264: A new North American Big Day birding record
April 27, 2011The Big Day is over and Team Sapsucker has set a new record for the most bird species seen or heard in a 24-hour period in North America. By birding nonstop from midnight to midnight on Friday, April 22, Chris Wood, Marshall Iliff, Brian Sullivan, Jessie Barry, Andrew Farnsworth, and Tim Lenz amassed a total of 264 species—three more than the previous record.
It was fun, it was hard work—and it was a conservation fundraiser. Pledges received so far total nearly $200,000, and there’s still time to make a pledge to help us break that mark. All the raised funds go directly to support conservation work at the Cornell Lab. Thank you to everyone who has supported the Big Day and Team Sapsucker so far.
The Big Day run ended a grueling week of scouting during which the team searched out key birds on their list of more than 300 possibilities. As new sightings came in, the team meticulously revised and streamlined their route to connect as many hotspots in as short a distance as possible. Aiding them in scouting were other Cornell Lab staff who came down for the event, as well as legions of Texas locals who offered advice about patches they’ve been birding for years. Local landowners were generous as well, granting access to private marshes and rich woodlands in a state where public land is scarce. Team Sapsucker is especially grateful to all the Texans who welcomed them and aided their cause.
The day began at midnight with a Yellow-crowned Night-Heron and a Barred Owl in a fashionable riverside section of San Antonio. In what the team later described as “perfect night birding,” the Sapsuckers found about 15 species before dawn, including a Cinnamon Teal on a moonlit wastewater treatment plant, as well as five owl species and three nightjars: Chuck-will’s-widow, Common Poorwill, and Common Pauraque.
At dawn their Toyota minivan was parked at Cooks Slough, a riparian zone near Uvalde, west of San Antonio. Desert birds such as Chihuahuan Raven, Cactus Wren, and Verdin were the draw in the Uvalde area, along with southern specialties such as Green Jay and Audubon’s Oriole. Alas, the Say’s Phoebe that had been hanging around the same fencepost all week seemed to have chosen Thursday night to migrate—it was one of the team’s few misses.
An arc through the Texas Hill Country centered around Neal’s Lodges added two endemic species, the endangered Golden-cheeked Warbler and Black-capped Vireo, along with Hutton’s Vireo, Canyon Wren, and Rufous-crowned Sparrow, and others.
Under Big Day rules, everyone on the team must see 95% of the species on the final list. The remaining 5% are can be seen by fewer than the entire team—Big Day competitors call them “dirty birds.” An example from this year’s Big Day was the Monk Parakeet, a bird the team picked up as they sped through San Antonio on the interstate. Five of the six Sapsuckers raised their binoculars to spot the bird sitting on its nest while the sixth—Marshall Iliff—kept his hands on the steering wheel.
From San Antonio the team headed for the coast for migrants: raptors, shorebirds, and warblers from Victoria’s agricultural fields and Corpus Christi’s barrier beaches. The three-hour drive was an opportunity to refuel on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. (As part of a new space-management plan in the cramped van, the team had reluctantly agreed on only one sandwich type for the day’s meals).
On the way east, the team’s raptor expert, Brian Sullivan, looked out the window and selected a promising-looking kettle of hawks. It turned into one of the day’s highlights, with 400 American White Pelicans soaring among a group of Swainson’s Hawks and Mississippi Kites. A few moments later, Andrew Farnsworth spied a dark fleck moving far above the kettle—a Swallow-tailed Kite only barely within binocular range.
Wetlands and rice fields around Victoria held American Golden-Plover, Baird’s Sandpiper, and Wilson’s Phalarope. These migrants, here to refuel on their way to Arctic breeding grounds, brought the Sapsucker shorebird total to 31 species. Warblers proved harder to find as the week’s hot weather and strong south winds carried many migrating species farther north. Still, by working the coastal woodlands the team pushed the day’s warbler list to 19 species—plus both forms of Yellow-rumped Warbler (eastern Myrtle and western Audubon’s), just in case they are once again split into separate species, as they were for much of the twentieth century.
With daylight fading the team found their 260th species, Eastern Wood-Pewee. If the Sapsuckers were going to set the record, it would have to happen in the dark. The tying species came with a whistled “bob-white!” from a pasture outside Port Aransas, and the go-ahead bird—#262—came with its own applause: a calling Clapper Rail. Two more rails, Virginia and Black, rounded out the day’s list at 264.
