Photo of the Week: American Redstart in the Neighborhood

Small black warbler with orange patches under neck, on wing, and under tail, perches on a bare tree branch.

What I’ve been thrilled about this year’s spring migration is discovering American Redstarts in our neighborhood park!

The small black bird with striking orange patches and the big voice may be breeding at the park. I’ve heard male American Redstarts singing and seen females at the park for the past three weeks.

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Photo of the Week: Elegant American Avocet

Large shorebird with copper head and neck and white body with black wings with white stripes pauses as it forages in the water of the mudflat.

A striking cinnamon-brown, black, and white shorebird, the American Avocet stood out on the mudflat of the Lake Erie marsh near the Michigan/Ohio state border.

The slightly-upturned long thin black bill is distinctive as is the white body with white-striped black wings.

The American Avocet is a rare bird in Michigan and one I had never seen before.

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Photo of the Week: Harlequin Duck

A small dark brown and blue duck with white bill, white spot behind the eye, and vertical white band along the back of the head swims slowly in the river, near the shoreline with tangled branches in the background.

What a surprise my friends Donna and Bill had when they learned the small dark duck they saw at a nearby inland lake was a Harlequin Duck.

A sea duck typically seen in northwest North America, Greenland, and eastern Canada, the Harlequin Duck winters along the coast of Atlantic Canada and New England as well as the Pacific Northwest coast.

The Harlequin Duck my friends found is a rare bird for southeast Michigan and the first time the bird was sighted in Washtenaw County.

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