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One Wild Bird at a Time

Page 18

by Bernd Heinrich


  Husby, M. 1986. On the adaptive value of brood reduction in birds: Experiments with magpies, Pica pica. Journal of Animal Ecology 55:75–83.

  James, R. D. 1998. Blue-headed Vireo (Vireo solitarius). The Birds of North America, no. 379., ed. A. Poole and F. Gill. Philadelphia: Academy of Natural Sciences.

  Mock, D. W. 1984. Siblicide aggression and resource monopolization in birds. Science 225:731–733.

  Mock, D. W., H. Drummond, and C. H. Stinson, 1990. Avian siblicide. American Scientist 78:438–449.

  O’Connor, R. J. 1978. Brood reduction in birds: Selection for fratricide, infanticide and suicide? Animal Behaviour 26:790–796.

  ———. 1979. Egg weights and brood reduction in the European swift (Apus apus). Condor 81:133–145.

  NUTHATCH HOMEMAKING

  Ghalambor, C. K., and T. H. Martin. 1999. Red-breasted Nuthatch (Sitta canadensis). The Birds of North America Online, ed. A. Poole. Ithaca, NY: Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/BNA/.

  BLUE JAYS IN TOUCH

  Johnson, W. C., and T. Webb. 1989. The role of blue jays (Cyanocitta cristata) in the postglacial dispersal of fagaceous trees in North America. Journal of Biogeography 16:561–571.

  Jones, T. B., and A. C. Kamil. 1973. Tool-making and tool-use in the northern blue jay. Science 180:1076–78.

  Racine, R. N., and N. S. Thompson. 1983. Social organization of wintering blue jays. Behaviour 87:237–255.

  Stewart, P. A. 1982. Migration of blue jays in eastern North America. North American Bird Bander 7:107–112.

  Tarvin, K. A., and G. E. Woolfenden. 1999. Blue Jay (Cyanocitta cristata). The Birds of North America, no. 469, ed. A. Poole and F. Gill. Philadelphia: Academy of Natural Sciences.

  CHICKADEES IN WINTER

  Barnea, A., and N. Nottebohm. 1994. Seasonal recruitment of hippocampal neurons in adult free-ranging black-capped chickadees. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 91:11214–221.

  Heinrich, B., and R. Bell. 1995. Winter food of a small insectivorous bird, the golden-crowned kinglet. Wilson Bulletin 107(3):558–561.

  Heinrich, B., and S. L. Collins. 1983. Caterpillar leaf damage, and the game of hide-and-seek with birds. Ecology 64(3):592-602.

  Nottebohm, F. 1980. Testosterone triggers growth of brain vocal control nucleus in adult female canaries. Brain Research 189:429–436.

  ———. 1981. A brain for all seasons: Cyclical anatomical changes in song control nucleus of the canary brain. Science 214:1368–70.

  ———. 1989. From birdsong to neurogenesis. Scientific American 260:74–79.

  Sherry, D. F., and J. S. Hooshooly. 2009. The seasonal hippocampus of food-storing birds. Behavioral Processes 80:334–338.

  Smith, S. M. 1991. The Black-capped Chickadee: Behavioral Ecology and Natural History. Ithaca, NY, and London: Comstock Publishing Associates of Cornell University Press. 362 pp.

  REDPOLLS TUNNELING IN SNOW

  Cade, T. J. 1953. Sub-nival feeding of the redpoll in interior Alaska: A possible adaptation to the northern winter. Condor 55:43–44.

  Clement, R. C. 1968. Common redpoll. In Life Histories of North American Cardinals, Grosbeaks, Buntings, Finches, Sparrows, and Allies, ed. A. C. Bent and O. L. Austin. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press.

  Collins, J. E., and J. M. C. Peterson. 2003. Snow burrowing by common redpolls (Carduelis flammea). The Kingbird 53(1):13–22.

  Furness, G. 1987. Common redpolls excavating snow burrows and snow bathing. The Kingbird, Spring, pp. 74–75.

