Viewing page 156 of 252

This transcription has been completed. Contact us with corrections.

[[circled]] 115 [[/circled]]

It is obvious that mixed flocks are not common [[underline]] inside [[/underline]] tall dense, "upper subtropical forest" ("USF") here. Certainly most of "my" species are edge birds. Clamatores (i.e. Furuariidae n. l.) seem to take the place of 9 - primaried Oscines inside tall forest. And, surprisingly enough, they don't
seem to form mixed flocks among themselves very much.
Going to work along highway this afternoon
2:05 pm 8050 ft. Near where one of the "Glauc"s seen a couple of months ago. See part of mixed flock. I know the flock was quite large, 
[[margin, in red]] WCC [[/margin]]
[[insert, in green]] 116 [[/insert]] including at least 8 [[8 green check marks]] individuals, but all I could
identify were 1 [[insert, in purple]] 1 [[/insert]] [[male symbol]] WCC 
[[margin, in purple]] XII HO [[/margin]]
(high in tall tree, 35 - 40 ft up), and 1 [[insert, in purple]] 2 [[/insert]] [[underline]] Cisemoscopus [[/underline]] (low in scrub, by road, 6 ft up). ) [[insert, in purple]] 3 4 5 [[/insert]] Flock as a whole
apparently diffuse. Quiet.
2:25 pm. Considerably further along road. Just where fog begins now. 
[[margin, in purple] XIII HO [[/margin]] Another mixed flock. Region of very mixed vegetation. All sorts of
second growth plus lots of mature trees. Flock apparently diffuse. Birds ranging all levels. Again I can
identify only a small fraction of them. 
[[margin, in red]] WCC [[/margin]]
[[margin, in green]] 119 [[/margin]]
[[green checkmark]] [[insert, in purple]] 1 [[/insert]] 1 [[male symbol]] WCC, 1 [[green checkmark]] [[insert, in purple]] 2 [[/insert]] Yellowbelly, 1 [[green checkmark]] [[insert, in purple]] 3 [[/insert]] Yellowface.
WCC and Yellowbelly 25-30 ft up 
[[margin, in green]] 125 [[/margin]]
Yellowface 6 ft up. Flock as a whole noisy. Lots of "CN"s [[six green check marks]] [[insert, in purple]] 15 6 7 [[/insert]] 
Then group suddenly becomes very coherent. Flies across road. Then moves rapidly down hill in forest. 1 or 2 [[underline]] Compsosoma flavinucha [[/underline]] apparently in lead. Followed by 1 or more [[underline]] Cisemoscopus [[/underline]]. Followed by 10 - 12 other birds of various species, including tree-creepers. [[underline]] C. flavinucha [[/underline]] high, 30 - 35 ft up in tree-tops. Other birds lower, ca. 20 ft. 
[[margin, written vertically]] Also 1 Ruddy Flycatcher [[/margin]]
2:41 A little further up road, see single Sooty Thrush alone 2 ft up in scrub.
Reach crest of road (the real, major, fog boundary), 2.45 pm.
8190 ft according to my altimeter now. Fog is not quite as thick as I