Keep South Carolina Wild

banner

Palmetto Pro Birders at ACE Basin

February 18, 2022

Thanks to all of the bird lovers that joined us for this winter’s Palmetto Pro-Birder walk at Bear Island WMA! Thanks also to Jessica Kinsella, Stewardship Coordinator for ACE Basin, which is managed in partnership with SC DNR, for teaching us about the property and showing us how a rice trunk works!  We viewed 85 species total, including a Black Skimmer that was chasing Tundra Swans and ducks.
We also viewed trees filled with dozens of Roseate Spoonbills, and saw a cute little rail called a Sora weaving in and out of the marsh grass. SCWF loves sharing special places like this with you, and we hope to see you at our next nature adventure!
Here is the list of the 85 species we saw and/or heard!

  1. Tundra Swan
  2. Gadwall
  3. Wood Duck
  4. Blue-winged Teal
  5. Green-winged Teal
  6. Northern Pintail (photos of a high-flying flock captured by Zach)
  7. Mottled Duck
  8. Northern Shoveler
  9. Bufflehead
  10. Hooded Merganser
  11. Pied Billed Grebe
  12. Sora
  13. American Avocet (one seen flying in and then landing in the far end of Mary’s Pond)
  14. Common Gallinule
  15. American Coot
  16. Bonaparte’s Gull
  17. Ring-billed Gull (two flyover birds at Bear Island)
  18. Forster’s Tern
  19. Caspian Tern
  20. Black Skimmer
  21. Double-crested Cormorant
  22. Anhinga
  23. Green Heron
  24. Great Blue Heron
  25. Little Blue Heron
  26. Tri-colored Heron
  27. Snowy Egret
  28. Great Egret
  29. Black-crowned Night Heron
  30. White Ibis
  31. Glossy Ibis
  32. Wood Stork
  33. American White Pelican
  34. Roseate Spoonbill
  35. Greater Yellowlegs
  36. Lesser Yellowlegs
  37. Killdeer
  38. Mourning Dove
  39. Eurasion Collared Dove
  40. Turkey Vulture
  41. Black Vulture
  42. Northern Harrier
  43. Red-tailed Hawk
  44. Red-shouldered Hawk
  45. Bald Eagle
  46. Barn Owl(In the nesting box on Bear Island)
  47. Belted Kingfisher
  48. Fish Crow
  49. American Crow
  50. Blue Jay
  51. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
  52. Red-headed Woodpecker
  53. Red-bellied Woodpecker
  54. Pileated Woodpecker
  55. Downy Woodpecker
  56. Northern Flicker
  57. Red-cockaded Woodpecker
  58. Carolina Chickadee
  59. Tufted Titmouse
  60. Tree Swallow
  61. Ruby-crowned Kinglet
  62. Carolina Wren
  63. Marsh Wren
  64. Eastern Bluebird
  65. American Robin
  66. Swamp Sparrow
  67. Song Sparrow
  68. Chipping Sparrow
  69. Eastern Towhee
  70. Red-winged Blackbird
  71. Common Grackle
  72. Boat-tailed Grackle
  73. Eastern Phoebe
  74. White-breasted Nuthatch
  75. Brown-headed Nuthatch
  76. Northern Mockingbird
  77. Gray Catbird
  78. Eastern Meadowlark
  79. Blue-gray gnatcatcher
  80. White-eyed Vireo
  81. Northern Cardinal
  82. Pine Warbler
  83. Palm Warbler
  84. Common Yellowthroat (A cute warbler that we heard at both places).
  85. Yellow-rumped Warbler

Similar Posts

W.A.I.T. Partner Spotlight: Lonza
October 16, 2019

The South Carolina Wildlife Federation (SCWF) is fortunate to partner with companies all over the state for the Wildlife and Industry Together (W.A.I.T.) Program. W.A.I.T. creates an opportunity for organizations...

Community Feature: Naturalist Zach Steinhauser provides nesting boxes to Fourteen Mile Creek in Lexington, S.C.
March 05, 2019

We love hearing about ways our supporters and partners are making improvements around the state for our wildlife and wildlife habitat! Zach Steinhauser, a Naturalist based at Wingard’s Market (A...

Haig Point on Daufuskie Island Celebrates Certification as a Community Wildlife Habitat
July 24, 2024

Haig Point was recently certified as a Community Wildlife Habitat! As the 15th Certified Community Wildlife Habitat in our state, Haig Point has joined over 300 other communities across the...