Bird Checklist
for Pte. Mouillee State Game Area

Monroe County, Michigan

295 species

Last updated - April 9, 2011

Pointe Mouillee State Game Area is one of best birding sites in Michigan.  It consists of approximately 3,000 acres of marsh, mud flats, and open water.  Depending on season you will look here for marsh birds, shorebirds, waterfowl, and migrant passerines.  Pointe Mouillee's thirteen units and cells are separated by dike roads. Additionally, there are north and south causeways that separate the area from Lake Erie.  Pointe Mouillee is located (mostly) in Monroe County in southeast Michigan less than 30 miles south of Detroit at the northwest corner of Lake Erie.  Pointe Mouillee, pronounced "moo-ee-yay" or "moo-yay," is French for "wet point."  This birding site and its location are described at the bottom of this document.


Checklist of the Birds of Pte. Mouillee SGA

The checklist below has been constructed with input from experienced Michigan birders who are among the most frequent and regular visitors to Pte. Mouillee. The Michigan Bird Records Committee (MBRC) has reviewed and approved this checklist and has contributed a number of species to the list. Despite MBRC involvement this is not what could be called an official checklist. A small number of species for which clarification is needed are superscripted and explained in footnotes. This can be for a species for which the MBRC does not have documented/accepted records for Pte. Mouillee although a report deemed reliable exists. Other footnoted entries can be for species that were split after the last known record for Pte. Mouillee.

The checklist includes birds found in all of Pte. Mouillee State Game Area, including the relatively small area in Wayne County at the Headquarters.
 

