Willow Flycatcher. David Brown/Macaulay Library. 26 May 2016. eBird S29917824
Continental Summary
Light to moderate flights graced many areas from California east through the Rockies and featured Black Tern, Willow Flycatcher, Cordilleran Flycatcher, Gray Catbird, and Bobolink, while pulses of moderate and heavy flights featuring White-rumped Sandpiper, Common Nighthawk, Black-billed Cuckoo, Alder Flycatcher, Bay-breasted Warbler, and Canada Warbler were scattered across the East.
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Moderate to heavy flights in the Ohio River Valley and along the Atlantic Coast kicked off the weekend, only to be followed by an almost complete shutdown in the wake of a passing cold front on Saturday night. With this passage, more favorable conditions built slowly back to the region and brought heavy flights to the Upper Midwest on Sunday night, and more extensively to the mid Atlantic states, New Jersey and even Long Island, on Monday night. However, conditions did not allow these flights to overspread the entirety of the region, with most moderate to heavy flights restricted to the west of the Appalachians or south of the Adirondacks and southern tier of New York. Aside from the notable exception of locally moderate to heavy flights in New England on Wednesday and Thursday nights, the most extensive and intense movements in the region were significantly farther west.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Willow Flycatcher
250%
4.3
Eastern Wood-Pewee
77%
15.9
Wilson's Warbler
62%
9.2
Canada Warbler
72%
7.9
Blackpoll Warbler
41%
12.6
Common Nighthawk
90%
3.7
Alder Flycatcher
470%
1.2
Red-eyed Vireo
40%
28.3
Cedar Waxwing
43%
12.3
Mourning Warbler
118%
2.1
American Redstart
21%
34.2
Great Crested Flycatcher
32%
25
Semipalmated Sandpiper
47%
3.5
Magnolia Warbler
18%
20.9
Swainson's Thrush
19%
13.8
Acadian Flycatcher
40%
4.4
Ruddy Turnstone
54%
1.8
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
105%
0.5
Olive-sided Flycatcher
61%
0.9
Gray-cheeked Thrush
27%
3.5
Semipalmated Plover
32%
3.9
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
20%
15.6
Common Yellowthroat
15%
44.9
Eastern Kingbird
17%
21.4
Philadelphia Vireo
22%
1.9
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
-71%
3.3
White-throated Sparrow
-56%
9.9
Palm Warbler
-46%
6.7
Yellow-rumped Warbler
-40%
18.4
Sharp-shinned Hawk
-62%
0.7
Solitary Sandpiper
-44%
3.8
White-crowned Sparrow
-40%
8.4
Nashville Warbler
-41%
8.3
Greater Yellowlegs
-35%
3
Blue-headed Vireo
-34%
5.8
Lesser Yellowlegs
-32%
3.3
Hermit Thrush
-31%
3.3
Pine Siskin
-31%
2.2
Prairie Warbler
-30%
3.4
Swamp Sparrow
-16%
8.4
Merlin
-47%
0.5
Black-throated Green Warbler
-25%
14.3
American Pipit
-58%
0.3
Blue-winged Warbler
-19%
5.9
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
-14%
22.3
Broad-winged Hawk
-27%
2.3
American Woodcock
-34%
1.4
Rusty Blackbird
-66%
0.1
Black-billed Cuckoo. Sue Barth/Macaulay Library. 26 May 2016. eBird S29920861
Gulf Coast and Southeast
Moderate to heavy flights dominated the region to the west of the Mississippi River for the first half of the period, while areas farther east were significantly less active. But a change came by Monday night, when more extensive movements were apparent across the entire region. The remainder of the period was much less uniform with respect to the distribution of migration, in particular because of the persistent intense and extensive stormy conditions in the southeast. Migration was primarily moderate where it occurred, and noticeably absent, or at best light, in areas where intense rain and thunderstorms occurred.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Yellow-bellied Flycatcher
249%
2.1
Black Tern
124%
2.9
Wilson's Warbler
95%
5.6
Least Bittern
97%
2.8
Franklin's Gull
78%
2.4
Willow Flycatcher
83%
1.7
Western Wood-Pewee
219%
1.3
Canada Warbler
58%
3
Alder Flycatcher
139%
1.1
Least Tern
35%
7.4
Purple Gallinule
59%
2.3
Ruddy Turnstone
38%
5.4
Sanderling
42%
4.7
Black-bellied Whistling-Duck
22%
9.3
Black Skimmer
51%
3
Olive-sided Flycatcher
80%
1.4
Clay-colored Thrush
154%
0.8
Least Flycatcher
36%
3.9
Wood Stork
44%
3
Mourning Warbler
58%
1.5
Black-billed Cuckoo
398%
0.7
Yellow Warbler
39%
10.4
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
Black-throated Blue Warbler
-76%
0.7
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
-59%
1.3
Blackpoll Warbler
-57%
2.2
Solitary Sandpiper
-55%
1.3
Cape May Warbler
-75%
0.2
Bobolink
-51%
1.4
Scarlet Tanager
-41%
3
Palm Warbler
-89%
0.1
Lesser Yellowlegs
-38%
2.7
Baltimore Oriole
-40%
2.5
Gray Catbird
-26%
8.7
Connecticut Warbler
-81%
0.1
Veery
-57%
0.6
Pectoral Sandpiper
-48%
1.3
House Wren
-40%
1.9
Wood Thrush
-29%
4.6
Least Sandpiper
-26%
5.5
Nashville Warbler
-46%
0.8
Savannah Sparrow
-55%
0.8
Greater Yellowlegs
-46%
1.4
Black-and-white Warbler
-21%
4.6
Clay-colored Sparrow
-58%
0.3
White-throated Sparrow
-92%
0
Ovenbird
-19%
3.5
Cedar Waxwing
-18%
8.2
Bay-breasted Warbler. Nathan Martineau/Macaulay Library. 15 May 2016. eBird S29697492.
