Author Archive | Larry Jordan

BirdWords from Blue Oak Country

Our recent past president and author of our “BirdWords” articles has a new book out! It is appropriately titled “BirdWords from Blue Oak Country” and can be found here. Dan was an educator by trade until his recent retirement, and it shows. His incredible wit and command of the english language reveals itself throughout the book. So does his love of birds and the environment.

As an example of Dan’s pros, I would like to give you just a taste of the beginning of his article “Great Egrets” – “Camouflage clearly makes survival sense. But nature doesn’t settle for just one kind of sense. Out along river shorelines and on the damp fields of winter, great egrets are blatantly visible, as uncamouflaged as possible in head-to-tail white. They’re large. They’re out in the open. They’re plainly visible. Shouldn’t they be dead? A hundred years ago they almost were.”

The book presents in chronological order of winter, spring, summer and fall. It not only gives you specific information on several species of birds but also contains information on Christmas Bird Counts, bird migration, outdoor cats, how to begin birding, plants for birds, and importantly, the environment.

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A Thanksgiving Celebration                           of the part of the bird we don’t eat

Peregrine Falcon

Peregrine Falcon

Bill, neb, schnoz – whatever it’s called, a bird’s beak is its second most important appendage after its wings. Since birds’ upper limbs are devoted to flight, the beak is vitally important in manipulating objects for feeding and nest building. Although some species are able to use feet for those purposes, many rely entirely on their bills.

The upper and lower mandibles comprising the beak are bony structures covered with keratin, a substance similar to human fingernails – and also similarly, constantly growing. The keratin layer may be very rigid and powerful as in the woodpeckers, whose beaks can drill nest holes or tease out insects in hardwood trees. In some species such as puffins and White Pelicans, the keratin forms projections during breeding season, presumably to enhance their attractiveness to prospective mates. These ornaments are shed after nesting time.

Icthyornis dispar

Icthyornis dispar

So, how did the toothed jaws of ancestral dinosaurs become transformed into modern beaks? A strong hint is offered by the recently reconstructed fossils of an ancient sea bird, Icthyornis dispar, that lived alongside dinosaurs 87 to 82 million years ago. Although it had dinosaur-like teeth, its long, narrow jaw was tipped by a tiny beak that it could have used like tweezers to grasp objects. The scientist that led the effort to reconstruct this bird said that it pecked like a bird, but bit like a dinosaur.

Red-breasted Sapsucker

Red-breasted Sapsucker

Over the millennia since then, adaptation to many different foods and environments has led to the vast variety of bills seen in modern birds. Form follows function, and so we have finch and sparrow beaks that act as crackers for seed-opening; eagles with shredders to tear apart meat; woodpeckers with chisels to bore into wood for insects; hummingbird probes used to reach into flowers for nectar; heron and kingfisher spears for skewering fish or frogs; and the warblers’ tweezers for grabbing insects. Not all birds have beaks specialized for a single purpose – the omnivorous crow has a versatile beak that all by itself can be likened to a Swiss army knife.

American Crow

American Crow photo courtesy of Ingrid Taylar

Most birds have little or no sense of smell, but there are notable exceptions. Vultures find the carrion they eat by odor – a characteristic taken advantage of by oil pipeline companies. By including a decay molecule in the crude oil, oil companies attract a cloud of vultures to leaks. The vultures, in turn, are followed by pipeline tenders with repair equipment. At sea, the tables are turned. Some seabirds can follow an odor plume to locate dead fish – and in this case the birds take advantage of the humans to detect fishing boats and their discards.

Generally, nostrils are on the part of birds’ beaks close to the head. However, New Zealand’s distinctive kiwi has nostrils near the tip of the beak where its well-developed sense of smell helps it find the insects and earthworms that it eats in the leaf litter.

Kiwi

Kiwi

The flamingo feeds in a manner as distinctive as its tropical appearance. It partially submerges its beak in prey-rich water, holding it upside down so that the upper mandible is below the lower mandible. It draws in large amounts of water and sieves out small organisms by means of hair-like projections on its beak. Thus, it is a filter-feeder, a characteristic it shares with baleen whales and oysters!

American Flamingo

American Flamingo

Our familiar hummingbirds have tropical cousins with amazingly long or fantastically curved beaks that match the corolla tubes of the flowers they feed from. Scientists who study them think that they are partnered in an “arms race” against other flowers and birds. As the flower and the hummingbird team becomes increasingly matched to just each other, they become physiologically committed to just their unique flower-bird relationship, and they exclude other species from their activity. It is as if they are in a long process of being wedded to each other.

Anna's Hummingbird

Anna’s Hummingbird

You don’t have to travel to exotic places or visit zoos to see these amazing beaks in action. Notice the different ways the house finches and the nuthatches that visit your feeders get into the seeds that they eat. Look at the bills of the birds in your yard – do they look like tweezers, probes or chisels? Then watch and see how the bird uses its beak. This makes another way to enjoy the birds around us.

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First Snow Bunting Sighting for Shasta County

Snow Bunting in Shasta County

Snow Bunting in Shasta County

The Snow Bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis) is a widespread breeder in rocky habitats on high arctic tundra across northern North America. In addition to their breeding grounds in North America (see map below), they also breed in rocky regions of the Palearctic:1 Iceland, higher mountains of northern Scotland, Svalbard (Norway), and most Russian arctic islands; on the mainland they breed in tundra regions of Norway east through northern Finland to Kola Peninsula (Russia), then east through Siberia to Chukchi and Kamchatka peninsulas and Komandorskiye (Commander) Islands.