With 90 minutes left, the Sapsuckers tried for 265 by staking out a Tropical Kingbird nest Chris Wood and Jessie Barry had found earlier in the week. A few days ago they had confirmed there was enough ambient light to see the bird on its nest even at night. But the day’s high winds had the bird hunkering down over its nest and out of view, and so the record stands at 264.
As midnight struck, the plan was to celebrate with a pizza dinner, but apparently all the pizza places in Rockport, Texas, also close at midnight. And so it was with one more PB&J that the team toasted their victory.
Keep reading for the full list of species the Sapsuckers recorded on the Big Day and their locations (listed in taxonomic order) and see more discussion of the hits and misses on the eBird site:
1 | Black-bellied Whistling-Duck | Breckenridge Park–Tuleta Dr. (San Antonio) |
2 | Fulvous Whistling-Duck | Copano Bay–south end LBJ causeway |
3 | Snow Goose | Riverside Park, Victoria |
4 | Wood Duck | Cooks Slough |
5 | Gadwall | Sabinal WTP |
6 | American Wigeon | Sabinal WTP |
7 | Mallard | Breckenridge Park–Tuleta Dr. (San Antonio) |
8 | Mottled Duck | Riverside Park, Victoria |
9 | Blue-winged Teal | Sabinal WTP |
10 | Cinnamon Teal | Sabinal WTP (male) |
11 | Northern Shoveler | Sabinal WTP |
12 | Green-winged Teal | Dupont Wetlands |
13 | Redhead | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds |
14 | Greater Scaup | Oso Bay Bridge (distant) |
15 | Lesser Scaup | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds |
16 | Bufflehead | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds (*late; two females) |
17 | Red-breasted Merganser | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds (*late; male and female) |
18 | Ruddy Duck | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds |
19 | Northern Bobwhite | Port Aransas–Murphy’s Pasture (heard; third to last bird of day) |
20 | Wild Turkey | Cooks Slough |
21 | Common Loon | Copano Bay Causeway SP (alternate plumaged) |
22 | Least Grebe | Dupont Wetlands |
23 | Pied-billed Grebe | Sabinal WTP |
24 | Eared Grebe | Hans & Pat Suter Wildlife Refuge |
25 | Neotropic Cormorant | Dupont Wetlands |
26 | Double-crested Cormorant | Nueces Bay Causeway (scarce this late!) |
27 | Anhinga | Cooks Slough (Not seen by all |
28 | American White Pelican | DeWitt County |
29 | Brown Pelican | Copano Bay Causeway SP |
30 | Great Blue Heron | Cooks Slough |
31 | Great Egret | Dupont Wetlands |
32 | Snowy Egret | Dupont Wetlands |
33 | Little Blue Heron | Rt. 316 fields |
34 | Tricolored Heron | Dupont Wetlands |
35 | Reddish Egret | Nueces Bay Causeway Island |
36 | Cattle Egret | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane field |
37 | Green Heron | Cooks Slough |
38 | Black-crowned Night-Heron | Cooks Slough |
39 | Yellow-crowned Night-Heron | Breckenridge Park–Tuleta Dr. |
40 | White Ibis | Dupont Wetlands |
41 | Glossy Ibis | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
42 | White-faced Ibis | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
43 | Roseate Spoonbill | Dupont Wetlands |
44 | Black Vulture | Concan–Cielito Ridge |
45 | Turkey Vulture | Concan–Cielito Ridge |
46 | Osprey | Rt. 35–Guadalupe River |
47 | Swallow-tailed Kite | DeWitt County (pick of the day by Andy) |
48 | White-tailed Kite | Aransas grasslands (near probable nest site) |
49 | Mississippi Kite | DeWitt County (up to 50 seen on drive) |
50 | Northern Harrier | road near Bird Seed Factory |
51 | Cooper’s Hawk | Towhee Church |
52 | Harris’s Hawk | Tyler Rd.–mp 3.1 (on nest; ATLAS |
53 | Red-shouldered Hawk | Cooks Slough (ad) |
54 | Broad-winged Hawk | DeWitt County |
55 | Swainson’s Hawk | Uvalde quarry (ad) |
56 | White-tailed Hawk | Sikes Road Catfish Ponds (ad) |
57 | Red-tailed Hawk | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
58 | Crested Caracara | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
59 | American Kestrel | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane field (on fence) |
