resources Research Institute NRRI University of Minnesota Duluth UMD Technical Report 2000 ftunivminnesdc 2022-08-07T09:20:07Z An inventory of breeding birds associated with wetlands and upland habitats in the St. Louis River system from Duluth and Superior to Jay Cooke State Park was completed during the summer of 1999. A total of 39 wetland areas, each a minimum size of 1 hectare, and 9 forest areas consisting of a total of 79 point samples, were inventoried. Swamp Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, Common Yellowthroat, Song Sparrow, and Yellow Warbler (in rank order of decreasing abundance) were the most common species observed in the wetlands. Red-eyed Vireo, Common Yellowthroat, White-throated Sparrow, Ovenbird, American Redstart, Song Sparrow, Veery, and Yellow Warbler (also in rank order) were the most common species observed in the upland habitats. Colonial nesting birds within the St. Louis River system include the Ring-billed Gull (12,343 nests, Pearson 1999), Herring Gull (13 nests, Pearson 1999), Common Tern (215 nests, Pearson 1999), and Great Blue Heron (14 nests). Species of interest to The Nature Conservancy (Ewert 1999) that were found in the inventory included the following: primary focus species included Peregrine Falcon (1 occasional individual), Bald Eagle (frequently observed, one possible nesting pair in Jay Cooke State Park), Sedge Wren (15), Wood Thrush (2), and Black-and-White Warbler (16). Secondary focus species of interest that were observed include Wood Duck (5), Black-billed Cuckoo (3), Belted Kingfisher (7), Eastern Wood Pewee (14), Least Flycatcher (25), Marsh Wren (18), Veery (72), Brown Thrasher (3), Warbling Vireo (12), Chestnut-sided Warbler (26), Black-throated Green Warbler (14), Mourning Warbler (16), Rose-breasted Grosbeak (8), Clay-colored Sparrow (11), Baltimore Oriole (1 ), and Purple Finch (1 ). The following species of primary focus have historically been found in the area, but none were observed in 1999: American Bittern, Piping Plover, and Black Tern. Of the primary focus species, the Sedge Wren is found in highest densities in the sedge/grass wetlands in Allouez Bay, the Oliver Bridge area, ... Report Common tern peregrine falcon University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy Finch ENVELOPE(167.383,167.383,-72.567,-72.567) St. Louis ENVELOPE(-67.496,-67.496,-67.132,-67.132)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Minnesota Digital Conservancy
op_collection_id ftunivminnesdc
language English
topic Breeding birds
Bird monitoring
St. Louis River
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Wetlands
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
spellingShingle Breeding birds
Bird monitoring
St. Louis River
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Wetlands
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
Niemi, Gerald J
Solin, Jeremy
Watters, Deborah
Wolter, Peter T.
Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
topic_facet Breeding birds
Bird monitoring
St. Louis River
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Wetlands
Natural Resources Research Institute
NRRI
University of Minnesota Duluth
UMD
description An inventory of breeding birds associated with wetlands and upland habitats in the St. Louis River system from Duluth and Superior to Jay Cooke State Park was completed during the summer of 1999. A total of 39 wetland areas, each a minimum size of 1 hectare, and 9 forest areas consisting of a total of 79 point samples, were inventoried. Swamp Sparrow, Red-winged Blackbird, Common Yellowthroat, Song Sparrow, and Yellow Warbler (in rank order of decreasing abundance) were the most common species observed in the wetlands. Red-eyed Vireo, Common Yellowthroat, White-throated Sparrow, Ovenbird, American Redstart, Song Sparrow, Veery, and Yellow Warbler (also in rank order) were the most common species observed in the upland habitats. Colonial nesting birds within the St. Louis River system include the Ring-billed Gull (12,343 nests, Pearson 1999), Herring Gull (13 nests, Pearson 1999), Common Tern (215 nests, Pearson 1999), and Great Blue Heron (14 nests). Species of interest to The Nature Conservancy (Ewert 1999) that were found in the inventory included the following: primary focus species included Peregrine Falcon (1 occasional individual), Bald Eagle (frequently observed, one possible nesting pair in Jay Cooke State Park), Sedge Wren (15), Wood Thrush (2), and Black-and-White Warbler (16). Secondary focus species of interest that were observed include Wood Duck (5), Black-billed Cuckoo (3), Belted Kingfisher (7), Eastern Wood Pewee (14), Least Flycatcher (25), Marsh Wren (18), Veery (72), Brown Thrasher (3), Warbling Vireo (12), Chestnut-sided Warbler (26), Black-throated Green Warbler (14), Mourning Warbler (16), Rose-breasted Grosbeak (8), Clay-colored Sparrow (11), Baltimore Oriole (1 ), and Purple Finch (1 ). The following species of primary focus have historically been found in the area, but none were observed in 1999: American Bittern, Piping Plover, and Black Tern. Of the primary focus species, the Sedge Wren is found in highest densities in the sedge/grass wetlands in Allouez Bay, the Oliver Bridge area, ...
format Report
author Niemi, Gerald J
Solin, Jeremy
Watters, Deborah
Wolter, Peter T.
author_facet Niemi, Gerald J
Solin, Jeremy
Watters, Deborah
Wolter, Peter T.
author_sort Niemi, Gerald J
title Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
title_short Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
title_full Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
title_fullStr Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
title_full_unstemmed Breeding Bird Inventory of the St. Louis River, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1999
title_sort breeding bird inventory of the st. louis river, minnesota and wisconsin, 1999
publisher University of Minnesota Duluth
publishDate 2000
url http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187267
long_lat ENVELOPE(167.383,167.383,-72.567,-72.567)
ENVELOPE(-67.496,-67.496,-67.132,-67.132)
geographic Finch
St. Louis
geographic_facet Finch
St. Louis
genre Common tern
peregrine falcon
genre_facet Common tern
peregrine falcon
op_relation NRRI Technical Report;NRRI/TR-00-34
http://hdl.handle.net/11299/187267
_version_ 1766391804929769472