Winter Avifauna of Lease 17, a Preliminary Survey

Authors
Don Gill
Resource Date:
1979
Page Length
41

During the periods 27 January, 3-6 February and 10-13 February 1977, a preliminary survey was conducted on Syncrude Lease 17 to gain the following information on wintering birds: species presence during mid winter; abundance of each species within representative habitats; and numbers of birds present in undisturbed, lightly disturbed, and highly disturbed habitats. To accomplish these objectives, transect and flight surveys were established, together with listening posts, in three sample plots that are representative of the five major habitat types on Lease 17 (trembling aspen, black spruce, mixedwood, and riparian habitats, and the main cleared area). A total of 14 species was observed on the study plots in 72 separate sightings. The gray jay was the most common species (57 sightings), followed by hoary and common redpolls (33 sightings), willow ptarmigan (24 sightings}, boreal chickadee (10 sightings), black-capped chickadee (six sightings), hairy woodpecker (five sightings), downy woodpecker (four sightings), ruffed grouse and common raven (three sightings each), goshawk and black-backed three-toed woodpecker (two sightings each}, and sharp-tailed grouse and snowy owl (one sighting each). One additional species, the house sparrow, was seen near the extraction plant. The number of avifauna sightings made in each habitat type were: main cleared area 46, mixedwood 37, trembling aspen 34, black spruce 22, and riparian 12. In undisturbed habitats 37 sightings of birds were made, while in lightly disturbed and highly disturbed habitats 45 and 69 sightings, respectively, were counted.