Backyard Naturalist: Nate Marchessault – Species that skirt the season’s edge

Nate Marchessault

Nate Marchessault COURTESY PHOTO

A male Blackburnian warbler, a species of Neotropical migrant that breeds in this region and winters in South America.

A male Blackburnian warbler, a species of Neotropical migrant that breeds in this region and winters in South America. — PHOTO BY NATE MARCHESSAULT

An American woodcock foraging along the snowline. 

An American woodcock foraging along the snowline.  — PHOTO BY STEVEN LAMONDE

A wood frog crossing the road en route to breeding pools, observed during Harris Center’s Salamander Crossing Brigades.

A wood frog crossing the road en route to breeding pools, observed during Harris Center’s Salamander Crossing Brigades. — PHOTO BY BRETT AMY THELEN

An adult bald eagle in a white pine.

An adult bald eagle in a white pine. — PHOTO BY NATE MARCHESSAULT

Published: 02-21-2025 8:31 AM

It's a brisk morning in early March and you've just arrived at your favorite lake. Heater set to high, seats roasting, and warm beverage in hand, you take a moment to appreciate the landscape.

The lake is frozen in all but the outflow, and trees are coated from overnight snow. You notice a stick nest the size of a couch in a large pine, as coated as the trees surrounding it. The snow fidgets and shakes until a head as white as the snow encompassing it emerges, sporting a yellow bill gleaming in the morning sun.

The bird is a bald eagle, which shakes the snow off its body, examines its eggs and resumes incubating, undeterred by the conditions.

In our region, bald eagles return to begin nesting as early as mid-February. They are a species that skirts the season’s edge; risking adverse conditions for a greater reward.

Eagle eggs take just over a month to hatch, and after hatching, the young remain in the nest for approximately three months. It is this long process of rearing young in the nest that makes the early nesting worthwhile. By early April, many lakes and ponds have started to open up again, and adult eagles take advantage of the increased foraging opportunities to provide fish and occasionally waterfowl for their young.

Another bird that begins nesting early is the great horned owl. In addition to timing the hatching of their young to increased food availability, they also skirt the season’s edge for a slightly more devious reason. They do not build their own nests and instead take advantage of the hard work of hawks, crows and other bird species by stealing their nests in January and February before their owners arrive back from wintering grounds.

They will even steal nests from birds as large as herons, and it’s a favorite pastime of birders to look for the ear tufts of a great horned owl poking out of a heron nest at heron rookeries in the early spring.

Arriving in mid-March, American woodcocks are a cryptic species of shorebird that feed by probing the soil for earthworms and other insects in fields and thickets. These birds can only feed once the ground has thawed, but instead of waiting until there is no threat of re-freezing, their migrations follow the snowmelt.

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Woodcocks have been known to follow the frost line not only north as the ground thaws but also short jaunts back south with sporadic cold snaps that refreeze it. The added moisture from the melting snow may aid their capture of prey, as earthworms are most frequently near the soil surface when the ground is wet. They take advantage of this abundant food source to refuel from the energy spent during migration, and can eat their weight in worms in a single day.

Also timing their migrations shortly after snowmelt, amphibians like spotted salamanders and wood frogs skirt the edge for a different strategy; to minimize the risk of predation. Their entire reproductive cycle is about speed. They’ve adapted to breed nearly exclusively in vernal pools, which are often filled by precipitation from snow melt and dry out within just a few months’ time.

They do so because these pools lack fish, which are voracious predators of amphibian eggs, larvae and adults. In early spring when the ground has thawed, these amphibians migrate in droves to their breeding pools on rainy nights when temperatures are as low as 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Their goal is to breed and lay eggs as early as possible so their young have the greatest chance of success before the pools dry out.

They skirt the season’s edge so tightly that some, like wood frogs, have specially adapted to be able to freeze their bodies in entirety.

Though most arrive in May when conditions have become milder, our Neotropic bird migrants, that is, those that are migrating from Central and South America, also skirt the edge. Their long and often perilous migrations are timed to coincide with the emergence of large numbers of caterpillars and other insects following the “green wave” of plant growth in the spring.

As spring begins to arrive earlier and earlier in our region, these birds are unable to see our local environmental cues and are falling out of sync with the dramatic increase of insects with which their migrations have historically been timed to coincide. While it is clear this will impact the survival and breeding success of these birds, what's a little less clear is how this will affect the ecosystem as a whole.

The lack of a predator means that caterpillars and other insect prey will be more abundant than typical. If other species feed on them, it will increase their fitness and breeding success. If other species do not, there could be detrimental impacts to tree and other plant health.

Each natural system has a delicate balance between interactions of species that live within it, and each species has specific adaptations that make them successful in that niche. Skirting the edge is just one adaptation to gain a competitive edge. It comes with clear benefits like increased resources and a greater chance of reproductive success, but comes with the risk of harsh conditions and delicate timing.

Still, year after year these species use it to their advantage to prove that the risk is worth the reward.

Nate Marchessault is an ecologist with the Harris Center for Conservation Education in Hancock.