English NameScientific Name
DUCKS, GEESE, and SWANSAnatidae
  Greater White-fronted Goose  Anser albifrons
  Snow Goose  Chen caerulescens
  Ross's Goose [Casual]  Chen rossii
  Brant [Casual]  Branta bernicla
  Cackling Goose  Branta hutchinsii
  Canada Goose  Branta canadensis
  Mute Swan  Cygnus olor
  Trumpeter Swan  Cygnus buccinator
  Tundra Swan  Cygnus columbianus
  Wood Duck  Aix sponsa
  Gadwall  Anas strepera
  Eurasian Wigeon [Casual]  Anas penelope
  American Wigeon  Anas americana
  American Black Duck  Anas rubripes
  Mallard  Anas platyrhynchos
  Blue-winged Teal  Anas discors
  Cinnamon Teal [Accidental]  Anas cyanoptera
  Northern Shoveler  Anas clypeata
  Northern Pintail  Anas acuta
  Green-winged Teal  Anas crecca
  Canvasback  Aythya valisineria
  Redhead  Aythya americana
  Ring-necked Duck  Aythya collaris
  Greater Scaup  Aythya marila
  Lesser Scaup  Aythya affinis
  King Eider [Casual]  Somateria spectabilis
  Common Eider [Accidental]  Somateria mollissima
  Harlequin Duck  Histrionicus histrionicus
  Surf Scoter  Melanitta perspicillata
  White-winged Scoter  Melanitta fusca
  Black Scoter  Melanitta americana
  Long-tailed Duck  Clangula hyemalis
  Bufflehead  Bucephala albeola
  Common Goldeneye  Bucephala clangula
  Barrow's Goldeneye [Accidental]  Bucephala islandica
  Hooded Merganser  Lophodytes cucullatus
  Common Merganser  Mergus merganser
  Red-breasted Merganser  Mergus serrator
  Ruddy Duck  Oxyura jamaicensis
PARTRIDGES, GROUSE, TURKEYS, and OLD WORLD QUAILPhasianidae
  Ring-necked Pheasant  Phasianus colchicus
LOONSGaviidae
  Red-throated Loon  Gavia stellata
  Common Loon  Gavia immer
GREBESPodicipedidae
  Pied-billed Grebe  Podilymbus podiceps
  Horned Grebe  Podiceps auritus
  Red-necked Grebe  Podiceps grisegena
  Eared Grebe  Podiceps nigricollis
BOOBIES and GANNETSSulidae
  Northern Gannet [Accidental]  Morus bassanus
PELICANSPelecanidae
  American White Pelican  Pelecanus erythrorhynchos
  Brown Pelican [Casual]  Pelecanus occidentalis
CORMORANTSPhalacrocoracidae
  Double-crested Cormorant  Phalacrocorax auritus
BITTERNS, HERONS, and ALLIESArdeidae
  American Bittern  Botaurus lentiginosus
  Least Bittern  Ixobrychus exilis
  Great Blue Heron  Ardea herodias
  Great Egret  Ardea alba
  Snowy Egret  Egretta thula
  Little Blue Heron  Egretta caerulea
  Tricolored Heron [Casual]  Egretta tricolor
  Reddish Egret [Accidental]  Egretta rufescens
  Cattle Egret  Bubulcus ibis
  Green Heron  Butorides virescens
  Black-crowned Night-Heron  Nycticorax nycticorax
  Yellow-crowned Night-Heron [Casual]  Nyctanassa violacea
IBISES and SPOONBILLSThreskiornithidae
  Glossy Ibis [Casual]  Plegadis falcinellus
  White-faced Ibis [Casual]  Plegadis chihi
NEW WORLD VULTURESCathartidae
  Black Vulture [Casual]  Coragyps atratus
  Turkey Vulture  Cathartes aura
KITES, HAWKS, EAGLES, and ALLIESAccipitridae
  Osprey  Pandion haliaetus
  Bald Eagle  Haliaeetus leucocephalus
  Northern Harrier  Circus cyaneus
  Sharp-shinned Hawk  Accipiter striatus
  Cooper's Hawk  Accipiter cooperii
  Northern Goshawk  Accipiter gentilis
  Red-shouldered Hawk  Buteo lineatus
  Broad-winged Hawk  Buteo platypterus
  Swainson's Hawk  Buteo swainsoni
  Red-tailed Hawk  Buteo jamaicensis
  Rough-legged Hawk  Buteo lagopus