  Guntert, M., D. Hay, and R. P. Balda. 1988. Communal roosting in the pygmy nuthatch: A winter survival strategy. Proceedings of the International Ornithological Congress 19:1964–72.

  Heinrich, B. 2014. Redpoll snow bathing: Observations and hypothesis. Northeastern Naturalist 21(4):N45–N52.

  Heinrich, B., and R. Smolker. 1998. Play in common ravens (Corvus corax). In Animal Play: Evolutionary, Comparative, and Ecological Perspectives, ed. M. Beckoff and J. A. Byers, pp. 27–44. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

  Knox, A. G., and P. E. Lowther. 2000. Common redpoll (Carduelis flammea). The Birds of North America Online, ed. A. Poole and G. Gill. Ithaca, NY: Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/BNA/.

  Korhonen, K. 1981. Temperature in the nocturnal shelters of the redpoll (Acanthis flammea L.) and the Siberian tit (Parus cinctus Budd.) in winter. Annales Zoologici Fennici, pp. 165–168.

  Meltofte, K. 1983. Arrival and pre-nesting period of the snow bunting Plectophenax nivalis in East Greenland. Polar Research 1:185–198.

  Novikov, G. A. 1972. The use of under-snow refuges among small birds of the sparrow family. Aquilo Serie Zoologica 13:95–97.

  Palmer, R. S. 1949. Maine Birds. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology 102.

  Sulkava, S. 1968. On small birds spending the night in the snow. Aquilo Serie Zoologica 7:33–37.

  TRACKING GROUSE IN WINTER

  Bump, G. R., R. W. Darrow, F. C. Edminster, and W. F. Crissey. 1947. The Ruffed Grouse: Life History, Propagation, and Management. Buffalo: New York State Conservation Department. 915 pp.

  Heinrich, B. 2003. The Winter World: The Ingenuity of Animal Survival. New York: HarperCollins, p. 347.

  ———. 2004. Overnighting of golden-crowned kinglets in winter. Wilson Bulletin 115:123–124.

  Page, R. E., and A. T. Bergerud. 1988. A genetic explanation for the ten-year cycles in grouse. In Adaptive Strategies and Population Ecology of Northern Grouse, ed A. T. Bergerud and M. W. Gratson. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

  Whitaker, D. M., and D. F. Stauffer. 2003. Night roost selection during winter by ruffed grouse in the central Appalachians. Southern Naturalist 2(3):377–392.

  CRESTED FLYCATCHER’S NEST HELPERS

  Alcock, J. 2005. Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach, 8th ed., pp. 405–435. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.

  Clutton-Brock, T. H. 1991. The Evolution of Parental Care. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

  Davies, N. B. 2000. Cowbirds and Other Cheats. London: T. and A. D. Poyser.

  RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS RETURNING

  Orians, G. H. 1980. Marsh-nesting Blackbirds. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

  Searcy, W. A., and K. Yasukawa. 1995. Polygyny and Sexual Selection in Red-winged Blackbirds. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

  PHOEBE SEASONS

  Heinrich, B. 2000. Phoebe diary. Natural History 109(4):14–15.

  Olson, Roberta, and New York Historical Society. 2012. Audubon’s Aviary: The Original Watercolors for The Birds of America. New York: Skira Rizzoli.

  Pough, Richard H. 1946. Audubon Bird Guide. New York: Doubleday.

  EVENING GROSBEAKS

  Gillihan, S. W., and B. Byers. 2001. Evening grosbeak (Coccothraustes vespertinus). The Birds of North America Online, ed. A. Poole. Ithaca, NY: Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology. http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/BNA/

  AUDIENCE TO A WOODCOCK

  Longcore, J. R., D. G. McAuley, G. F. Sepic, and G. W. Pendleton. 1996. Canadian Journal of Zoology 74:2046–54.

  Marshall, W. M. 1982. Does the American woodcock bob or rock—and why? The Auk 99:791.

  McAuley, D. G., J. R. Longcore, and G. F. Sepic. 1993. Behavior of radio-marked breeding American woodcocks. Proceedings of the Eighth American Woodcock Symposium, pp. 116–125.

