Mature Arctic Ivory Gull Seen in Massachusetts – first time in over a century

One of the claims about “global climate change” is that it will affect the normal ranges of flora and fauna of our planet. Well, with a very cold northern hemisphere this winter, that seems to happening. A bird not seen (as a mature adult) in Massachusetts since the 1800’s , an Ivory Gull, normally an inhabitant of arctic areas, has been spotted. Here are the details from the Plymouth, MA Patriot-Ledger. – Anthony

GULL-LOVER’S TRAVELS: Birdwatchers flock to Plymouth to spot rare specimen

gull gd 012709-03.JPG

PLYMOUTH — Jan 28th, 2009

The temperatures were in the single digits, but not low enough to keep the gawkers away. A celebrity was in town, behind the East Bay Grille, a visitor not seen in these parts in decades, if not longer.

But these weren’t paparazzi, and this wasn’t a Hollywood star. Rather, they were avid birdwatchers – about 20 in all – braving the frigid air as they scanned the bay and the edges of the breakwater with binoculars and spotting scopes.

And they would be rewarded, catching a glimpse of a glimpse of a rare, fully mature ivory gull. A birdwatcher reported seeing one in Plymouth last week, and another was spotted at Eastern Point Lighthouse in Gloucester. From Sunday through Tuesday, the avian visitor was a regular in Plymouth, much to the delight of birdwatchers, who came from near and far in hopes of adding the extremely rare bird to their life list.

Ivory gulls normally stay well above Newfoundland, living on Arctic ice where they follow whales and polar bears to feed on the scraps and carcasses they leave behind after making a kill.

http://media.townonline.com/patriotledger/photos/ivory_gull_map.jpg

Until this year, the last report of a fully mature ivory gull in Massachusetts was in the 1800s. Three immature birds were seen in the 1940s. In 1976, another immature bird had been spotted in Rockport.

Russell Graham of Dallas is flying in Friday for a three-day visit. He’s hoping the gull will still be in town when he arrives.

“The ivory gull is one of a handful of birds that every birder dreams of seeing but almost no one has.,” he said. “This isn’t a dream that’s confined to North America. There is also an immature bird in France that is causing the same reaction there. There are a couple of places where you can go in the summer and expect to see one but they are distant and expensive – Svalbard on Spitsbergen, Norway and Pond Inlet on Baffin Island, Canada.

“I never thought I would have the chance to see one and I can’t pass up this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.”

If the gull is gone, Graham will consider a side trip to Nova Scotia, where two adult ivory gulls have been seen recently. “I’ll be keeping my fingers crossed,” he said.

John Fox of Arlington, Va., and his friend Adam D’Onofrio of Petersburg drove more than eight hours on Sunday to see the gull.

“No bird this morning,” Fox said a day later, shaking his head. “We left Virginia at three in the morning yesterday and arrived here 20 minutes too late.”

On Sunday morning, hundreds of people got to observe and photograph the gull as it fed on a chicken carcass someone put out on one of the docks in the parking lot. The bird stayed until 11 a.m., then flew across the harbor. It was not seen again for the rest of the day.

“We arrived at 11:20 and spent the rest of the afternoon in the parking lot, hoping it would return,” Fox said.

They stayed at Pilgrim Sands Motel and arrived at the parking lot early Monday morning for one more chance to see the ivory gull before returning to Virginia. Fox said it was his first time in Massachusetts. If he didn’t see the bird, he said, at least he could see Plymouth Rock before they left for home.

“That’s how it goes sometimes,” he said. “We don’t always see what we come for, but it’s nice to see some of the sights when you travel to a new area in hopes of seeing a rare bird.”

As Fox was planning his exit, a commotion caught his attention. One of the birders pointed toward the sky and said with a shout, “There it is.”

The pure white gull was flying toward the parking lot, silhouetted against a bright blue sky. Someone in the crowd announced for the record the gull had arrived at 7:45 a.m.

The bird flew in circles overhead, then landed on a snow bank in the middle of the parking lot. Cameras clicked and the birders “oohed and ahhhed” each time the ivory gull switched positions.

“Look how white it is,” someone said. “It’s got black feet, black eyes and a grayish-black beak,” said another.

