Click here for information on this image
DVOC Main Page > Our
Members > Keith Russell
Keith Russell
Fellow
of the DVOC
Life Member
Author of A CHECKLIST OF BIRDS OF THE FAIRMOUNT PARK URBAN GREENWAYS IMPORTANT BIRD AREA
![]() |
These "20 Questions with Keith Russell" appeared in the Fall 2007 Larus. At what age did you start birding? What got
you started? Where did you go to secondary school and have
you had formal training in ornithology? If so, when and where? Who were your birding mentors? What was it that made you decide to join the
DVOC in 1973 and who were your sponsors? |
We note that you were part of a DVOC-sponsored WSB
team in the late eighties era. Are we correct that you were "the ringer"
brought in to give that team extra credibility, causing it to rank in the event's
top 10 with 181 species one year?
I think we all provided something unique and valuable to the team. My area of
specialty was identifying songs.
You, along with Steve Lawrence are often called the
"Master Birder of Carpenter's Woods". How did your long-time interest
in that great warbler spot in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park come about? Is it
still a top hotspot in the spring?
Carpenter’s Woods is still an extraordinary place to look for migrating
birds during both the spring and fall. Because Joe Cadbury and other birding
friends birded there a lot, and it was only located a block from where I went
to elementary school (C. W. Henry), I wound up getting to know it well. Besides
Steve Lawrence, I’ve met Erica Brendel, Gary Seagraves and many other
birding friends (who are also “master” Carpenter’s Woods birders)
there over the years.
What other birding spots in Philadelphia can you highly
recommend?
Besides well-known spots like John Heinz, my favorite publicly accessible places
to recommend are Roosevelt Park and Glen Foerd, which are both parts of Fairmount
Park. The Bell’s Mill Road section of the Wissahickon was once superb
during the breeding season but its now lost Chat, Cerulean, Kentucky, Hooded
warblers and many other breeders. The park is currently working on a plan to
attract many of these species back to the area.
People say you can do perfect birdsong imitations
in the field (for instance, Yellow-throated Warbler and many others). Could
this skill be related to your longtime/inherited interest in music, specifically
opera?
I guess for there to be a connection between whistling and having a love of
music make sense.
For years before the Birds of North America (BNA)
project you worked at the Academy of Natural Sciences. What was the nature of
that job and your work there?"
From 1982-1992 I worked as the museum’s Collection Manager for Exhibits.
The collection manager cared for the museum’s collection of mounted specimens
(birds, mammals, fish, etc.), as well as the museum’s dioramas.
You were instrumental in putting together BNA. What
were the highlights of that epic project?
It’s always a privilege to work with Frank Gill. In addition to that,
the opportunity to meet and work with so many of North America’s top ornithologists
and to coauthor the Carolina Parakeet and Atlantic Puffin accounts were unbelievable,
once in a lifetime opportunities.
It has been over 20 years since you began the Philadelphia
Mid-Winter Bird Census (PMWBC). What have been the most surprising trends in
the last couple of decades?
I’m not sure if anything has been that surprising, but since 1987 there
have been huge declines in the number of wintering diving ducks (mainly on the
Delaware), winter finches, pheasants and bobwhite, harriers, and Barn and Short-eared
owls. Birds that have increased include Fox Sparrow, Merlin, Bald Eagle, Black
Vulture and Double-crested Cormorant.
How does the PMWBC differ from the National Audubon Society’s Christmas
Bird Counts (CBC’s)?
In two ways. 1) The PMWBC is held in early January AFTER the CBC count period
ends. 2) The PMWBC covers all areas within Philadelphia County rather than a
15-mile diameter circle. Although Philadelphia is over 15 miles long it contains
fewer square miles (land and water) than one would find within a 15-mile diameter
circle. In all other respects the PMWBC is run like a CBC.
In the 200+ years since the birth of our nation, what
species have disappeared from Philadelphia that were common back then?
Among transients the Passenger Pigeon is probably the only regularly occurring
species that’s now completely gone. Among residents there’s the
bobwhite. Species that have disappeared as breeders (although all of these still
occur as transients) include Blue-winged Teal, Black Duck, King Rail (?), Sora
(?), Virginia Rail (?), Broad-winged Hawk, Whip-poor-will, Black-billed Cuckoo
(?), Great Egret, Black-crowned Night-Heron, Red-headed Woodpecker, Horned Lark,
Purple Martin, Cliff Swallow, Cerulean, Kentucky, Worm-eating and Hooded warblers,
Dickcissel, and Vesper Sparrow.
Has there been any bird that has shown up in Philadelphia
that you regretted not seeing? If so, what was it, where was it seen and when?
There have been a number of pelagic and coastal species that have shown up during
storms that would have been fascinating to see.
You are in the process of writing a book on Philadelphia's storied birding history. How did this project get started, what will the book contain, and when might it be published?
(Can this question be deleted? I am still plugging away on the book but would respectfully prefer to not respond to this question now).
You are one of the few members of our Club to have
won both the Stone and Potter Awards, the two highest awards the Club gives.
What were your achievements that DVOC recognized in bestowing these Awards upon
you?
The Witmer Stone Award was for a Cassinia paper on Birds of the Wissahickon.
The Julian Potter Award was for coordinating the Philadelphia Mid-Winter Bird
Census.
A number of people including our club members, not
least Jan Gordon, fought to save the East Park reservoir as open space. Can
you tell us about your job with PA Audubon here in Philadelphia and what the
future holds for the reservoir?
I am an Outreach Coordinator for Audubon Pennsylvania. My job covers two areas.
Education and outreach to the Strawberry Mansion community (where Audubon and
Fairmount Park are working to build an environmental education center) and promoting
bird conservation projects within the Fairmount Park Important Bird Area. Audubon
would like to build the education center at the East Park Reservoir and we are
currently working on completing the business plan for the project. The Water
Department and Fairmount Park are our main partners in creating the center.
What has the New Bins for New Birders (NB4NB) program
meant to you?
It has helped me to introduce children from Strawberry Mansion community to
the world of birds. Most have never used binoculars before and most know nothing
about birding. Having good quality kid-sized optics makes all the difference
in this effort.
What is the best way to get Inner City kids into birding?
I think inner city kids are predisposed to be interested in birds just as much
as any other kids, but they often lack mentoring and social acceptance from
family and friends (especially as they get older). A bird club might be one
way of helping inner city kids to sustain this type of interest. There are chess
clubs, swim clubs, and other clubs that have helped inner city kids to excel.
I think they would make excellent birders too.
What kinds of projects in Philadelphia would you like
to see the DVOC involved in?
I’d like to see the DVOC become a bit more politically active. When it
comes to problems that negatively affect birds in our region, we birders are
the keepers of the knowledge that can identify and combat such problems. We
cannot complain about bad things happening to birds and bird habitats if we
are not willing to do share our knowledge in meaningful ways with those in a
position of power.
Finally I have to ask this. I am certain that
you have salivated over automobiles. If you were to ever get one, which would
it be and why?
Formally I would have picked a Volvo. Now I think I’d pick a Prius hybrid.