  Golden Eagle  Aquila chrysaetos
CARACARAS and FALCONSFalconidae
  American Kestrel  Falco sparverius
  Merlin  Falco columbarius
  Gyrfalcon  Falco rusticolus
  Peregrine Falcon  Falco peregrinus
RAILS, GALLINULES, and COOTSRallidae
  King Rail [Casual]  Rallus elegans
  Virginia Rail  Rallus limicola
  Sora  Porzana carolina
  Common Moorhen  Gallinula chloropus
  American Coot  Fulica americana
CRANESGruidae
  Sandhill Crane  Grus canadensis
PLOVERS and LAPWINGSCharadriidae
  Black-bellied Plover  Pluvialis squatarola
  American Golden-Plover  Pluvialis dominica
  Snowy Plover [Accidental]  Charadrius alexandrinus
  Semipalmated Plover  Charadrius semipalmatus
  Piping Plover  Charadrius melodus
  Killdeer  Charadrius vociferus
STILTS and AVOCETSRecurvirostridae
  Black-necked Stilt [Accidental]  Himantopus mexicanus
  American Avocet  Recurvirostra americana
SANDPIPERS, PHALAROPES, and ALLIESScolopacidae
  Spotted Sandpiper  Actitis macularius
  Solitary Sandpiper  Tringa solitaria
  Greater Yellowlegs  Tringa melanoleuca
  Willet  Tringa semipalmata
  Lesser Yellowlegs  Tringa flavipes
  Upland Sandpiper  Bartramia longicauda
  Whimbrel  Numenius phaeopus
  Hudsonian Godwit  Limosa haemastica
  Marbled Godwit  Limosa fedoa
  Ruddy Turnstone  Arenaria interpres
  Red Knot  Calidris canutus
  Sanderling  Calidris alba
  Semipalmated Sandpiper  Calidris pusilla
  Western Sandpiper  Calidris mauri
  Least Sandpiper  Calidris minutilla
  White-rumped Sandpiper  Calidris fuscicollis
  Baird's Sandpiper  Calidris bairdii
  Pectoral Sandpiper  Calidris melanotos
  Purple Sandpiper  Calidris maritima
  Dunlin  Calidris alpina
  Curlew Sandpiper [Accidental]  Calidris ferruginea
  Stilt Sandpiper  Calidris himantopus
  Buff-breasted Sandpiper  Tryngites subruficollis
  Ruff [Casual]  Philomachus pugnax
  Short-billed Dowitcher  Limnodromus griseus
  Long-billed Dowitcher  Limnodromus scolopaceus
  Wilson's Snipe  Gallinago delicata
  American Woodcock  Scolopax minor
  Wilson's Phalarope  Phalaropus tricolor
  Red-necked Phalarope  Phalaropus lobatus
  Red Phalarope [Casual]  Phalaropus fulicarius
GULLS, TERNS, and SKIMMERSLaridae
  Black-legged Kittiwake  Rissa tridactyla
  Sabine's Gull  Xema sabini
  Bonaparte's Gull  Chroicocephalus philadelphia
  Black-headed Gull [Accidental]  Chroicocephalus ridibundus
  Little Gull  Hydrocoloeus minutus
  Laughing Gull  Leucophaeus atricilla
  Franklin's Gull  Leucophaeus pipixcan
  Ring-billed Gull  Larus delawarensis
  California Gull [Casual]  Larus californicus
  Herring Gull  Larus argentatus
  Iceland Gull  Larus glaucoides
  Lesser Black-backed Gull  Larus fuscus
  Glaucous Gull  Larus hyperboreus
  Great Black-backed Gull  Larus marinus
  Least Tern [Casual]  Sternula antillarum
  Gull-billed Tern [Accidental]  Gelochelidon nilotica
  Caspian Tern  Hydroprogne caspia
  Black Tern  Chlidonias niger
  Common Tern  Sterna hirundo
  Arctic Tern [Casual]  Sterna paradisaea
  Forster's Tern  Sterna forsteri
SKUAS and JAEGERSStercorariidae
  jaeger species  Stercorarius ---
PIGEONS and DOVESColumbidae
  Rock Pigeon  Columba livia
  White-winged Dove1 [Casual]  Zenaida asiatica
  Mourning Dove  Zenaida macroura
CUCKOOS, ROADRUNNERS, and ANISCuculidae
