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Padre Island National Seashore Sunrise over the Gulf of Mexico
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Padre Island National Seashore
Birds
 

Download and print your own guide to the birds at Padre Island National Seashore.

Over 380 species of birds may inhabit Padre Island National Seashore during each year. This is nearly half of all bird species that have been documented in North America! The National Seashore is a fabulous place for birds and bird-lovers because it is located on the Central Flyway, a major migration route on which birds travel during their migration to and from North, Central, and South America.

Click here to view and or print the Birds Sighted List from January 2011 to April 30, 2011.

 
Bird migration routes in the United States
usgs.gov
Migration routes of North America.  Notice how the Central Flyway crosses right over the Texas coast.
 
Black skimmer gliding for fish

nps photo

If you get to observe a Black skimmer gliding along the water, watch its head. When it makes a "hiccupping" motion, the skimmer has caught a fish.

While visiting Padre Island, you may catch a glimpse of the Black skimmer grazing the water with its bill, a White-tailed hawk keeping watch, perched on top of a telephone pole, or hear the song of an Eastern meadowlark happily celebrating the spring. The National Seashore protects a variety of habitats that are critical to the health of myriad bird populations. Some habitats, like wind-tidal flats, are extremely fragile and rare, and provide an abundance of food upon which migratory and resident birds depend. Other bird habitats found in the park include beach, coastal prairie, dunes, grasslands, wetlands and ponds.    
 
Reddish egrets

FWS Photo by Joel Reynolds

Reddish egrets are currently listed as having Threatened status in Texas.

Its range of habitats makes Padre Island an essential stop-over point for migrating and resident birds that are seeking out grounds for rest, food, nesting, and breeding. As such, the island has been designated as a Globally Important Bird Area by the American Bird Conservancy and a Site of International Importance by the Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network

Occurring within the park, there are 13 threatened and endangered bird species, making Padre Island National Seashore an even more important location to these creatures' fragile existence. Based on the Texas Colonial Waterbird Survey, bird counts show decreasing numbers of waterbird species on the spoil islands within the park's boundaries, but participants in the waterbird survey provide varied explanations to suggest why the decrease is occurring. Explanations include habitat loss, disappearance of nesting grounds, marine debris, depletion of food sources, windmills impeding flight, and light pollution affecting migratory patterns.

View this interesting YouTube video on Red Knots of Padre Island and the research being conducted.

Many information sources and partners of the park, including you, are critical to continuing education on birds and promoting worldwide bird and bird habitat conservation. If you are interested in becoming a part of a team committed to restoring bird populations and bird habitat, please contact the park's volunteer coordinator to find out how you can get involved.

 

Young birders, please visit this site.

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Last Updated: September 08, 2011 at 08:21 MST