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Kamloops Naturalist Club

Protecting and Promoting Nature

Kamloops Naturalist Club
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Welcome to Kamloops Naturalist Club

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Recent Comments

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  • First Cape May Warbler Ever Seen In the Lower Mainland

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Kamloops Naturalist Club

2 days ago

Kamloops Naturalist Club

I am creating this post at 4:50 PM on Feb. 16 to see if it gets shared with our website.
This adult Trumpeter Swan has been foraging in mineral rich waters which have stained its head. Likely on the breeding grounds somewhere. It is likely iron that is causing the staining.
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I am creating this post  at 4:50 PM on Feb. 16 to see if it gets shared with our website.
This adult Trumpeter Swan has been foraging in mineral rich waters which have stained its head. Likely on the breeding grounds somewhere. It is likely iron that is causing the staining.
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If you send a post to one of the Website managers, they will post it for you.

I wondered why the swans on the Thompson all had brownish heads!!

Looks like our whites at Paul Lake!

got it

Kamloops Naturalist Club

3 days ago

Kamloops Naturalist Club

Hey Kamloops, can you help get the word out about an exciting new program we’re offering? Share this post and tag anyone you know who might be interested in joining up. … See MoreSee Less

Hey Kamloops, can you help get the word out about an exciting new program were offering? Share this post and tag anyone you know who might be interested in joining up.
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Kamloops Naturalist Club added 6 new photos.

5 days ago

Kamloops Naturalist Club

Common Redpolls are another seed-eating finch that are normally found at higher latitudes in the Boreal and Taiga regions. They are an irruptive species that swarm south, often in large flocks when northern cone crops are inadequate to feed the large populations. They are one of the most common breeding birds of the north.
Birdwatchers in the south look for them anxiously in the winter when they may be found in cone-bearing conifers, birches and alders that have abundant catkins. They are restless little birds that may be feeding quietly and then suddenly burst into flight as a flock and vanish into the distance. Their harsh chattering "che che che" calls are distinctive and are unlike the buzzy, electric -like calls of Pine Siskins which they will associate with on occasion.
The taxonomy of this species and the closely-related Hoary Redpoll is often under debate about just how many species there are. The conservative view is that there is one species of Common Redpoll and it is distinct from the Hoary Redpoll. But other researchers suggest that there may be more than one species of Common Redpoll. Recent DNA studies suggest that there is only one species of redpoll period, with various expressions of physical traits.
Here I have posted a few variations of plumage that one might encounter when looking at this species.
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Common Redpolls are another seed-eating finch that are normally found at higher latitudes in the Boreal and Taiga regions. They are an irruptive species that swarm south, often in large flocks when northern cone crops are inadequate to feed the large populations. They are one of the most common breeding birds of the north.
Birdwatchers in the south look for them anxiously in the winter when they may be found in cone-bearing conifers, birches and alders that have abundant catkins. They are restless little birds that may be feeding quietly and then suddenly burst into flight as a flock and vanish into the distance. Their harsh chattering che che che calls are distinctive and are unlike the buzzy, electric -like calls of Pine Siskins which they will associate with on occasion.
The taxonomy of this species and the closely-related Hoary Redpoll is often under debate about just how many species there are. The conservative view is that there is one species of Common Redpoll and it is distinct from the Hoary Redpoll. But other researchers suggest that there may be more than one species of Common Redpoll. Recent DNA studies suggest that there is only one species of redpoll period, with various expressions of physical traits.
Here I have posted a few variations of plumage that one might encounter when looking at this species.Image attachmentImage attachment+3Image attachment
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Interestingly we used to see them frequently, but none for at least a year. Cute birds.

Thanks for this interesting information and photos of variations.

Savanna..... One to look out for! :)

Kamloops Naturalist Club shared Michelle Tsutsumi’s post.

2 weeks ago

Kamloops Naturalist Club

The latest in the ‘Films for Change’ series put on by TRU’s Office of Environment and Sustainability. This month’s entry is hosted by the Kamloops Food Policy Council. … See MoreSee Less

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Michelle

Hope you can join us on February 27th for a screening of SEED: The Untold Story! Full details in link below.

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2 weeks ago

It’s there a list of the current KNC board members? I am having a hard time finding them. … See MoreSee Less

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Some Naturalist Links

  • B.C. Nature
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  • Nicola Naturalists
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KNC Outdoors

  • Creamy-Marblewing
  • The inky cap has a smooth, pale brown cap
  • Western Bluebird Sialia mexicana Tucson, Pima County, Arizona, United States 1 March Adult Male Turdidae
  • Peter adjusting the clean-out door
  • No.1 Lynne Borle photo
  • Frank points out that there are orange lichens that grow on spots of nutrient enrichment, such as urine or poo from animals. Species of Xanthoria do this.
  • Judy drilling hinge holes
  • This delicate little ink cap grows on dung
  • Two-Tailed-Swallow-Tail
  • Last year we found two Long-toed salamanders

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Calendar

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    bats birds Dewdrop ecology environment environmentalist Isobel Lake Lac Du Bois restoration Shuswap snakes toads
Day
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October 18, 2018
18 Thu
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October 18, 2018
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