  Yellow-billed Cuckoo  Coccyzus americanus
  Black-billed Cuckoo  Coccyzus erythropthalmus
BARN OWLSTytonidae
  Barn Owl2 [Accidental]  Tyto alba
TYPICAL OWLSStrigidae
  Eastern Screech-Owl  Megascops asio
  Great Horned Owl  Bubo virginianus
  Snowy Owl  Bubo scandiacus
  Long-eared Owl  Asio otus
  Short-eared Owl  Asio flammeus
GOATSUCKERSCaprimulgidae
  Common Nighthawk  Chordeiles minor
SWIFTSApodidae
  Chimney Swift  Chaetura pelagica
HUMMINGBIRDSTrochilidae
  Ruby-throated Hummingbird  Archilochus colubris
KINGFISHERSAlcedinidae
  Belted Kingfisher  Megaceryle alcyon
WOODPECKERS and ALLIESPicidae
  Red-headed Woodpecker  Melanerpes erythrocephalus
  Red-bellied Woodpecker  Melanerpes carolinus
  Yellow-bellied Sapsucker  Sphyrapicus varius
  Downy Woodpecker  Picoides pubescens
  Hairy Woodpecker  Picoides villosus
  Northern Flicker  Colaptes auratus
TYRANT FLYCATCHERSTyrannidae
  Olive-sided Flycatcher  Contopus cooperi
  Eastern Wood-Pewee  Contopus virens
  Yellow-bellied Flycatcher  Empidonax flaviventris
  Alder Flycatcher  Empidonax alnorum
  Willow Flycatcher  Empidonax traillii
  Least Flycatcher  Empidonax minimus
  Eastern Phoebe  Sayornis phoebe
  Great Crested Flycatcher  Myiarchus crinitus
  Western Kingbird  Tyrannus verticalis
  Eastern Kingbird  Tyrannus tyrannus
SHRIKESLaniidae
  Loggerhead Shrike  Lanius ludovicianus
  Northern Shrike  Lanius excubitor
VIREOSVireonidae
  White-eyed Vireo  Vireo griseus
  Yellow-throated Vireo  Vireo flavifrons
  Blue-headed Vireo  Vireo solitarius
  Warbling Vireo  Vireo gilvus
  Philadelphia Vireo  Vireo philadelphicus
  Red-eyed Vireo  Vireo olivaceus
JAYS, MAGPIES, and CROWSCorvidae
  Blue Jay  Cyanocitta cristata
  American Crow  Corvus brachyrhynchos
LARKSAlaudidae
  Horned Lark  Eremophila alpestris
SWALLOWSHirundinidae
  Purple Martin  Progne subis
  Tree Swallow  Tachycineta bicolor
  Northern Rough-winged Swallow  Stelgidopteryx serripennis
  Bank Swallow  Riparia riparia
  Cliff Swallow  Petrochelidon pyrrhonota
  Cave Swallow [Accidental]  Petrochelidon fulva
  Barn Swallow  Hirundo rustica
CHICKADEES and TITMICEParidae
  Black-capped Chickadee  Poecile atricapillus
  Tufted Titmouse  Baeolophus bicolor
NUTHATCHESSittidae
  Red-breasted Nuthatch  Sitta canadensis
  White-breasted Nuthatch  Sitta carolinensis
CREEPERSCerthiidae
  Brown Creeper  Certhia americana
WRENSTroglodytidae
  Carolina Wren  Thryothorus ludovicianus
  House Wren  Troglodytes aedon
  Winter Wren  Troglodytes hiemalis
  Sedge Wren  Cistothorus platensis
  Marsh Wren  Cistothorus palustris
KINGLETSRegulidae
  Golden-crowned Kinglet  Regulus satrapa
  Ruby-crowned Kinglet  Regulus calendula
OLD WORLD WARBLERS and GNATCATCHERSSylviidae
  Blue-gray Gnatcatcher  Polioptila caerulea
THRUSHESTurdidae
  Eastern Bluebird  Sialia sialis
  Veery  Catharus fuscescens
  Gray-cheeked Thrush  Catharus minimus
  Swainson's Thrush  Catharus ustulatus
  Hermit Thrush  Catharus guttatus
  Wood Thrush  Hylocichla mustelina
  American Robin  Turdus migratorius
MOCKINGBIRDS, THRASHERS, and ALLIESMimidae
  Gray Catbird  Dumetella carolinensis
  Northern Mockingbird  Mimus polyglottos
  Brown Thrasher  Toxostoma rufum
STARLINGS and ALLIESSturnidae
  European Starling  Sturnus vulgaris
WAGTAILS and PIPITSMotacillidae
