Yellow-bellied Flycatcher

Yellow-bellied Flycatcher

Yesterday, I joined some bird-watching friends visiting Stone Prairie Wildlife Management Area near Mayflower. It was my first time hiking this WMA, which consists of 989 acres with seven miles of gravel roads. It is known for its restored prairies, savannas, and oak-hickory forests. It was previously part of Camp Robinson’s World War II-era field training area.

While it will likely never become my favorite WMA to visit, it was a peaceful walk that netted us sightings of several interesting birds, such as a Painted Bunting, Prairie Warblers, an Osprey, and a Broad-winged Hawk.

We later ventured across the road to the Camp Robinson WMA and Camp Robinson Special Use Area. I’m always excited to find Northern Bobwhites here, and we discovered my first Yellow-bellied Flycatcher (pictured above).

Flycatchers in the Empidonax genus are notoriously hard to identify, but the Yellow-bellied is one of the easier ones due to its yellowish underparts and bold eyering. It helped that two of the people in our group excel at identifying them. The Yellow-bellied Flycatcher migrates through Arkansas. While common, it was my first time seeing this flycatcher, so it was my bird of the day. That was saying something because we continued to hear and see an interesting assortment of birds, such as those below.

We also found the cutest Rough Greensnake and butterflies.

Photos: A few rare birds

Sanderling

One of my ongoing projects has been to reorganize my photo archives and to go through my folder of birds I needed to identify. I finally got that “need to identify” folder cleaned out. There were a few rare birds in there from 2013 to 2015 that I am now able to check off my bird list. Besides the above pictured Sanderling, here’s a few more: a Lapland Longspur, a Snowy Plover, a Least Flycatcher, a Hudsonian Godwit, a Black-bellied Plover, an Orchard Oriole, a Marsh Wren, a Philadelphia Vireo, a Blackburnian Warbler, an Ovenbird and an American Redstart.

Can you spot the Lapland Longspur? It blends in well. This one was one of 65 Lapland Longspurs spotted during the 2013 Christmas Bird Count in Lonoke.
Least Flycatcher
Nashville Warbler