  Mendell, H. L., and C. M. Aldous. 1948. The Ecology and Management of the American Woodcock. Orono: Maine Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, University of Maine. 201 pp.

  Nemeth, E., and H. Brumm. 2009. Blackbirds sing higher-pitched songs in cities: Adaptation to habitat acoustics or side-effect of urbanization. Animal Behaviour 78(3):637–641.

  Pettingill, O. S., Jr. 1936. The American woodcock (Philohela minor). Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History 9:169–391.

  Sheldon, W. G. 1967. The Book of the American Woodcock. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.

  Wo
rth, C. B. 1976. Body-bobbing woodcocks. The Auk 93:374–375.

  Appendix

  Latin names of the highlighted or commonly cited birds

  * * *

  American Crow

  Corvus brachyrhynchos

  American Goldfinch

  Carduelis tristis

  American Robin

  Turdus migratorius

  Bank Swallow

  Riparia riparia

  Barred Owl

  Strix varia

  Black-capped Chickadee

  Poecile atricapilla

  Blue-headed Vireo

  Vireo solitaries

  Blue Jay

  Cyanocitta cristata

  Broad-winged Hawk

  Buteo platypterus

  Canada Goose

  Branta canadensis

  Cliff Swallow

  Petrochelidon pyrrhonota

  Common Grackle

  Quiscalus quiscula

  Common Raven

  Corvus corax

  Common Redpoll

  Carduelis flammea

  Eastern Phoebe

  Sayornis phoebe

  European Starling

  Sturnus vulgaris

  Evening Grosbeak

  Coccothraustes vespertinus

  Great Crested Flycatcher

  Myiarchus crinitus

  Great Horned Owl

  Bubo virginianus

  Mourning Dove

  Zenaida macroura

  Northern Flicker

  Colaptes auratus

  Northern Saw-whet Owl

  Aegolius acadicus

  Pine Siskin

  Carduelis pinus

  Red-breasted Nuthatch

  Sitta canadensis

  Red-tailed Hawk

  Buteo jamaicensis

  Red-winged Blackbird

  Agelaius phoeniceus

  Ruby-throated Hummingbird

  Archilochus colubris

  Ruffed Grouse

  Bonasa umbellus

  Sharp-shinned Hawk

  Accipiter striatus

  Tree Swallow

  Tachycincta bicolor

  Wild Turkey

  Meleagris gallopavo

  Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

  Sphyrapicus nuchalis

  Yellow-rumped Warbler

  Dendroica coronata

  Index

  A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

  Page numbers in italics indicate illustrations.