60 | Merlin | Oso Bay Bridge (Not seen by all |
61 | Peregrine Falcon | Mustang Island mangroves (on tower) |
62 | Black Rail | Cape Valero |
63 | Clapper Rail | Port Aransas–Murphy’s Pasture (singing) |
64 | Virginia Rail | Port Aransas Birding Center (second to last bird of day) |
65 | Sora | Cooks Slough (flushed from pond edge) |
66 | Common Moorhen | Dupont |
67 | American Coot | Sabinal WTP |
68 | Black-bellied Plover | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
69 | American Golden-Plover | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
70 | Wilson’s Plover | Coast Guard Base |
71 | Semipalmated Plover | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
72 | Piping Plover | Coast Guard Base |
73 | Killdeer | Dupont Wetlands |
74 | American Oystercatcher | Indian Point causeway (on nest) |
75 | Black-necked Stilt | Dupont Wetlands |
76 | American Avocet | Dupont Wetlands |
77 | Spotted Sandpiper | Cooks Slough |
78 | Solitary Sandpiper | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) (flying over car) |
79 | Greater Yellowlegs | Copano Bay Causeway SP |
80 | Willet | Copano Bay–south end LBJ causeway |
81 | Lesser Yellowlegs | Dupont Wetlands |
82 | Upland Sandpiper | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane Ranch (private) |
83 | Whimbrel | Coast Guard causeway |
84 | Long-billed Curlew | Indian Point causeway |
85 | Marbled Godwit | Hans & Pat Suter Wildlife Refuge |
86 | Ruddy Turnstone | Nueces Bay Causeway Island |
87 | Sanderling | Nueces Bay Causeway Island |
88 | Semipalmated Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
89 | Western Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
90 | Least Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
91 | White-rumped Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
92 | Baird’s Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
93 | Pectoral Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
94 | Dunlin | Dupont Wetlands |
95 | Stilt Sandpiper | Dupont Wetlands |
96 | Buff-breasted Sandpiper | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
97 | Long-billed Dowitcher | Dupont Wetlands |
98 | Wilson’s Phalarope | Dupont Wetlands |
99 | Laughing Gull | near Bloomington Landfill |
100 | Franklin’s Gull | near Bloomington Landfill |
101 | Ring-billed Gull | Hans & Pat Suter Wildlife Refuge |
102 | Herring Gull | Oso Bay Bridge (SY) |
103 | Least Tern | Indian Point causeway |
104 | Gull-billed Tern | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
105 | Caspian Tern | Nueces Bay Causeway Island |
106 | Black Tern | Hans & Pat Suter Wildlife Refuge |
107 | Common Tern | Mustang Island–crossover 1A beach (ad) |
108 | Forster’s Tern | Copano Bay Causeway SP |
109 | Royal Tern | Copano Bay–south end LBJ causeway |
110 | Sandwich Tern | Coast Guard causeway |
111 | Black Skimmer | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
112 | Rock Pigeon | Uvalde (town) |
113 | Eurasian Collared-Dove | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
114 | White-winged Dove | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
115 | Mourning Dove | Cooks Slough |
116 | Inca Dove | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane Ranch (private) |
117 | Common Ground-Dove | Rt. 2690 (Not seen by all |
118 | Monk Parakeet | San Antonio (Not seen by all |
119 | Yellow-billed Cuckoo | Cooks Slough (Not seen by all |
120 | Greater Roadrunner | Cooks Slough |
121 | Barn Owl | TX-2690–large open field (sitting on fence) |
122 | Eastern Screech-Owl (McCall’s) | TX-127–wash west of TX-2690 (whistled up; photos; short whinny call heard “weeow”) |
123 | Great Horned Owl | TX 400–mp 2.5 (young on nest found by KVR) |
124 | Elf Owl | TX-400–mp 1.1 (whistled up in same spot where first found (as first Uvalde Co. record?) three days earlier) |
125 | Barred Owl | Breckenridge Park–Tuleta Dr. (San Antonio) (heard calling pre-dawn; flew in in response to hoots) |
126 | Lesser Nighthawk | TX-2690–southern portion |
