American Woodcock. Richard Evon/Macaulay Library. eBird S40330645.
Continental Summary
Local light and moderate flights were the norm in the West featuring Common and Barrow’s Goldeneyes, Trumpeter Swan, Bonaparte’s Gull, Snowy Owl, American Kestrel, and Horned Lark, while moderate and heavy flights occurred in numerous areas of the East featuring Canvasback, Common Goldeneye, Hooded, Red-breasted and Common Mergansers, Tundra Swan, Bonaparte’s Gull, Snow Bunting, and American Tree Sparrow.
Curious what birds will move next? Check out our forecast.
Need a review of our definitions for regions, species on the move, and migration amounts? Please visit this link.
Widespread moderate to locally heavy flights kicked off the weekend. These extent of these flights quickly collapsed to isolated coastal flights by Saturday, but then expanded again in portions of the Upper Midwest following the passage of a frontal boundary there on Sunday night. As the frontal boundary moved east, locally moderate to heavy flights followed on Monday night. And the remainder of the week saw similarly restricted moderate and heavy flights around the region, particularly in its southern reaches. Note some local coastal activity persisted on many nights of the period, typical of this time of the migration season.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Bufflehead
567%
18.1
Tundra Swan
1843%
4.8
Hooded Merganser
248%
10.5
Common Goldeneye
414%
4.1
Common Loon
76%
10.6
Red-breasted Merganser
99%
5.5
Horned Grebe
127%
4.8
Bonaparte's Gull
71%
7.7
Lesser Scaup
119%
4.6
Long-tailed Duck
137%
3
Common Merganser
96%
5.3
Ruddy Duck
53%
8.7
American Tree Sparrow
71%
6.2
Snowy Owl
1743%
0.5
Snow Bunting
75%
2.2
White-winged Scoter
34%
3.6
Pied-billed Grebe
15%
12.2
Greater Scaup
42%
1.8
Rough-legged Hawk
48%
1.3
Common Redpoll
60%
1.1
Trumpeter Swan
40%
1.4
Brant
17%
3.4
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
White-crowned Sparrow
-73%
2.2
Yellow-rumped Warbler
-53%
12.4
Chipping Sparrow
-63%
3.6
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
-55%
7.3
Red-winged Blackbird
-41%
13.3
Turkey Vulture
-43%
11.5
Savannah Sparrow
-62%
2.7
American Robin
-25%
30.4
Swamp Sparrow
-47%
6.3
Killdeer
-55%
4
Eastern Phoebe
-68%
2.4
Great Egret
-64%
2.2
Field Sparrow
-53%
3.2
Common Grackle
-41%
6.5
Song Sparrow
-22%
26
Lincoln's Sparrow
-88%
0.3
Orange-crowned Warbler
-80%
0.4
Double-crested Cormorant
-22%
17.4
Eastern Towhee
-45%
3.8
Hermit Thrush
-46%
3.6
Great Blue Heron
-21%
15.1
Greater Yellowlegs
-40%
3.2
White-throated Sparrow
-17%
26.5
Blue Jay
-12%
48.7
Blue-winged Teal
-74%
0.4
Bufflehead. Jay Wherley/Macaulay Library. eBird S40409298.
Gulf Coast and Southeast
Widespread moderate flights in the region began on Friday night but gradually became increasingly less extensive by Sunday, when they were distributed mostly in coastal areas. Monday and Tuesday nights saw these movements generally intensify, though they remained somewhat less extensive than region wide. With a slow frontal passage ending the period, moderate to locally very heavy flights occurred on Wednesday and Thursday nights in the wake of the boundary’s advances.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Hooded Merganser
2173%
3.2
Ring-necked Duck
314%
6.2
Lesser Scaup
484%
3.6
Dark-eyed Junco
182%
5.5
Bufflehead
2381%
2
Northern Pintail
187%
5.4
Northern Shoveler
113%
7.8
Snow Goose
366%
2.7
Redhead
257%
3.3
Canvasback
830%
1.5
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Gray Catbird
-40%
12.7
Indigo Bunting
-78%
1.1
Blue Jay
-26%
35.3
Brown Thrasher
-47%
5.5
Pine Warbler
-41%
5.9
Palm Warbler
-25%
17.2
Northern Flicker
-25%
13.5
Black-and-white Warbler
-47%
3.6
Black-throated Blue Warbler
-92%
0.2
Barn Swallow
-48%
2.7
Common Yellowthroat
-30%
7.8
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
-31%
6.7
Yellow-throated Warbler
-50%
2.2
Turkey Vulture
-17%
29
Common Grackle
-23%
10.4
Black-throated Green Warbler
-61%
0.8
Tennessee Warbler
-76%
0.3
American Crow
-15%
27.2
Red-tailed Hawk
-22%
10.4
Ferruginous Hawk. Colin Croft/Macaulay Library. eBird S40313437.
Great Plains
A slow start for migration on Friday and Saturday finally gave way to scattered moderate to heavy flights in the central and southern Plains on Sunday night. Several small pulses of locally light to moderate flights persisted generally in more southern areas for the remainder of the period, but migration was generally low intensity or nearly nonexistent in other areas.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Hooded Merganser
645%
14
Common Goldeneye
1420%
5.6
Snow Goose
421%
10.7
Bufflehead
238%
13.5
Lesser Scaup
209%
15.3
Common Merganser
2385%
3.5
Common Loon
321%
7.2
Red-breasted Merganser
3615%
3.2
Ross's Goose
748%
3.6
Cackling Goose
176%
8.5
Bonaparte's Gull
258%
5.9
Mallard
53%
36.3
Canada Goose
52%
37.2
Herring Gull
154%
5
American Kestrel
70%
13.5
Ferruginous Hawk
259%
2.3
Redhead
60%
11.8
Northern Shoveler
49%
14.9
Greater White-fronted Goose
144%
4.4
Golden-crowned Kinglet
94%
4.6
Greater Scaup
219%
2.2
Ring-billed Gull
24%
28.3
Canvasback
68%
6.1
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Chipping Sparrow
-66%
2.3
Lincoln's Sparrow
-69%
1.5
Red Crossbill
-78%
0.9
Red-breasted Nuthatch
-57%
2.4
Eared Grebe
-78%
0.5
Franklin's Gull
-38%
6.6
Common Grackle
-45%
3.9
Black-capped Chickadee
-26%
15.5
Yellow-rumped Warbler
-23%
16.8
Field Sparrow
-48%
2
Red-bellied Woodpecker
-20%
17.2
Blue-winged Teal
-67%
0.7
Long-billed Dowitcher
-91%
0.1
Turkey Vulture
-52%
2.4
Northern Flicker
-17%
19.9
Orange-crowned Warbler
-54%
1.1
Sharp-shinned Hawk
-40%
2.3
Swamp Sparrow
-42%
1.7
Marsh Wren
-54%
0.6
White-throated Sparrow
-18%
9.7
Great Egret
-42%
1.6
American Avocet
-47%
0.9
Carolina Wren
-15%
12.2
Trumpeter Swan. John Gatchet/Macaulay Library. eBird S40373243.
West
Scattered precipitation and some unfavorable wind conditions kept many remaining migrants in the region grounded for much of the weekend. Moderate flights returned to the most common location for such flights in the region at this time of year, the Central Valley of California. However, disturbances and their associated precipitation returned to fill the remainder of the period in many areas, with generally marginal to unfavorable migration conditions keeping migration localized and light.