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Dateline: August 2022

If it’s August, must be time for an update (or several) from the BIRDS (BirdingPI.com Regional Desert Southwest) Field Station in Tucson, AZ. (Recent weather in Tucson: ranging from sunny with highs of 105 deg F to rainy/monsoon with temps in the 70s deg F; humid.) Lots of great birds in Arizona!

Recent shots from around the field station. First up, the state bird of Arizona, the beautiful Cactus Wren, on or in a cactus:

Cactus Wren on a cactus
Cactus Wren off a cactus

Wow, Haris’s Hawk! In a neighborhood eucalyptus tree. Note the dark brown coloration, chestnut shoulder patches, white coverts, and white tail tip.

Tree view, front
Tree view, rear I
Tree view, rear II

Plenty of hummingbird activity. One of the more common in Tucson, Costa’s Hummingbird. These are all males, or perhaps the same male:

Flower feeder

Looks similar to the also-fairly-common Anna’s Hummingbird, but the males have a purple-colored head/throat/gorget (see following shot); Anna’s males – red-colored. (“Gorget:” flaps of elongate feathers that extend off either side of the throat.)

Feeder feeder
Preening
Flight drama
Perch/branch

Dove action! Omitting the very common Mourning Dove in favor of two of the local ‘exotics:’

Eurasian Collared Dove – note the black ‘collar’
White-winged Dove

Another ubiquitous desert denizen, the Curved-billed Thrasher:

Puffy/thrasher

Yet another desert/southwest ‘likely to see,’ the Lesser Goldfinch (male):

Goldfinger

Ducks in Tucson? Yup – plenty of artificial lakes in Tucson, and thereby plenty of birds to take advantage. Here’s a lovely female Mexican Duck (Mexican/Mallard hybrid?) at Sweetwater Wetlands:

Happy duck portrait

Very interesting discussion of Mexican vs. Mallard Ducks by Sibley. Although, recent word is that Mexican Duck is currently considered a separate species from Mallard, interbreeding notwithstanding.