Here today, gone tomorrow.
A brown shrike, a bird usually found in East Asia, was spotted by a group of volunteer bird banders in Metchosin on Tuesday, Oct. 1.
B次元官网网址淚 just started yelling for a minute or so,B次元官网网址 says Joachim Bertrands, a Simon Fraser University biology student. B次元官网网址淲eB次元官网网址檙e all pretty obsessed with birds, so to realize that a bird made it so far is a pure rush of adrenaline for me.B次元官网网址
READ MORE: Rare Russian bird sighting sees birdwatchers flock to the BC Shuswap
This is the first spotting of a brown shrike in British Columbia and the second spotting in Canada. The last time the same bird was seen in Nova Scotia back in 1997.
Bertrands is part of a volunteer group that captures and releases migratory birds. He credits his co-volunteers, Siobhan Darlington, Ian Cruikshank, and David Bell, for helping with the banding process.
They spotted the rare find in Rocky Point Bird Observatory, located within a DND military base thatB次元官网网址檚 off-limits to the public.
ALSO READ: Birders flock to Cloverdale for rare sighting
The banding process is simple. Volunteers will place a small band on the birdB次元官网网址檚 leg so future banders will know where it was spotted previously. Additionally, they quickly take key measurements, such as the wingspan and tail length. They also weigh, age, and sex them.
But what has caused this rare sighting? Something called B次元官网网址榬everse migrationB次元官网网址.
B次元官网网址淪ometimes these birds have minor errors in their migration instinct,B次元官网网址 says Bertrands.
B次元官网网址淪trong winds may be responsible for pushing birds away from their route, especially when they are young. They become lost and then end up on another continent.B次元官网网址
aaron.guillen@goldstreamgazette.com
Like us on and follow us on