Great Plains
A quiet start for migration in this period quickly became much more active. In favorable conditions, moderate to heavy flights occurred in many areas of the northern and central Plains from Saturday through to the end of the period. These flights reached, perhaps, their greatest intensity and extent on Wednesday night. However, stormy conditions in the southern Plains kept movements somewhat less intense and more localized, generally. This was particularly true on Monday and Thursday nights.
Top Movers
Increasing
Species
Increase from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
American Redstart
64%
18.4
Chestnut-sided Warbler
81%
5.9
Philadelphia Vireo
87%
4.8
Black Tern
34%
8.8
Canada Warbler
339%
2
Mourning Warbler
108%
3.3
Alder Flycatcher
156%
2.9
Wilson's Warbler
39%
9.1
Tennessee Warbler
39%
16.9
Least Flycatcher
28%
21.6
Yellow-headed Blackbird
45%
12.2
Bobolink
44%
7.4
Willow Flycatcher
88%
2.7
Eastern Wood-Pewee
34%
14.7
Yellow Warbler
24%
44.4
Gray Catbird
24%
23.5
Bank Swallow
45%
5.3
Gray-cheeked Thrush
56%
3.6
Bay-breasted Warbler
107%
1.4
Common Yellowthroat
22%
20
Magnolia Warbler
23%
5.4
Olive-sided Flycatcher
55%
1.8
Decreasing
Species
Decrease from Last Week
% of Checklists Reporting
White-crowned Sparrow
-70%
3.4
Lincoln's Sparrow
-59%
3.1
Harris's Sparrow
-53%
3.7
Mississippi Kite
-58%
2.6
Baird's Sandpiper
-54%
2
White-throated Sparrow
-35%
4.8
Orange-crowned Warbler
-37%
5.5
Chuck-will's-widow
-85%
0.1
Yellow-rumped Warbler
-29%
10.8
Blue Grosbeak
-50%
2.4
Lesser Yellowlegs
-29%
5.6
Greater Yellowlegs
-46%
1.5
Savannah Sparrow
-33%
4.3
Ash-throated Flycatcher
-93%
0
Hooded Warbler
-88%
0.1
Solitary Sandpiper
-55%
0.8
Pied-billed Grebe
-36%
3.6
Northern Bobwhite
-28%
5.7
American Wigeon
-49%
1.4
Black-crowned Night-Heron
-59%
0.4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
-32%
3.8
Long-billed Dowitcher
-35%
2.6
Black-necked Stilt
-49%
0.8
White-faced Ibis
-39%
1.5
Lark Sparrow
-25%
13.2
Bobolink. Don Coons/Macaulay Library. 16 May 2016. eBird S29702099
West
On Friday night, moderate flights occurred from California and the Desert Southwest locally north and east through the Rockies. In the latter areas, in particular, a stationary front farther east brought favorable conditions that allowed locally heavy flights to occur. In the days that followed, increasingly scattered precipitation across the region kept most movements local and light, but some areas of the Rockies continued to experience significant movements. These movements included moderate to locally heavy flights in the northern Rockies on Sunday and Monday, as well as similarly intense flights in the central Rockies on Tuesday and Wednesday, and even the southern Rockies on Thursday. Note that a significant pattern change for weather in the Pacific Northwest kept movements for the period light at best.