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Nests are usually built in stands of
bulrush or cattail but occasionally at the edge of dense patches
of willows (Stirling 1964), in open water over stands of water-milfoils
(Forbes 1984), or in a grassy marsh. At the Duck Lake colony, mean
density of common cattail stems ranged from 1.4 to 16.1 stems/m2
(Forbes 1984); water depths ranged from 60 to 150 cm. Nests were large accumulations of vegetation
with bases of rotten or decaying vegetation, mostly bulrush, cattail,
or reed canarygrass and occasionally sticks. The smaller centre
platform was often lined with dry stems of emergent vegetation as
well as aquatic plants including water-milfoils, buttercups, filamentous
algae, and duckweeds. Outside diameters ranged from 38 to 122 cm,
with most between 46 and 61 cm. Nest heights ranged from 5 to 15
cm; the depression from 2.5 to 5 cm deep. Human disturbance (e.g. anchored fishermen,
power boating) and changing environmental conditions (e.g. wind,
water levels) make it difficult to determine the natural egg-laying
period because of forced re-nesting. Clutches have been reported
from 29 April (Munro, J.A. 1939b) to 31 August (incubating - Fyfe
and Teeple 1968). Egg-laying is synchronous and probably occurs
mostly in late May and early June. Sizes for 433 clutches ranged
from 1 to 7 eggs (1E-44, 2E-79, 3E-184, 4E-100, 5E-21, 6E-4, 7E-1),
with 66% having 3 or 4 eggs. Bent (1919) reports incubation to be
"about 23 days" while Lindvall and Low (1982) give a range of 21
to 28 days with an average of 24 days. Young have been recorded from 5 June
(Munro, J.A. 1939b) to 31 August. Calculated dates indicate that
young could be found as early as 25 May and as late as September
(see Fyfe and Teeple 1968). Under normal conditions, most probably
hatch in late June and early July. Sizes for 26 broods ranged from
1 to 4 young (1Y-9, 2Y-13, 3Y-3, 4Y-1) with 13 broods having 2 young.
Fledging period is unknown.
The Western Grebe appears on every "Blue
List" from 1973 to 1982 (Tate 1981, Tate and Tate 1982). In the
1980 list, habitat loss was blamed for its current decline, "with
more drastic losses predicted in the future" (Arbib 1979). By the
1982 list, the Western Grebe appeared to be "stabilizing at a reduced
level" (Tate and Tate 1982). It was delisted to a species of "special
concern" in 1986 (Tate 1986). See Forbes (1985b) for recent studies
on feeding ecology. POSTSCRIPT: On 14 September 1988 a pair
of adult Western Grebes, accompanied by 2 less than half-grown,
downy young, were seen in a marsh west of the George C. Reifel Bird
Sanctuary. On 2 October, presumably the same family group was found
in the same area. W.C. Weber (pers. comm.) suggests that occasional
pairs probably nest in the brackish marshes off Westham Island. On 24 March 1989, over 11,000 Western
Grebes were counted, in flocks of 4 to 4,000 birds, between Denmarl
Island and French Creek (P.W. Martin pers. comm.). The birds were
seaward of huge concentrations of gulls, scorers, and loons where
Pacific herring were spawning.
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