Headlands+Dunes+State+Nature+Preserve

Also, see Headlands Beach State Park, Mentor Headlands Area, Grand River-Lower Watershed Important Bird Area, and Lake County Lakeshore Birding Drive
 * =Birding in Ohio=

Lake County
=Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve= 9601 Headlands Road Mentor, Ohio 44060 Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve webpage Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve (Coastal Access) webpage

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Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve
Coordinates: 41.7642698, -81.2838936 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

Tips for birding Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve
This legendary site is one of the best-birded sites in Ohio and is famous for its rarities and big fallouts of migrants. The rock jetty that runs out to the lighthouse is a fantastic observation point for conducting "sea watches" as well. The total Headlands list is well over 300 species—approximately ¾ of the entire Ohio bird list. Not bad for a 25-acre preserve!

Spring and fall migrations bring a great diversity of songbirds, and sometimes in enormous numbers. Over 100 species is possible on a good May or September day. All of the regularly occurring songbirds found in northeast Ohio can occur at Headlands every year, including all of the warbler species and all, or nearly all, sparrow species.

Late fall and early winter is best for lake-watching from the jetty. Monstrous flocks of Red-breasted Mergansers swirl offshore, and staggering numbers of Bonaparte's Gulls can gather. Nearly all of the regularly occurring diving ducks and gulls can be found.

The extensive sand beach is great for birding—swimming is not permitted and thus the beach is much more bird-friendly than the busy state park beach to the west. A variety of gulls, terns, and shorebirds can be found roosting or feeding. From Lake Erie Birding Trail website

The Mentor Headlands area includes Headlands Beach State Park, Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve, Mentor Marsh State Nature Preserve, Fairport Harbor Lakefront Park, and Mentor Lagoons Nature Preserve. The area has an impressive list of 334 species with single days during the spring migration of more than 130 bird species tallied. Days of 100 or more are common in May and possibly even in April. It is the most heavily covered area in the county and can attract 50 or more local birders on a May weekend. The habitat is diverse including lake shore, sand dunes, bottomland forest, marsh, upland forest, pine plantings, river, harbor, and open fields, all in an area that is just a 6.6 mile stretch of Lake Erie Shoreline. All of these areas are easy to access and have ample parking. Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve and the adjacent Headlands Beach State Park is an excellent starting point for spring and fall migrants plus waterfowl, shore birds, gulls, and terns which can be found walking along the beach and jetty which leads out to the lighthouse. From Birding Lake County's Often Overlooked Birding Hotspots by Haans Petruschke

About Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve
Extensive development along the shores of Lake Erie has all but eliminated the presence of sandy beaches and dunes. Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve, located adjacent to Headlands Dunes State Park, is one of the last of its kind in Ohio.

This community is much more than just an accumulation of sand along a shoreline. It is a living assemblage of fascinating and highly specialized plants and animals occurring in an environment too hostile for most other organisms to survive.

The most important dune developers along the Lake and Ashtabula County coast are switchgrass and/or beach grass (Hicks, 1934). Switchgrass or beach grass becomes established on the upper beach along with annuals, such as cocklebur and sea rocket. These lone grass plants quickly spread into huge root-like mats. Sand rapidly drifts into the relatively quiet vicinity of the switchgrass crown, and deposition occurs. Switchgrass and beach grass have an adaptation shared by many dune plants, such as cottonwood, red osier, Canada wild-rye and sandbar willow. Despite an accumulation of sand around its crown, switchgrass or beach grass continues to grow upward through the sand. As the dune becomes more or less stabilized by the switchgrass or beach grass, grape vines, and poison ivy become established on the dunes; eventually, cottonwood and willow appear, and finally oak (usually black oak). The historical factors which allowed the migration of the coastal species into the Great Lakes are no longer at play; once we lose our sand dune communities, they will be lost forever. Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve protects a vestige of the Lake Erie dunes community.

Located in Lake County west of Fairport Harbor at the north end of OH-44 and extreme east end of Headlands Beach State Park. From Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve webpage

Magnolia Warbler Photo by Cory "Chia" Chiappone



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|| L617867 US US-OH US-OH-085 41.7642698 -81.2838936 Headlands Dunes State Nature Preserve