The gull eyeballed the chicken carcass, still there from the day before, but it didn’t eat. Instead, it flew to the railing along the edge of the boat ramp and perched with a group of sea gulls. The photographers followed, changing positions to get the best lighting.

Fox stood with the group, talking with other birdwatchers, as the gull sat peacefully on the railing, observing all the people gathered around it. Was it worth the long drive up from Virginia?

“It sure was,” Fox said with a smile.

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JimB
January 29, 2009 2:05 pm

Since we’re talking about weather ;*)
“A big, and perhaps even a colossal, winter storm looms for the East early next week. The storm will begin through the South later Sunday with rain falling in the Gulf states and snow breaking out from Arkansas into western Tennessee and western Kentucky.”
MAJOR East Coast storm:
http://www.accuweather.com/news-story.asp?partner=accuweather&traveler=0&zipChg=1&article=0
JimB

B. Friesen
January 29, 2009 2:15 pm

H.A. Reynolds (13:13:22) :
The Coleman article has some interesting comments on Maurice Strong. In that regard, I strongly recommend reading “Cloak of Green” by Elaine Dewar (James Lorimer & Company, Toronto, 1995). Summary: in preparation for the Rio summit in 1992, Strong ensured he could influence the summit and achieve the desired outcomes (two examples: he created a Brazilian ENGO staffed by Canadians and funded by the Canadian international development agency to influence the PrepComs leading up to Rio and at Rio; he worked with his friend Stephan Schmidheiny to establish the Business Council on Sustainable Development as the main conduit for business participation at Rio). None of this is illegal or unethical, and certainly not a surprise. It is politics as usual, done particularly well by a very competent politician.
The points are: the climate issue is political, and is seen as some as an entry point for world governance. Again, this is not new or surprising, but the book mentioned above is an entertaining read.
Cheers from a long time, and appreciative, lurker.

January 29, 2009 2:36 pm

John A (01:12:22)
I’ll never understand birdwatchers as long as I live.

I like bird watching, but ornithology, I don’t understand! 😀

budahmon
January 29, 2009 2:39 pm

From 1974 to 1978 we had a snowy owl that lived in our barn during the winter. It would arrive in early December and leave in early March. The amazing thing is this was in North Carolina….

Jari
January 29, 2009 2:42 pm

Michelle St.Sauveur;
beautiful photos! I am glad you where able to capture good images of the bird. Not a bird watcher myself but I can understand the excitement.

Austin
January 29, 2009 2:47 pm

For fun, Google “Arctic Owls in Ohio” or any other Midwestern State. There are papers on “Owl Infestations”
LOL
http://www.jstor.org/pss/4156129

Ray
January 29, 2009 2:51 pm

This is another observation that puts more reservations on the actual ice coverage in the artic. Why birds would fly so far south to find food if the artic ice is melting away?
On the more serious side of this story… to any climate modelers reading this blog, please add this very important parameter, the Gull Parameter into your models. This could be the missing link in your model that might improve your output.

Simon Evans
January 29, 2009 2:53 pm

Like the birds that brought down the “miracle on the Hudson” jetliner last week. They were said to be there thanks to “climate change”. – Anthony
Hmm – more than one of them though – we have you outnumbered! 😉
Let’s decide it all on a count of flaura and fauna out of their ‘natural’ territory. We need a trading system, though – 1 polar bear = 59 gulls = 4,289 ferns…..
I look forward to your lead articles on critters being spotted more northerly than we might expect ;-). Alternatively, we could discuss the science on these matters, if anyone was interested in that!

Ray
January 29, 2009 2:59 pm

H.A. Reynolds, I read this article earlier today and did a bit of research on Maurice Strong. It is totally true what they say about him and his globalist ambitions… the connection is (of course): Rockefeller!
“In 1973, William Irwin Thompson founded Lindisfarne, which has been supported by the Rockefeller Foundation. Lindisfarne’s plan is for a new “planetary culture” synthesizing science, art, and spiritual awareness. Maurice Strong has been its financial officer, and Luciferian David Spangler has been on its faculty. Strong also has been a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation and the custodian of a group of New Age ashrams in Colorado called “The Baca” which has been visited by David Rockefeller, Henry Kissinger and others.” ref. http://www.newswithviews.com/Cuddy/dennis146.htm
It is also good that Gore’s mentor, Roger Revelle, changed his mind about the whole man-made global warming scam. Of course, Gore having to morality, rejected Revelle’s revision by accusing him of being senile.

budahmon
January 29, 2009 3:09 pm

Austin pretty nice link……

k
January 29, 2009 3:37 pm

Very cool bird sighting.
Would you people please quit allowing truth to cloud your vision?