  White Wagtail [Accidental]  Motacilla alba
  American Pipit  Anthus rubescens
WAXWINGSBombycillidae
  Cedar Waxwing  Bombycilla cedrorum
LONGSPURS and ALLIESCalcaridae
  Lapland Longspur  Calcarius lapponicus
  Snow Bunting  Plectrophenax nivalis
WOOD-WARBLERSParulidae
  Blue-winged Warbler  Vermivora pinus
  Golden-winged Warbler  Vermivora chrysoptera
  Tennessee Warbler  Oreothlypis peregrina
  Orange-crowned Warbler  Oreothlypis celata
  Nashville Warbler  Oreothlypis ruficapilla
  Northern Parula  Parula americana
  Yellow Warbler  Dendroica petechia
  Chestnut-sided Warbler  Dendroica pensylvanica
  Magnolia Warbler  Dendroica magnolia
  Cape May Warbler  Dendroica tigrina
  Black-throated Blue Warbler  Dendroica caerulescens
  Yellow-rumped Warbler  Dendroica coronata
  Black-throated Green Warbler  Dendroica virens
  Blackburnian Warbler  Dendroica fusca
  Pine Warbler  Dendroica pinus
  Palm Warbler  Dendroica palmarum
  Bay-breasted Warbler  Dendroica castanea
  Blackpoll Warbler  Dendroica striata
  Black-and-white Warbler  Mniotilta varia
  American Redstart  Setophaga ruticilla
  Prothonotary Warbler  Protonotaria citrea
  Worm-eating Warbler  Helmitheros vermivorum
  Ovenbird  Seiurus aurocapilla
  Northern Waterthrush  Parkesia noveboracensis
  Louisiana Waterthrush  Parkesia motacilla
  Mourning Warbler  Oporornis philadelphia
  Common Yellowthroat  Geothlypis trichas
  Wilson's Warbler  Wilsonia pusilla
  Canada Warbler  Wilsonia canadensis
  Yellow-breasted Chat  Icteria virens
TANAGERSThraupidae
  Scarlet Tanager  Piranga olivacea
NEW WORLD SPARROWS and ALLIESEmberizidae
  Eastern Towhee  Pipilo erythrophthalmus
  American Tree Sparrow  Spizella arborea
  Chipping Sparrow  Spizella passerina
  Field Sparrow  Spizella pusilla
  Vesper Sparrow  Pooecetes gramineus
  Lark Bunting [Casual]  Calamospiza melanocorys
  Savannah Sparrow  Passerculus sandwichensis
  Grasshopper Sparrow  Ammodramus savannarum
  Henslow's Sparrow  Ammodramus henslowii
  "sharp-tailed" sparrow species3 [Accidental]  Ammodramus ---
  Fox Sparrow  Passerella iliaca
  Song Sparrow  Melospiza melodia
  Lincoln's Sparrow  Melospiza lincolnii
  Swamp Sparrow  Melospiza georgiana
  White-throated Sparrow  Zonotrichia albicollis
  White-crowned Sparrow  Zonotrichia leucophrys
  Dark-eyed Junco  Junco hyemalis
CARDINALS and ALLIESCardinalidae
  Northern Cardinal  Cardinalis cardinalis
  Rose-breasted Grosbeak  Pheucticus ludovicianus
  Indigo Bunting  Passerina cyanea
BLACKBIRDS and ALLIESIcteridae
  Bobolink  Dolichonyx oryzivorus
  Red-winged Blackbird  Agelaius phoeniceus
  Eastern Meadowlark  Sturnella magna
  Western Meadowlark  Sturnella neglecta
  Yellow-headed Blackbird  Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus
  Rusty Blackbird  Euphagus carolinus
  Brewer's Blackbird  Euphagus cyanocephalus
  Common Grackle  Quiscalus quiscula
  Brown-headed Cowbird  Molothrus ater
  Orchard Oriole  Icterus spurius
  Baltimore Oriole  Icterus galbula
FINCHES and ALLIESFringillidae
  Purple Finch  Carpodacus purpureus
  House Finch  Carpodacus mexicanus
  Common Redpoll  Carduelis flammea
  Pine Siskin  Carduelis pinus
  American Goldfinch  Carduelis tristis
OLD WORLD SPARROWSPasseridae
  House Sparrow  Passer domesticus
 

