Friday, August 1, 2014

Kirtland's Warbler and Karner Blue Butterfly - A trip to Pure Michigan


Karner Blue Butterfly at the Michigan Nature Association's Newaygo Karner Blue Sanctuary


There's an old saying in Michigan that goes like this: If you seek a pleasant peninsula, look about you! How true it is. I had two "bucket list" nature goals that have been bugging me - I wanted to really make an effort to see a Karner Blue butterfly, and I also wanted to see a Kirtlands Warbler in its breeding territory - Crawford County Michigan (Greyling Michigan).

Map of Karner Blue Sanctuary in Newaygo MI
Nom Nom Nom ...Monarch Caterpillars on its foodplant - Milkweed
Karner Blue Butterfly on Wild Lupine - Its larval foodplant
The Karner Blue is extirpated from Ontario [ROM link] and is endangered in most of its remaining range [see range map here]. One area that hosted the Karner Blue Butterfly was in Port Franks - Just north of the Pinery Provincial Park. 

I did not have much time to search for the Karner Blue butterfly so I stopped at one location that almost promised to host this endangered species: Michigan Nature Association's Karner Blue Sanctuary in Newaygo Michigan. Looking around, we saw many Monarch butterflies, some singles of American Copper and Grey Hairstreaks. I could have spent the afternoon at this sanctuary but almost upon finding my target species, my son declared that he had to go to the bathroom... So I tried my best to capture this rare butterfly with a brief 10 or so minutes of photography. This was the best I could do in my brief 10 minute stay... Oh the joys of parenthood!  The Karner Blue Sanctuary was beautiful ... but sadly, it was being overrun with Spotted Knapweed, an invasive flower that chokes out native plants... such as Wild Lupine.

Karner Blue Butterfly - Dorsal & Ventral Composite

Next stop was Greyling Michigan, which hosts the Kirtland's Warbler. A quick check of E-bird will give you some ideas of where to look. This bird was found pretty easily in a special forest of young Jack Pine trees with man made open areas.

Kirtland's Warbler in Greyling MI

Vesper Sparrow

Brown headed Cowbird Traps
Oval shaped opening in Jack Pine Habitat

 
Satellite view of Managed Kirtlands Forest Habitat along Fletcher Road. There were many oil derricks in the area (white patches on right)
When visiting Greyling, or any part of Northern Michigan, I think a good afternoon activity is to Kayak a local river. In Greyling, they have a beautiful, clear, meandering river called the Au Sable River. My son and I rented a two-person sit-on-top kayak and kayaked for about 2 hours down this river. Surrounded by nature, with towering white pines and singing Pine Warblers, It was beautiful!

Two hours on the Au Sable River in Greyling. Awesome.
White Pine along the Au Sable River


Mustard White Butterfly - one of the very few butterflies seen in Traverse City. A lifer though. I almost assumed that this was a Cabbage White that we often see in Essex, but its dorsal view had no black markings.

We also visited Traverse City Michigan for a few days. One highlight of Traverse City is its proximity to Sleeping Bear Dunes. Sleeping Bear Dunes is one of the most beautiful beaches in North America and is a stonghold for the great lakes population of Piping Plovers. According to USFWS: "In 2008, there were 63 breeding pairs (126 individuals) in the Great Lakes region. Of these, 53 pairs nested in Michigan, while 10 were found outside the state, including six pairs in Wisconsin and four in Ontario, Canada. A single breeding pair discovered in 2007 in the Great Lakes region of Canada represented the first confirmed piping plover nest there in over 30 years, and in 2008 the number of nesting pairs further increased to four. In 2009, a pair of piping plovers nested on the Lake Michigan shoreline in Illinois, the first nest in Illinois in 30 years" (USFWS).  I did attempt to visit one particular area where ebird had a sighting just days before my arrival (July 27th) but I was unable to find a piping plover at the Platt River Point area. A quick look at Ebird for Piping Plovers this year hinted that there were at least five sites in this park alone with breeding Piping Plovers.
450 ft dune!?!?

Lake Michigan
No Piping Plovers at Platt Point in late July

Just one last point - I couldn't help but notice beautiful pink flowers everywhere you look in northern michigan - the fields and roadsides all have this nice pink hue. Sadly, its Common Knapweed though, an invasive plant that chokes out native vegetation. Three ways that this plant is thriving:


  1. A tap root that sucks up water faster than the root systems of its neighbors
  2. Low palatability, meaning it is less likely to be chosen as food by herbivores
  3. It is also suspected to be allelopathic, releasing a toxin from its roots that stunts the growth of nearby plants of other species (Wikipedia)



Each Spotted Knapweed plant will produce over 900 seeds (gov.bc.ca)

This plant was in the news at Point Pelee a few years ago, but now that I've seen how invasive and aggressive it is, I think its a good idea to get rid of this plant sooner then later.

To end this long posting, I had a great trip to Michigan and wanted to share some of the nature-based highlights of my trip. The northern half of the the lower peninsula of Michigan is so beautiful. Driving through the Manistee and Huron forests is breathtaking and its just hard to realize how much forest and wetland are still intact. Seeing the Karner Blue butterfly, even for a  fleeting few minutes was one of the best nature discoveries of the year for me.



Good Birding!
Dwaynejava

Sources: 
USWFS , "Piping Plover - Great Lakes Population", July 1, 2014
web, Aug 1 2014, http://www.fws.gov/midwest/EastLansing/te/pipl/index.html 

More Reading:
ROM Karner Article



Karner Blue Sanctuary in Michigan

Karner Blue in Ohio

Spotted Knapweed

9 comments:

  1. Don't be so negative on Spotted Knapweed! It is common knowledge that a healthy butterfly population can be healthy ONLY if lots of flowering plants are present. At places such as Point Pelee, which is severely overgrown and thus not in a natural state, about the ONLY flowering plant present for butterflies is Spotted Knapweed. In other words, if Spotted Knapweed were not present at Point Pelee, likely some butterfly species would die out in short order.

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  2. Great post, Dwayne.....I haven't been to the northern part of the lower peninsula for awhile, but have some fond memories of the amazing white pine forests as well as the jackpine forests with Kirtland's Warbler.

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  3. Thanks for sharing a great trip! Would love to see a Karner Blue, but I got into butterflies too late to see one in Ontario.

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    1. Its too bad the recovery team was unable to re-introduce the Karner at St Williams or Port Franks. Oh well, I guess we can always drive to Michigan or Ohio... :-p

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  4. Thanks for the comment Alan and Allen. Alan, would it be possible for the park to have planters installed with native perennials that flower through the year? I am totally amazed at how pervasive this plant is ... and I'm sure its spread to SW Ontario is inevitable. One could debate the health of butterflies at PPNP vs slowing down the spread of this plant to this region, but this comment section probably is not the best place for that debate. Points taken though.

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  5. Dwayne your blog is so wonderful to read and look at. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and photos. Next time we me up you'll have to tell me about your trip out west. It looks like it was really great. Ellen Smout

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    1. Ellen, thanks for the kind words! I'm sure we'll meet again at Pelee in May. I'm still indebted to you for your Comber Hudsonian Godwit post to Ontbirds a few years ago... -DM

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  6. Dwayne, looks like a great trip. I'm trying to figure out what I'm seeing in the aerial image of the managed forest... are those all clearings cut in the particular pattern? Are they regularly managed to keep them clear? How much land has that treatment?

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    1. Brian, I noted on ebird that kiwa was seen near these forest with the oval clearings. I think some research may have indicated that this is their preferred habitat, so the trees are planted in a way that these openings occur at various intervals... Its my theory but two spots I visited gave easy nooks at these avian gems.

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