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January 2018

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Tue, 30 Jan 2018 21:29:50 +0000
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I'm sure that, besides the lack of captivity issue and the seasonal movements in SA issue, there must have been persuasive field notes... There are several other species on the Ohio state list for which there is no photo or specimen.  Or for which there was no photo or specimen for the first accepted record.  One that comes immediately to mind is Baird's Sparrow.  I'd have to look through my Peterjohn to find the others...
Carlton SchooleyStrasburg (Tuscarawas)
 

    On Tuesday, January 30, 2018, 3:43:31 PM EST, Bill Whan <[log in to unmask]> wrote:  
 
 I have always been troubled with the acceptance of the Large-billed Tern
to the Ohio list. There is no specimen, no photograph, and no
precedence. It was reported seen by three observers on a sandbar in
Mahoning County on 29 May 1954. It was said to have been the second
appearance of this species in North America (the other was from 1949 in
Illinois); I am taking this information from "The Birds of Ohio" and
there have been other reports I haven't seen). Reported supports of the
ID were that the species was unknown in captivity and its appearance
corresponds with its seasonal movements in south America (all data from
Peterjohn, "The Birds of Ohio." p. 250).
        Lots of birders' reports of far less rare species are rejected
for lack of a photo or a specimen, yet this occurrence seems to have
been accepted. The Birds of Ohio states that large-billed tern reports
here have been questioned, while this occurrence was accepted because
the species is "unknown in captivity and its appearance in Ohio
correspondences with its seasonal movements in South America." The
occurrence lacks hard evidence and I wonder why this far-fetched
appearance, lacking persuasive evidence, is still regarded as
legitimate. If there a better set of hard evidence, where is it? Why has
it been accepted to the Ohio list, when others with just as
unlikely have been laughed off?
Bill Whan
Columbus

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