TOTAL SPECIES COUNT FOR PTE. MOUILLEE:  295

The above species count is for all birds in the list, including the species listed below.

1White-winged Dove - Alan Ryff; August 13, 2007.

2Barn Owl - extirpated in the area; last reported by Jim Fowler, Tex Wells, Al Maley, Alan Ryff, and others in 1979

3"sharp-tailed" sparrow species - Joe Kleiman; December 27, 1975 // This sighting was documented and the record was accepted by the MBRC as Sharp-tailed Sparrow. This was before the splitting of Sharp-tailed Sparrow into two species, Nelson's and Saltmarsh--Ammodramus nelsoni and Ammodramus caudacutus. As there are presently no accepted records of A. caudacutus for Michigan, this bird was almost certainly what is now called Nelson's Sparrow.

MBRC Review List species are in blue.           top


The above list is not an official checklist, but it can be considered a reliable guide to the birds that may be found at Pte. Mouillee State Game Area.

List Contributors

This list has been constructed with input from several birders who are among the most frequent and regular visitors to Pte. Mouillee, together with the Michigan Bird Records Committee. If you have a species in your Pte. Mouillee list that is not in the above checklist, you are invited to submit it for inclusion.

Location

The Pte. Mouillee State Game Area is near the town of Rockwood, Michigan, south of Detroit at the northwest corner of Lake Erie. It is approximately equidistant from Southfield, Ann Arbor, and Toledo--35 to 40 miles driving distance. Pte. Mouillee is just a few miles south of Grosse Ile along (and east of) a road known and marked as both W. Jefferson Ave. and U.S. Turnpike. It is about a mile south of Lake Erie Metropark.

See location maps.

Directions

I-75 South (from the Detroit area)

Take I-75 south to the South Huron River Drive exit (Exit 26). At the top of the exit ramp, turn right (east) and follow South Huron River Drive for 2.9 miles to its end at a T- intersection with U.S. Turnpike (labeled W. Jefferson Avenue on some maps). Turn right onto U.S. Turnpike and go 0.2 miles to Sigler Road. [From A Birder's Guide to Michigan (2004). See reference below.]

The Sigler Road parking lot is 0.3 miles to the left (east) on Sigler Road. The Mouillee Creek entrance is 1.0 miles past Sigler Road. Roberts Road is another 0.2 miles. (There is a small cement block building at Roberts Road.) Turn left and follow Roberts Road two miles to its end, where you will find a parking lot and the third entrance to Pte. Mouillee SGA.

If you wish to go to Pte. Mouillee Headquarters, turn left at the South Huron River Drive "T" with U.S. Turnpike and go 0.9 miles to Campau Road. It will be on your right. Follow Campau Road 1.2 miles to its end.

I-275 South (from western suburbs)

Take I-275 south to the Will Carleton Road exit (Exit 8). At the top of the exit ramp, turn left (east) and follow Will Carleton for 4.4 miles to a T-intersection at Telegraph Road (U.S. 24) in the town of Flat Rock. Turn left (north) and go just 0.2 miles before turning east again (your first right). Continue east for 2.8 miles to I-75 (you will be on Huron River Drive, not the South Huron River Drive referenced above in the I-75 directions). Pass under I-75 and continue for another 2.2 miles to a T-intersection at W. Jefferson Avenue (U.S. Turnpike). You will pass through the town of Rockwood. The entrance to Lake Erie Metropark is 0.15 miles left on W. Jefferson. Turn right (south) to go to Pte. Mouillee. It is 1.1 miles to Campau Road and 2.0 miles to the South Huron River Drive T-intersection with W. Jefferson/U.S. Turnpike referenced in the I-75 directions above. From South Huron River Drive go another 0.2 miles to Sigler Road or continue past to either of the other entrances to Pte. Mouillee SGA--1.0 miles to the Mouillee Creek entrance or 1.2 miles to Roberts Road (and then left and another two miles). If you wish to go to the Pte. Mouillee Headquarters, turn left on Campau Road and follow it 1.2 miles to its end.

(Note: If you jog right at Telegraph Road and continue through, you will be on South Huron River Drive. This route will also take you to U.S. Turnpike/W. Jefferson Ave., where you will be half a mile to the south of Campau Road, for Pte. Mouillee SGA HQ, instead of north.)

Maps

  Location maps
  Pte. Mouillee maps

Description

The following short description was excerpted, with permission, from the seven pages on Pointe Mouillee State Game Area in A Birder's Guide to Michigan (2004), by Allen T. Chartier and Jerry Ziarno.

Pointe Mouillee, one of the top birding sites in Michigan, should be on any birder's "must see" list.