127 | Common Nighthawk | Port Aransas–Murphy’s Pasture |
128 | Common Pauraque | Mitchell Lake–entrance (whistled up at night) |
129 | Common Poorwill | TX-2690–bend to right |
130 | Chuck-will’s-widow | TX-2690–bend to right |
131 | Chimney Swift | Cooks Slough |
132 | Ruby-throated Hummingbird | Blucher Park |
133 | Black-chinned Hummingbird | Neal’s Lodge–Cattle Guard feeders |
134 | Buff-bellied Hummingbird | Blucher Park |
135 | Belted Kingfisher | Cooks Slough (MJI, JHB, and TCL only) |
136 | Green Kingfisher | Cooks Slough (MJI, CLW only; ‘dzzrrt’ call heard) |
137 | Golden-fronted Woodpecker | Cooks Slough |
138 | Red-bellied Woodpecker | Riverside Park, Victoria |
139 | Ladder-backed Woodpecker | Cooks Slough |
140 | Downy Woodpecker | Riverside Park, Victoria |
141 | Pileated Woodpecker | Riverside Park, Victoria (in nest hole) |
142 | Eastern Wood-Pewee | Paradise Pond (Not seen by all |
143 | Least Flycatcher | Cooks Slough |
144 | Black Phoebe | Concan–Sabinal River bridge |
145 | Eastern Phoebe | Towhee Church (heard singing) |
146 | Vermilion Flycatcher | TX-2690–southern portion |
147 | Ash-throated Flycatcher | Cooks Slough |
148 | Great Crested Flycatcher | Riverside Park, Victoria |
149 | Brown-crested Flycatcher | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
150 | Great Kiskadee | Cooks Slough |
151 | Couch’s Kingbird | Cooks Slough |
152 | Western Kingbird | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane Ranch (private) |
153 | Eastern Kingbird | Packery Channel (flyover) |
154 | Scissor-tailed Flycatcher | Cooks Slough (flyover) |
155 | Loggerhead Shrike | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane Ranch (private) |
156 | White-eyed Vireo | Cooks Slough |
157 | Bell’s Vireo | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
158 | Black-capped Vireo | Concan–ridge to east (Not seen by all |
159 | Yellow-throated Vireo | Concan–Pecan Grove |
160 | Hutton’s Vireo | Concan–HUVI bend (singing) |
161 | Red-eyed Vireo | Concan–Cielito Ridge (singing) |
162 | Green Jay | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
163 | Blue Jay | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
164 | American Crow | north of Victoria (flew across road) |
165 | Chihuahuan Raven | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
166 | Common Raven | Concan area |
167 | Horned Lark | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane field |
168 | Northern Rough-winged Swallow | Concan–Sabinal River bridge |
169 | Purple Martin | Cooks Slough |
170 | Bank Swallow | duck pond off Rt. 35 |
171 | Barn Swallow | Cooks Slough |
172 | Cliff Swallow | Sabinal–bridge to north |
173 | Cave Swallow | TX-400 |
174 | Carolina Chickadee | Riverside Park, Victoria (heard singing) |
175 | Black-crested Titmouse | Cooks Slough |
176 | Verdin | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
177 | Cactus Wren | Cooks Slough |
178 | Rock Wren | Uvalde Quarry |
179 | Canyon Wren | Concan–Cielito Ridge (heard singing) |
180 | Carolina Wren | Cooks Slough |
181 | Bewick’s Wren | Cooks Slough |
182 | House Wren | Cooks Slough |
183 | Sedge Wren | Copano Bay Causeway SP |
184 | Marsh Wren | Dupont Wetlands |
185 | Blue-gray Gnatcatcher | Cooks Slough |
186 | Black-tailed Gnatcatcher | TX-400–mp 1.7 |
187 | Ruby-crowned Kinglet | Cooks Slough |
188 | Eastern Bluebird | Concan–Pecan Grove |
189 | Swainson’s Thrush | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
190 | Hermit Thrush | Concan–ridge to east (giving mew call) |
191 | Wood Thrush | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
192 | American Robin | San Antonio Botanical Gardens (on nest) |
193 | Gray Catbird | Blucher Park |
194 | Northern Mockingbird | Sabinal WTP (singing) |
195 | Brown Thrasher | Blucher Park (*late; continuing bird in park seen well) |
196 | Long-billed Thrasher | TX-127–wash west of TX-2690 (singing at night) |
197 | Curve-billed Thrasher | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo (calling at dawn) |
