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American Robin Migration Update: May 10, 2005

Today's Report Includes:


American Robin Migration Maps and Data
Where are all the robins? That’s the question we began with as we asked you to join the 2005 Winter Robin Round-up 3 months ago. And now look at the map of your sightings! Spring's robin migration is reaching the end of the road. All but one of our NOPs have welcomed their robins home.
 
First Robins
Seen
Waves
of Robins
First Robins Heard Singing*

(map) (map) (map) (data)
*Recommended for mapping

Initiation of "Song" is the clearest pattern we expect to see as we track the spring robin migration. Printer-friendly format:


Instant Replay of the Migration: Try This!
For almost 4 months you have watched the ever-changing Journey North maps. You were challenged to think and act like scientists as you made predictions and puzzled out the mysteries of migrations and other seasonal changes. Now you can see an instant replay! Play this slideshow several times and watch how the migration advanced each week through spring.

Try This! Discussion/Journaling Questions
As you viewed the slideshow, do you see changes you did not notice before? Make a general statement to describe what happened as the season went on. Try to explain the underlying reasons for this pattern. How did the "pace" of spring change from one week to the next? What factors might have influenced this?


Just One More NOP to Go
Which of the Canadian NOPs is the only holdout still waiting to see spring's first robin? Which places are waiting to hear the robin’s song? It's NOT Port Hope, Ontario, where Ute Keitsch exclaims: “We have Spring! The Robins are going crazy.” Trees still don’t have leaves yet, but last week brought another huge wave of robins to Port Hope--mostly females but also some new males. See the latest NOP News for the fun story of the robin family on Linda Hoffman’s deck, and to find out how spring looks for some of the NOPs who already welcomed their robins. A HEARTY THANK YOU to all the wonderful folks who shared the excitement of welcoming their robins at our 20 Northern Observation Posts!

How old do you think these robins are? Why are only two hatched? When will the other(s) hatch? Photo Dorothy Edgington

Welcome to the World!
"Three eggs in the nest!! It is the beginning,” exclaimed Marielle Gauvin of St-alphonse-de-granby (45.3305 N, 72.7827 W) in the Province of Quebec. When will these robin eggs hatch? (You have learned from past reports how long this takes. Look back, or see information on our Robin Resource page for this answer and more.)

Guess what? Hatching out of an egg can take an entire day! Each chick must fight its way out of the egg. First it breaks a hole in the shell (this is called pipping) with its egg tooth. The egg tooth is a hard hook on the baby’s beak, especially there for a hatching tool. The baby pokes and stretches and struggles from inside the shell, taking rest stops during the hard work. Finally it breaks free of the shell. Eggs usually hatch a day apart in the order they were laid.

Baby robins grow quickly. They grow from the size of their tiny egg to the size of their big parents in only about two weeks! For the first four days of a nestling's life, the parent birds regurgitate partly digested food into the orange, yawning mouths of the babies. By their fifth day, the nestlings are receiving earthworms that have been broken into small mouthfuls. As the days go by, parents give the babies complete worms and large insects. Fred Charles found that Illinois robins put in 15.5 hours a day feeding young in late May. Each day they bring an average of 356 pieces of food to the nest! In his book The American Robin, Roland Wauer says this food is 50% Lepidoptera larva (caterpillars), 29% earthworms, 7% ants, 5% flies, and 9% beetles, centipedes, millipedes, adult butterflies and moths.


Try This! Make a pie chart showing what baby robins eat.


Don’t Stop Now! Robin-Watching Tips
Now that robins are nesting in many places, what kinds of observations can you make? During summer vacation, keep a field notebook for recording all your observations. Learn what kinds of things to record here:

Not all robins nest on trees! The one in this photo is nesting on a porch light. Photo Westbrooks.

Unbeatable Summer Reading
If a child came to your door with a dying robin and asked what was wrong with it, what would you do? When this happened to Jean Craighead George, the author of many distinguished books for children, she became deeply involved in tracking down the killer. The result was an ecological mystery that will captivate you (Harper Trophy edition 1992 pictured here). This must-read book is dedicated to "sunshine, clear water, and sparkling skies and the kids who are cleaning up the Earth."

As he tries to figure out who really killed the town's male Robin, eighth-grader Tony Isidoro threads his way through a maze of clues that includes trillions of ants in the town park, the absence of frog songs, and strange fumes from the town dump. So grab your copies of Jean Craighead George's wonderful mystery. Then take all summer to enjoy some activities from our suggestions below!