In 1945, the State of Michigan acquired 2,604 acres of marsh for Pointe Mouillee SGA from the Pointe Mouillee Shooting Club. Over the years, an offshore barrier island, which protected the marsh, eroded and eventually disappeared, leading to the destruction of the marsh by the rising waters of Lake Erie. Restoration of the marsh was made possible when the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers needed a disposal site for contaminated dredge material. This 700-acre facility was built offshore roughly in the shape of the barrier island that formerly protected the Pointe Mouillee Marsh. This man-made island--3.5 miles long and 1,400 feet wide at its widest--was immediately dubbed "The Banana". The Banana is comprised of five cells, numbered from south to north, that are being filled with dredge material.

There are some logistical considerations you need to make before setting out to bird Pointe Mouillee. The road system of the dikes is closed to private vehicles. This leaves two options: walking or biking. The latter is the most popular choice among local birders. Given the scale of the place, a scope is required. In the summer be prepared for long spells in the sun, as there is no shade on the dikes. Keep an eye out for lightning, as you are likely to be the tallest object around. Fortunately, despite the marsh setting, biting insects are rarely a problem.

There are three access points: the Sigler Road entrance, the Mouillee Creek entrance, and the Roberts Road entrance. [See Pte. Mouillee maps and the map in A Birder's Guide to Michigan.] ... Where you chose to enter depends on where the best birding is; check local rare bird alerts. [See Michigan birding listserver lists and RBAs.]

When parking at any of [the] parking areas, be security-conscious. The shattered safety glass in the parking lots bears witness to the fact that these places are sometimes favored by thieves, so unless you are a strong proponent of redistributive justice, do not leave any valuables in plain sight. The Mouillee Creek entrance, being on a main road, is perhaps less prone to this problem than the other entrances.

A Birder's Guide to Michigan describes Pte. Mouillee's units and cells in detail with information about what birds to look for, and where, in spring, summer, fall, and winter.

Access

Pte. Mouillee SGA is open to non-hunters year round except during open seasons for snipe, rails, ducks, mergansers, coots, and moorhens. This period in 2007, for example, was September 15 through December 2 plus January 5 and 6, 2008. The dates vary a little bit each year, but the "no birders allowed" period is always September 15 through approximately the end of November plus the first weekend in January. Pte. Mouillee is not closed to non-hunters during early, regular, or late Canada Goose season except as those seasons overlap with the aforementioned seasons. The rest of the time the area is open to non-hunters and hunters (during legal hunting seasons). The last legal day for small game hunting is March 31. After that date you should not see many people out wearing blaze orange and carrying guns. For more information see the Michigan Waterfowl Hunting Guide at http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,1607,7-153-10363_10859---,00.html.

There has been an early goose season at Pte. Mouillee, September 1 through the 15th, every year since 1987. The hunting pressure usually dies off after the first couple of days, and most goose hunters are done goose hunting by 9:30-10:00am. Bird watchers and hikers are still allowed anywhere in the area until September 15.

Motor vehicles are not allowed on the dike roads. You must park in one of three parking lots provided and walk (or bike) in past the locked yellow gates. The shortest birding walk you will ever take here is about two miles and the longest probably about 10 miles. There is no protection from the sun out on the dike roads, so for shorebirding in August it is a good idea to wear a hat and sunscreen and to carry drinking water.

Many birders get around Pte. Mouillee by bicycle. Mountain bikes, or other wide-tired bikes, are required because of the rocky, uneven, and sometimes rutted dike roads.

Call the Pointe Mouillee SGA office at 734-379-9692 for additional information or email Joe Robison, Wildlife Biologist, at robisnj@michigan.gov.


Bruce M. Bowman, 2150 Spruceway Ln., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103   /  (734) 994-5398
Bird Checklist for Pte. Mouillee State Game Area Bird Checklist for Pte. Mouillee State Game Area     top    home

created by / comments to:  Bruce M. Bowman  bbowman99@comcast.net

created: July 16, 2005
last modified: April 9, 2011

This page has been visited times since July 16, 2005.

URL: http://www.umich.edu/~bbowman/birds/se_mich/pte_mou.html