THE BIRDS
NORTHERN PHALAROPE. Lobipes lobatus (Linnaeus)
Field characters.A
'wader' much smaller than Killdeer; bill needle-like. Whole under
surface pure white; back dark brown in spring and summer, pearl gray in
fall and winter; sides of neck rusty brown in spring and summer. Swims
buoyantly in companies on open water.
Occurrence.Numerous at
Mono Lake during seasons of migration. Observed May 24 and 27, 1916
(Dixon, MS), and in August and between September 2 and 21, 1901 (Fisher,
1902, p. 10).
The Northern Phalarope is one of the small water
birds that nests in the far north and winters to the south of us. It
thus occurs in our latitude only for a brief period in spring and again
in the fall. At these times it is likely to appear on any body of water
either east or west of the Sierran divide.
These birds are adept swimmers and gather their food
from the surface of the water by rapid darting movements of the head and
neck. Their delicate bills serve unerringly to capture the small objects
which are taken as food. At times a bird will spin around rapidly so as
to produce a miniature whirlpool or vortex and thus swirl the
animalicules from below up to within easy reach of its bill. Thus these
birds do not need to dive below the surface for their food as do so many
of the water birds, as, for instance, the grebes.
Dr. Walter K. Fisher (1902, p. 8) states that in the
fall of 1901 large numbers of southbound Northern Phalaropes visited
Mono Lake and fed on the brine shrimps which abound there. The
phalaropes fell easy prey to hunters, who called them "Mono Lake
pigeons."
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