Ray
January 29, 2009 3:53 pm

And do you know who else was in this Lindisfarne society? None other than James Lovelock himself… the Father of Gaia.

Steven Hill
January 29, 2009 3:53 pm

Anyone care to comment on this linkhttp://discover.itsc.uah.edu/amsutemps/execute.csh?amsutemps
It shows heat increases since 2004.

Fernando Garcia
January 29, 2009 4:19 pm

If ivory gulls go south is because weather is getting colder in the artic, so get ready for a real cold winter 2009

k
January 29, 2009 4:26 pm

I didn’t read thru all the posts so forgive if this is a repeat. There are many reasons for rare bird sightings, some which we don’t understand. On the flip side, last year a mango hummingbird (native to the rainforests) was seen in GA and WI. GA also had an eruption year last year of red-breasted nuthatches commonly seen in Canada.
It’s still a cool bird sighting though and I hope all those that travel to see it get at least a glimpse.

Ray
January 29, 2009 4:29 pm

Steven, I don’t know how much validity is in the graphs shown at that website. For one thing, the present temperature is average or colder for most altitude. But when you look at the average temperature at the near surface it shows about -16.5 to -17 Celsius. Well, for a global temperature it is pretty cold and the earth should be a snowball earth.

January 29, 2009 4:38 pm

Yeah i think this winter is gonna turn deadly.

N. O'Brain
January 29, 2009 4:42 pm

Beautiful bird, the Ivory Gull.
Lovely plumage.
But is he pining for the fjords?

January 29, 2009 5:52 pm

Here’s a photo that covers both bases, birds & volcanoes: click

Editor
January 29, 2009 6:08 pm

Oh this isn’t unusual. I’ve been identifying a number of birds visiting the feeders outside my house this winter, many are species that are normally found in the high arctic. Saw a few Pine Grosbeaks and White Winged Crossbills the other day which spend their summers in the high tundra and their winters in the pine forests of mid-canadian latitudes. I am in New Hampshire.
We are also seeing increases in wolf activity here in the Northeast, as they are forced southward out of canada by ever colder winters. The moose that are native to this state are expanding southward into southern New England, with resident populations now in Connecticut state that are reproducing: http://www.rep-am.com/sports/local_sports/doc495eee65ac1d3000173007.txt

pyromancer76
January 29, 2009 6:09 pm

I have read every comment of the last three entries; the monumental thrashing and hashing things out respectfully albeit passionately has been a remarkable opportunity afforded so uniquely by this blog. One magnificent, undoubtable (for me) conclusion is that the AGWers or GCMers have:
-the data wrong
-the statistics wrong
-the forecasting wrong
-the atmospheric physics wrong
-global climate history wrong
And it is clear that most of the wrongs are purposeful and definitely befouling science. It is time to stop them. I voted for Al Gore; I shudder to think of that moment. At least the beautiful white gull offers a soothing moment as we try to “save our planet” from the pseudo-saviors.
I would be appreciative of more recent work on atmospheric physics. I do not feel comfortable with “the greenhouse”; it is difficult to imagine the effects of gravity compared to that of a glass-wall encasement.

Harold Vance
January 29, 2009 7:12 pm

N. O’Brain: He’s pining for the lovely sheets of iridescent nacreous clouds over the fjords.

AnonyMoose
January 29, 2009 7:15 pm

Snowy owls: “The name is a clue” comments on the AP’s not connecting the owl with the cold weather.

Randall
January 29, 2009 7:26 pm

Dell Hunt, have you seen any snowy owls by the Cascades?

Jim Thomas
January 29, 2009 7:41 pm

Slightly OT:
Per Fox 32 TV Weather in Chicago: “Coldest January in 15 years.”
Shhhhh, tell no one.