Snow Bunting Range Map

The Snow Bunting’s winter diet is mainly weed seeds of ragweed, goosefoot, aster, goldenrod, grasses and grains like wheat, oats and barley. They forage on the ground, pecking at food. Again, according to Birds of North America Online, they winter in open weedy and grassy fields, grain stubbles, and shores; after heavy snowfall, they are conspicuous on roadsides and in farmyards. “They are also attracted to winter fields where farm manure has been recently spread; they appear to feed on undigested seeds in manure.”

Snow Bunting with Seed

Like most birds this lone Bunting stopped briefly for a little stretch, showing its outstretched wing.

Snow Bunting Stretch

Following a bit more foraging, I finally saw the bird fly. It flew up to roost on a nearby pile of old wooden posts. As is the habit of many birds after foraging and/or bathing, this Snow Bunting did some preening and posing for yet more photos.

Snow Bunting Perched

What a treat to see this first Snow Bunting on record in Shasta County and a lifer for me! Thanks to conscientious birders and our local list serve, Shasta Birders! Here is a Google Map to the location: https://goo.gl/9fqaPA

Snow Bunting Perched

Snow Bunting video from Cornwall, England. Thanks to Paul Dinning.

References: 1Birds of North America Online

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International Vulture Awareness Day 2017

Turkey Vulture

The first Saturday in September each year is International Vulture Awareness Day.

Vultures are an ecologically vital group of birds that face a range of threats in many areas that they occur. Populations of many species are under pressure and some species are facing extinction.

The International Vulture Awareness Day has grown from Vulture Awareness Days run by the Birds of Prey Programme of the Endangered Wildlife Trust in South Africa and the Hawk Conservancy Trust in England, who decided to work together and expand the initiative into an international event.

Turkey Vulture Adult and Juvenile

Turkey Vulture Adult and Juvenile

It is now recognised that a co-ordinated international day will publicise the conservation of vultures to a wider audience and highlight the important work being carried out by the world’s vulture conservationists.

On the first Saturday in September, the aim is for each participating organization to carry out their own activities that highlight vulture conservation and awareness. This website provides a central place for all participants to outline these activities and see the extent of vulture conservation across the world. Additionally, it is a valuable resource for vulture workers to learn about the activities of their colleagues and to perhaps develop new collaborations or exchange information.

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Birds Pull Out Their Winter Coats

Bald Eagle Juvenile

Bald Eagle Juvenile photo courtesy David Bogener

What’s up with our backyard birds? Where are they?

You may have seen them over the last months busily carrying load after load of insects to feed their ravenous nestlings, then being raucously pursued by fledglings demanding yet more food – sometimes with two or even three batches of babies through the season. All this effort has taken a toll on the adult birds’ feathers and now, despite the daily care they have taken preening and cleaning them, the feathers are worn out. The birds are lying low during their molt – the annual or twice yearly loss and regrowth of feathers done by most songbirds. But don’t expect to catch a glimpse of bald birds – each worn feather becomes loosened in its socket and is pushed out by the growth of a new feather.

The process takes from 5 to 12 weeks for songbirds, after which some will appear in winter plumage quite different from the bold patterns some males sport in summer. For example, American Goldfinch males are bright canary yellow with bold black accents during the breeding season, but become a quieter butterscotch color, much like females and juveniles, in their winter garb. Similarly, you may see a male Western Tanager that has lost his gaudy orange head feathers and exchanged them to the muted gray of a female before starting the long, dangerous migration to Costa Rica for the winter.

Bald Eagle 4 Year Old

Bald Eagle Sub-Adult photo courtesy David Bogener

Other groups of birds go about the molt differently. Ducks, geese and some other water birds go through a rapid “synchronous molt”. They change their feathers quickly in a period as short as two weeks which renders them flightless for that period. This seems like a risky business – but researchers have deduced that since these birds are heavy relative to their wing surfaces, losing a few feathers at a time would seriously hamper flying ability, so they get it over with as quickly as possible and minimize the length of time that they are especially vulnerable to predators.

Raptors (eagles, hawks, falcons and their kin) “make their living” on the wing and can’t afford to suffer periods of impaired flying abilities. These birds may take as long as two years to complete a molt. The loss of flight feathers must be symmetrical or flying would be skewed. A woman who raised an owl that could not be released into the wild observed this in action. She reported that her feathered friend pulled a loose wing feather out and gave it to her, then immediately removed the corresponding feather from the other wing.

Bald Eagle Adult

Bald Eagle Adult photo courtesy David Bogener

To give young Turkey Vultures a good start, they don’t molt their flight feathers until they are two years old. The vultures soaring over minus a couple feathers are almost certainly adults.

In most birds, tail feather replacement is from the center of the tail toward the outer edge. Woodpeckers reverse this for a very good reason. Watch closely the next time you see one ratcheting up a tree and you will see that it braces itself firmly using its stiff tail feathers. The key for this is an inner pair of long feathers. Those are retained until the outer tail feathers have been replaced with fresh, strong vanes, keeping the woodpecker able to fully function searching for insects in the bark.

You may find a single feather in your yard – evidence that one of “your” birds has cast it off for a brand new set of feathers to get it through the winter or prepare it to head off to winter habitat in Mexico, Central America or South America. Enjoy the memento!

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