Bird Survey – March 2026
Urban Forest Monthly Survey
March 26, 2026
39 Species, 260 Individuals, 9 species with photos
Cloudy to sunny skies, warming temps of 61-72 degrees with an abundance of bird song for mate attraction and territory defense. Pair bonding behavior and nest building activity observed.
James Kendall (scope&camera), Ann Marshall (camera), Tonya Fannon (camera), Cassandra Margitan (camera) with Betty Kanne as scribe.
Checklist S313375629
Sharing links
Main Details
Thu 26 Mar 2026
8:07 AM
Thu 26 Mar 2026
8:07 AM
Totals
Observations
-
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 3
Media
© TG Fannon Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 15
-
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 4
-
Number observed: 16
Media
© James Kendall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 1
Details
Flyover -
Number observed: 1
Media
© James Kendall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 4
-
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 2
-
Number observed: 15
Details
Two adults actively building nest -
Number observed: 8
Media
© TG Fannon Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 2
-
Number observed: 6
Details
Going in and out of established nest -
Number observed: 4
-
Number observed: 12
Details
Taking nest materials into nestMedia
© TG Fannon Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 7
-
Number observed: 9
-
Number observed: 1
Details
Chup chup -
Number observed: 39
-
Number observed: 8
-
Number observed: 21
-
Number observed: 18
-
Number observed: 7
-
Number observed: 3
Details
Trill -
Number observed: 9
Media
© TG Fannon Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 1
Media
© TG Fannon Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 1
-
Number observed: 7
-
Number observed: 5
Media
© James Kendall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 3
-
Number observed: 4
Details
Pair together in palm tree, very active, expect nest buildingMedia
© James Kendall Macaulay Library © James Kendall Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © TG Fannon Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library © Ann Marshall Macaulay Library -
Number observed: 4
-
Number observed: 3
-
Number observed: 11
Exotic species
Exotic species flags differentiate locally introduced species from native species.
Naturalized: Exotic population is self-sustaining, breeding in the wild, persisting for many years, and not maintained through ongoing releases (including vagrants from Naturalized populations). These count in official eBird totals and, where applicable, have been accepted by regional bird records committee(s).
Provisional: Either: 1) member of exotic population that is breeding in the wild, self-propagating, and has persisted for multiple years, but not yet Naturalized; 2) rarity of uncertain provenance, with natural vagrancy or captive provenance both considered plausible. When applicable, eBird generally defers to bird records committees for records formally considered to be of “uncertain provenance”. Provisional species count in official eBird totals.
Escapee: Exotic species known or suspected to be escaped or released, including those that have bred but don’t yet fulfill the criteria for Provisional. Escapee exotics do not count in official eBird totals.

Details
Female viewed gathering cobwebs for nest