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By
Sheryl DeVore
n
a cool December day last year, Gayle Wagner watched a northern
shrike (Lanius excubitor) in McHenry County pluck
what appeared to be a very frozen grasshopper impaled on
a twig and chomp it down.
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Photo
by Rob Curtis/The Early Birder.
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Last
February, Tom Lally watched a shrike fly down to a small
tree used as a caching site and yank the remains of some
small mammal off a thorn and wolf it down.
Meanwhile
Richard Biss was entertained while a shrike in his Lake
Villa backyard in Lake County flew near a wetland, caught
a vole, and ate it.
These
experiences are rare for birders in the Chicago Wilderness
region the northern shrike only visits here in the
winter from about October through March and its numbers
are declining in eastern North America. These facts should
give pause to observers who may not realize birds need not
only good habitat for breeding, but also good wintering
habitat. Indeed, says Steven D. Bailey, an ornithologist
with the Illinois Natural History Survey, "most shrike
species throughout the world are declining, for various
reasons, some of which are still unknown."
Last
winter, Illinois birders documented a record number of northern
shrikes 105 and most were in the Chicago Wilderness
region, says Bailey. But that doesnt mean the species
numbers are rising. National Christmas Bird Count data from
1900 through 1980 show northern shrikes go through irregular
series of cycles. These fluctuations probably occur based
on winter severity and prey availability on the shrikes
Canadian tundra breeding grounds.
Northern
shrikes wintering here typically choose wet prairies and
grassy areas near wetlands and lakes where tussocky grasses
provide habitat for its favorite foods: voles, mice, and
small birds. Some fairly reliable places to find northern
shrikes annually include Illinois Beach State Park in Lake
County, Fermilab in DuPage County, and Moraine Hills State
Park in McHenry County.
The
northern shrike defends large winter territories
as many as 540 acres. Like other members of its family,
including the loggerhead shrike (a state threatened breeder
in Illinois), the northern shrike catches it prey, then
stores it in caches known as larders by impaling the prey
on a sharp projection. "Hawthorns, crab apples, osage
orange, and barbed wire are common sites for loggerhead
shrikes in Illinois, and are likely sites for wintering
northern shrikes as well," says Bailey.
The
northern shrike is found here only in winter. The loggerhead
shrike spends winters in the South but breeds regularly
at Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie near Joliet.
Shrikes
possess extremely acute vision. A trained shrike once spotted
flying bumblebees at least 100 yards away. You may not get
to experience shrikes catching bumblebees in Chicago Wilderness
this winter, but if you choose the right habitat and wait
patiently, you may spot a northern shrike perched atop a
tree, scouting for prey. Be patient and keep your distance
from this wary species because it often flies if approached
too closely.
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