{"id":69836,"date":"2021-04-19T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-04-20T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/on-the-trails-longspurs-and-buntings-on-the-wetlands\/"},"modified":"2021-04-19T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2021-04-20T06:30:00","slug":"on-the-trails-longspurs-and-buntings-on-the-wetlands","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/on-the-trails-longspurs-and-buntings-on-the-wetlands\/","title":{"rendered":"On The Trails: Longspurs and buntings on the wetlands"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Mary F. Willson <\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n For the Juneau Empire<\/p>\n <\/strong><\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n The day dawned bright and sunny at my place, so I decided to visit the wetlands, to catch some rays and maybe see something interesting. By the time I got there, though, clouds were shedding snowflakes (again) and, staying near the dike trail, I didn’t see much except otter tracks going over the icy ponds. The best part was meeting two very nice Bernese mountain dogs, a friendly golden retriever and an elegant Gordon setter.<\/p>\n On the way back to the car, however, I encountered a reliable observer who reported sighting of numerous snow buntings, Lapland longspurs, and gray-crowned rosy finches way out on the sedge and sand flats exposed by the low tide. Flocks of these migrants were on their way north to their nesting areas.<\/p>\n Disappointed at having missed those birds, I went back the next day, again on the low tide, in hopes of finding them. By then, however, the weather had deteriorated to stiff cold wind and ‘snain.’ I rambled around out on the flats for what seemed like a long time — saw a few geese and ravens. Then, I saw a flock of snow buntings zoom by overhead. And, at last, there were some small birds scuttling about in the tide-flattened vegetation. Yes! Some Lapland longspurs, a couple of little groups of them, looking for fallen seeds or errant insects. So I found two of the three I’d been seeking. Hardy harbingers of a long-awaited spring.<\/p>\n Lapland longspurs get their English common name from the long hind claw. They breed across the far-northern tundra of North America (and Eurasia). In winter, they’re seen across the middle of the U. S. (or Asia), usually in flocks, and they arrive on the breeding ground still in flocks. Socially monogamous pairs form there, and males defend territories around nesting sites selected by females. Females build the nests, often lined with feathers, and lay clutches of three to seven eggs—earlier if the weather is good and snow cover has receded, later if the weather is poor and snow cover is thick. Nests are usually hidden in the side of a bank or tussock, or maybe under a low-sprawling shrub. Females do the incubating, for eleven to twelve days, with no help from the male beyond a bit a guard duty.<\/p>\n