198 | European Starling | Cooks Slough |
199 | Sprague’s Pipit | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
200 | Cedar Waxwing | Concan–Cielito Ridge (flock seen) |
201 | Tennessee Warbler | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
202 | Orange-crowned Warbler | Cooks Slough |
203 | Nashville Warbler | Cooks Slough |
204 | Northern Parula | Riverside Park, Victoria (singing) |
205 | Yellow Warbler | Packery Channel (male) |
206 | Chestnut-sided Warbler | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
207 | Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) | Cooks Slough |
207 | Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon’s) | Cooks Slough |
208 | Golden-cheeked Warbler | Concan–Cielito Ridge |
209 | Black-throated Green Warbler | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
210 | Yellow-throated Warbler | Towhee Church |
211 | Blackpoll Warbler | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond (female) |
212 | Black-and-white Warbler | Towhee Church |
213 | American Redstart | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond (yellow start) |
214 | Ovenbird | Blucher Park (Not seen by all |
215 | Northern Waterthrush | Blucher Park |
216 | Common Yellowthroat | Port Aransas–Paradise Pond |
217 | Hooded Warbler | Blucher Park (female) |
218 | Wilson’s Warbler | Cooks Slough |
219 | Yellow-breasted Chat | Cooks Slough |
220 | Olive Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
221 | Spotted Towhee | Towhee Church (female feeding along edge of fence) |
222 | Rufous-crowned Sparrow | Concan–ridge to east |
223 | Canyon Towhee | Concan–ridge to east (MJI, BLS, AF, TCL only) |
224 | Cassin’s Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
225 | Chipping Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
226 | Clay-colored Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
227 | Field Sparrow | Concan–Pecan Grove |
228 | Vesper Sparrow | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
229 | Lark Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
230 | Black-throated Sparrow | TX-400–mp 1.7 |
231 | Savannah Sparrow | Sabinal WTP |
232 | Grasshopper Sparrow | TX-400–mp 1.1 |
233 | Le Conte’s Sparrow | Copano Bay Causeway SP |
234 | Seaside Sparrow | Mustang Island mangroves (heard singing) |
235 | Lincoln’s Sparrow | Cooks Slough |
236 | Swamp Sparrow | Hans Suter (Not seen by all |
237 | White-crowned Sparrow (Eastern) | Cooks Slough |
238 | Summer Tanager | Concan–ridge to east |
239 | Northern Cardinal | San Antonio Botanical Gardens (calling at night) |
240 | Pyrrhuloxia | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane (south) |
241 | Blue Grosbeak | Cooks Slough |
242 | Lazuli Bunting | Neal’s Lodge–Cattle Guard feeders (CLW only; female) |
243 | Indigo Bunting | Blucher Park |
244 | Painted Bunting | Cooks Slough |
245 | Dickcissel | Cooks Slough |
246 | Red-winged Blackbird | Cooks Slough |
247 | Eastern Meadowlark | TX-2690–mp 5.8 |
248 | Yellow-headed Blackbird | Uvalde–Dunbar Lane Ranch (private) |
249 | Brewer’s Blackbird | Sabinal Feedlot (female) |
250 | Common Grackle | Tyler Rd.–mp 1.5 |
251 | Boat-tailed Grackle | TX-1289 ricefield (Calhoun Co.) |
252 | Great-tailed Grackle | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
253 | Bronzed Cowbird | Sabinal Feedlot |
254 | Brown-headed Cowbird | Cooks Slough |
255 | Orchard Oriole | Tyler Rd.–mp 0.5 |
256 | Hooded Oriole | TX-400–mp 1.7 (female) |
257 | Bullock’s Oriole | Cooks Slough |
258 | Audubon’s Oriole | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
259 | Baltimore Oriole | Blucher Park |
260 | Scott’s Oriole | Concan–Cielito Ridge (female and male) |
261 | House Finch | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
262 | Pine Siskin | Neal’s Lodge–Cattle Guard feeders (calling flyover) |
263 | Lesser Goldfinch | Neal’s Lodge–Cattle Guard feeders |
264 | House Sparrow | Uvalde–4th and Cenizo |
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