  A

  Agelaius phoeniceus. See red-winged blackbirds

  American robins, 14, 15, 16, 75, 146, 149

  amphibians, 69–70

  Argiope aurantia (garden spider), 122–23, 123

  Argyresthia thuiella (gray moth), 118

  Audubon, John James, 165, 166

  B

  Bakewell, Lucy, 165

  barred owls

  attracted to fledging flickers, 12

  hunting shrews, 62–65

  perched near cabin, 58, 59, 60, 67

  vocalizations, 54, 56–58, 60–61, 65–66

  Bauman, Nikki, 58

  beak color, evening grosbeaks, 179–80, 181

  Beakie (pet starling), 34

  begging

  flicker chicks, 6–10, 7

  yellow-bellied sapsucker chicks, 49–50

  blackbirds. See red-winged blackbirds

  blackburnian warblers, 78

  black-capped chickadees

  at birdfeeder, 55, 108, 109–11

  courtship and feeding behaviors, 42–43

  egg, hatchling, and half-grown young, 117

  flocks, 102, 107–8, 109, 111, 113, 117–18, 123, 125

  foraging behavior, 111–13, 112, 114–23, 116, 123

  learning, 114–17, 116, 120–23

  nesting, 113–14, 146–47

  sap licks, 43

  stomach contents, 119–20, 120

  vocalizations, 107, 108

  winter survival strategies, 108–9

  The Black-capped Chickadee (Smith), 107–8

  black-throated green warblers, 179

  Blarina brevicauda (short-tailed shrew), 13, 55, 60, 62–65

  Blouin, Mike, 58, 60

  blue-headed vireos

  egg reduction, 80–82

  fledging of young, 1

  nesting, 77–82, 80

  singing, 75–77, 166

  vocalizations, 77, 78

  blue jays

  at birdfeeder, 65

  courtship, 92, 96–97

  flocking and feeding, 97–99, 104

  food caching, 91, 101, 104

  foraging behavior, 90

  intelligence of, 91

  nest protection, 92–96

  and owls, 55

  solitary behaviors, 100–105

  broad-winged hawks, 69–73, 145

  brood reduction, 80–82

  brown creepers, 111

  Brown, Michelle, 58

  Buteo platypterus (broad-winged hawk), 69–73

  C

  Callosamia promethea (Promethia moth), 109

  Canada geese, 85, 86, 146

  Carpodacus mexicanus (house finch), 152–53

  catbirds, 149

  cedar waxwings, 149

  chickadees. See black-capped chickadees

  chicks

  broad-winged hawks, 71

  Pipsqueak (flicker chick), 10–11, 13–15

  red-breasted nuthatches, 82

  woodcocks, 185–86

  yellow-bellied sapsuckers, 49–50

  cluster flies, 30–31

  Collins, Scott, 114–15

  common redpolls burrowing in snow, 126–27, 128–29, 130–33

  Corvus genus, 20–21

  courtship

  black-capped chickadees, 42–43

  blue jays, 92, 96–97

  red-winged blackbirds, 160–61

  coyotes, 20

  crossbills, 125

  crows

  attacks on other crows, 23–25

  cooperative flocks and keeping watch, 21–22

  Corvus genus, 20–21

  feeding behaviors, 19–20, 21–22

  human hunting of, 18–19

  intelligence of, 17

  pet crows, 17–18

  D

  Deely, Kat, 58

  Douglas, Scott, 61

  downy woodpeckers, 111, 179

  drumming

  and mate attraction, 40–42, 44–49

  ruffed grouse, 166

  yellow-bellied sapsuckers, 1, 37–42, 39, 48–49, 50

  E

  eagles, 81–82

  eastern phoebes

  egg reduction, 81

  migration, 166, 169, 173–74

  nesting, 145–46, 167–68, 167, 170–75

  vocalizations, 167, 168–69, 170, 171–72, 173, 174

  egg case, garden spider egg case, 122–23, 123

  egg production, flickers, 3–4

  egg reduction

  blue-headed vireos, 80–82

  great crested flycatchers, 151–52

  eggshells, 5–6

  Eurasian jackdaw, 20

  European nuthatches, 84

  evening grosbeaks

  beak color, 179–80, 181

  feeding, 177–78, 179–80

  flocks, 178, 180

  nesting, 181–82

  F

  feeding behaviors

  black-capped chickadees, 111–13, 112, 114–23, 116, 123

  crows, 19–20, 21–22

  evening grosbeaks, 177–78, 179–80

  flickers, 6–10, 7

  ravens, 19, 22–23

  ruffed grouse, 135, 140, 142

  starlings, 27–28

  woodcocks, 185

  yellow-bellied sapsuckers, 1–2, 14, 51–52, 146

  Fell, Greg, 70–71

  Ficedula hypoleuca (pied flycatcher), 166

  finches

  feeding behaviors, 55, 125–26

  purple finches, 65, 179 />
  See also evening grosbeaks

  fledging

  blue-headed vireos, 1

  crows versus ravens, 21

  flickers, 11–15

  great crested flycatchers, 151

  flickers

  baby flickers, 4–6, 5

  begging and feeding of young, 6–11, 7, 12, 13, 14

  egg production, 3–4

  eggshells, 5–6

  feeding on chokecherries, 75

  fledging, 11–15

  hunting restrictions, 19

  nest cavity in cabin wall, 3–5, 15–16

  nest cleaning, 6, 7, 8–9, 10

  nest hole in outer cabin wall, 2–3

 

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