Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Transcontinental mourning dove recovery

January 1, 1971

A Mourning Dove (Zenaida macroura) banded in New York has been reported shot in California. On 25 August 1969, near Palmyra (43°00' N, 77°10' W), New York Department of Environmental Conservation personnel placed U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service band 883-97279 on the leg of a hatching-year Mourning Dove of unknown sex. During the first weekend of the dove season in September 1970, Stan Solus (P.O. Box 594, Seiad Valley, California) recovered the band from a dove he shot in the Shasta Valley, Siskiyou County, California (41°30' N, 122°20' W). As Mr. Solus included the band with his reporting letter and, in response to my asking him for verification, reaffirmed his original information, the recovery has been accepted as authentic.

I suggest this vagrancy may be explained by assuming that the inexperienced New York bird got emotionally involved with a western bird with which it shared winter quarters, perhaps in Mexico, and thus the following year ended up a flower child in California.

Publication Year 1971
Title Transcontinental mourning dove recovery
DOI 10.2307/4083853
Authors Brian Sharp
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title The Auk
Index ID 5220177
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center
Was this page helpful?