Did you know that white ash, a bird‐friendly tree, has diamond patterns in its bark? Or, that 100‐200 organisms live inside leaves? More than 20 birders showed up Sunday morning for the Brookline Bird Club’s Tree Identiication walk led by Harvard University botanist Walter Kittredge, and learned this much and more. Toting binoculars and carrying a list of trees found in Belmont‐Watertown’s Beaver Brook Reservation, participants studied compound and simple, opposite and alternate leaves, bark textures, tree structures and soil preferences of specific trees. 
Walter described and passed around leaves from various species of oaks and maples, cherry, beech, birch and ash trees, so we could note differences and similarities among leaf shapes and content. Non‐native species such as glossy buckthorn, porcelain berry and oriental bittersweet unfortunately thrive at Beaver Brook, and we identified many examples of these highly invasive vines ‐ “the worst!” Throughout the walk, we considered reasons why certain trees support birds and wildlife better than others: in short, it’s about the insects and other creatures that live on the leaves and bark of some (native) trees and not others, so a chewed‐up, hole‐ridden leaf is generally a great sign of a bird‐friendly tree! Frequent references were made to Doug Tallamy’s Book, Bringing Nature Home, which makes the case for planting native oaks,
birches, maples and other native trees that support birds in many ways. At the end of walk, we arrived at and studied a young, impressive swamp white oak while watching a dozen American Robins, 2 Blackpoll Warblers, a Pine Warbler and a Red‐eyed Vireo consuming bittersweet berries and insects lurking beneath their dense foliage. Birders were not disappointed: we saw some late fall warblers and learned how and why they stopped at Beaver Brook to refuel on their ways elsewhere.

Note: the Brookline Bird Club is planning future conservation‐minded walks. Please check our website and massbird for announcements: https://brooklinebirdclub.org/
News Categories
Upcoming Field Trips
Field Trips / Events
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Mount Auburn Cemetery
Mount Auburn Cemetery 536 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA, United States -
Bring Back Boblinks: Bobolinks at Heard Farm, Wayland
Wayland - Heard Farm Conservation Area 12 Heard Road, Wayland, MA, United StatesPart of our Bring Back Boblinks conservation series. This gem works its way into the rotations of many birders once discovered. It is managed for dog walking (no dogs on this walk please) and bobolinks, which in agood year can number 100 or more. We will be using dirt trails and boardwalks. Ttrails can be
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Roslindale Wetlands Urban Park
Roslindale Wetlands Urban Park 23 Coniston Rd, Roslindale, MA, United StatesA small but mighty urban wild that offers a variety of habitat. Expect to see a variety of woodpeckers, resident birds, warblers, and other migratory species, as well as a surprise or two. The path is flat with a mix of gravel and dirt surfaces with newly added boardwalks on the wetter sections. Boots are
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Mount Auburn Cemetery
Mount Auburn Cemetery 536 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA, United States -
Arlington Reservoir
Lexington - Arlington Reservoir 210 Lowell Street, Arlington, MA, United StatesWe will search for spring migrants, waterfowl, shorebirds. Cosponsored with Menotomy Bird club.






