Collection date unknown. Likely window strike.
ID suggested by Steve Brauning, female.
Expedición Murrucucú
Waterthrush foraging along cenote at Cueva de los Peces. Sea water flushes this pool through a natural underground channel.
Northern Waterthrush (Parkesia noveboracensis) Very similar to Louisiana Waterthrush, but usually more yellowish base color below, duller legs, and narrower off-white eyebrow. Also look for small streaks on the throat (clean white on Louisiana). It is found dense vegetation near water. Look for off-white underparts with dark streaks (often with a noticeable yellowish wash) and a whitish eyebrow. Stays on or near the ground, constantly bobbing its rear end up and down. Winters mostly in Mangroves, primarily in Middle America and the Caribbean, extending into northern South America (further south than Louisiana Waterthrush).
https://ebird.org/species/norwat/ and and My Ebird: https://ebird.org/checklist/S127515992
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, ed. Jon L. Dunn, 7th ed., 2017. pp.452-453
Field Guide to the Birds of Cuba, Orlando H. Garrido and Arturo Kirkconnell, 2000, pp. 198-199, plate 43
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PROBABLY NOT
Louisiana Waterthrush (Parkesia motacilla) Winters primarily in Middle America and the Caribbean. Can be found around slower-moving water. Very similar to Northern Waterthrush, but whiter base color below, brighter pink legs, and broader white eyebrow. Also look for clean white throat (usually streaked on Northern).
Diet is aquatic and terrestrial insects, crustaceans. Eats many insects including beetles, bugs, adult and larval mayflies, dragonflies, crane-fly larvae, ants, caterpillars, scale insects; also small crustaceans, snails, a few small fish and seeds. Tends to take larger items than Northern Waterthrush.
Waterthrushes are a genus of New World warbler, Parkesia. The genus was split from Seiurus, which previously contained both waterthrush species and the ovenbird.
E Bird https://ebird.org/explore and https://ebird.org/species/louwat and My Ebird: https://ebird.org/checklist/S127515992
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, ed. Jon L. Dunn, 7th ed., 2017. pp.452-453
Field Guide to the Birds of Cuba, Orlando H. Garrido and Arturo Kirkconnell, 2000, pp. 198-199, plate 43
Audubon Guide to North American Birds https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/louisiana-waterthrush
Sample sound recording of the Louisiana Waterthrush
Sharing wildlife sounds from around the world https://xeno-canto.org/explore?query=Parkesia%20motacilla
I.D. Guide on (400) Birds of Cuba (including the 23 Endemics) https://Birds-Of-Cuba.com and https://www.birds-of-cuba.com/Endemic_Birds_of_Cuba.html
The Cornell Lab (Birds in U.S. and Canada) https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/ (enter common name)
Merlin Bird ID (great app available for Iphones) by The Cornell Lab (Bird ID help for 8,500+ species)
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November 17-26, 2018 I participated in the bi-annual Cuba Bird Survey with Western Field Ornithologists and the Caribbean Conservation Trust (CCT). Our guides were Kurt Leuschner, College of the Desert, Palm Desert CA, Dr. Luis M. Diaz, Curator of Herpetology at the Cuban National Museum of Natural History in Havana, Jon Dunn, editor of the National Geographic Field Guide to Birds of North America, and local natural history specialists in each region we visited.
I had the privilege again, January 4-14, 2023, to participate in the Cuba Bird Survey. We did find 25 of the 27 endemic Cuban bird species as well as many other interesting plants, animals, and people. Cuba is a fascinating country and is rich in biodiversity!
All of our Ebird Cuba 2023 Trip Report sightings (61 checklists, 161 bird species) can be viewed at https://ebird.org/tripreport/103452.
Irene's New World Warblers (Parulidae) observations worldwide on INaturalist: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?place_id=any&taxon_id=71349&user_id=aparrot1&verifiable=any
Brown-capped Redstart
Chickadee at the feeder. Don't ask me why it looks like big black doom in the background.
Canon EOS 2000D with Tamron 75D AF 200-400mm f/5.6 lens
In parking garage at 100 College Street
Carolina Chickadee
Cimetière Laval/Mt Pleasant
Foto tomada por Sol Botello