Baby robin in the grass. Photo J. Brophy

Keep Kitty Indoors
You’ve learned that robins make 2 to 4 nests a year, with 4 babies per nest. The same two adult robins are responsible for the hatching of children, grandchildren, great grandchildren, and more--with the potential to produce 19.5 million descendants by the end of a ten-year life span. In real life, this just doesn’t happen. Robins must produce plenty of babies to keep the robin population high enough to replace all the robins that die.

Here’s an important reminder as generations of new birds hatch and fledge this summer. The lives of billions of songbirds will be saved each year (and pet cats will be much safer) if people keep cats indoors. The birds and cats will thank you, and so will future generations who will still see and hear the songbirds that beautify each spring and summer. Remember the message and pass it on! Can you list 10 ways you can help birds? Read more here:


You’re the Expert: A Question for You
“While staying at a cabin in North GA we watched a female robin lay three eggs on the edge of a deck railing. Each one of them rolled off and broke on the deck. What would cause her to do this?” We got this question from an observer in Helen, Georgia.

Stop now to discuss why this might have happened. What ideas do you have?

After your discussion, compare with what Robin expert Laura Erickson says:
“It's hard to figure out how old she is; with females, that's only easy when they've been banded. But my guess is that she's a young female, and wasn't finished building a nest yet. Female birds produce one egg a day, and when the egg is ready to come out, she needs to lay it right away. If the nest isn't ready, some birds lay them in another bird's nest, but sometimes they just ‘dump’ it wherever they can.

“With robins, this dumping is very unusual. Robins start building their nest very quickly when they return in spring, and their bodies are timing egg production for when the nest is finished, so I suspect bad timing and inexperience are not the only problems this female had. Something may have happened to the nest. For example, another bird may have taken it over, or the nest may have been destroyed in bad weather.”


Disposable Diapers for Birds? Discussion of Challenge Question #11
Last time we asked you read “The Scoop on Poop: Disposable Diapers for Birds” then "Think of at least three advantages of parent birds eating fecal sacs of very young babies. Why do you think they usually stop eating them after the babies get older?"

Three cheers for Erin, grade 5 TAG student at South O'Brien Elementary, who showed good thinking by naming these advantages:
1. The nest stays clean.
2. There is more room in the nest.
3. The robins are happier.

We also thought of these advantages:
  • Very young babies don't digest much of their food yet, so their fecal sacs contain a lot of nutritious food. This would be a waste to throw away, especially when the parents are feeding their babies most of the food they find.
  • Eating fecal sacs on the spot saves parents the time and energy it would take to carry them away.
  • Fecal sacs are white, which would be noticeable when parents carry them from the nest. By eating the white fecal sacs (evidence of babies), the parents make it harder for nest predators to notice where a nest is.

We suspect that the reason parents stop eating fecal sacs as the babies get older is that bacteria growing in the babies' intestines starts making their feces germy, causing possible health risks to the parents.


Photo Wayne Kryduba
Sitting Down on the Job: Discussion of Challenge Question #12
Last time we gave you these facts: (1) A robin egg must be incubated for 12-14 days to develop normally. (2) Except for about a 10-minute hourly break during daylight hours, the female robin sits on the eggs all day long. Next, we asked you to figure out: "If you add up all of the time a robin egg is incubated, how many hours do you estimate that it takes for a robin egg to develop properly? (Assume the egg is incubated for 13 days and that there are 15 daylight hours. Don't forget to subtract the time a mother robin takes for "breaks"!)

If ten minutes of every hour are spent taking a break from incubating, that adds up to 2 hours and 30 minutes. Subtract that break time each day, and you get 12.5 hours of sitting per day, times 13 days = 162.5 hours for a robin egg to develop properly. This is one time when sitting down on the job deserves high praise.


Heads Up, Teachers! Science Standards and the Robin Study
Are you thinking ahead to science plans for the next school year? Don’t miss our new Standards Chart for the Journey North Robin Study:


Year-End Evaluation: Please Share Your Thoughts!
Please take a few minutes to share your suggestions and comments in our Year-End Evaluation. The information readers provide is critical for planning new initiatives and for improving Journey North. We'd appreciate your help. THANK YOU!

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Year End Evaluation
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This is the FINAL Robin Migration Update for Spring 2005. It was a delight to learn about YOUR robins this spring! Thanks to all who shared observations to build a picture of this spring’s robin migration, and double high fives for everyone who will watch their robins with a caring and attentive eye this summer!

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