FW: [SBB] Junco and cowbird
- Subject: FW: [SBB] Junco and cowbird
- From: [[email protected]] (Birdermom)
- Date: Wed, 29 Jun 2005 21:21:58 +0000
- Delivery-date: Wed, 29 Jun 2005 17:25:33 -0400
- Envelope-to: [[email protected]]
Hi all!
Two springs ago, at Lake Cunningham, I spotted two Bushtits frantically trying to feed a very large Cowbird! They were so frantic that no matter how hard they tried, they just couldn't seem to make it happy :( A little brain teaser for you is how does the female cowbird lay the egg in the hanging sack??? Have a great time birding!
Jean Myers
---------------------- Forwarded Message: ---------------------
From: "Hannes Vogel" <[[email protected]]>
To: <[[email protected]]>
Subject: [SBB] Junco and cowbird
Date: Wed, 29 Jun 2005 17:20:59 +0000
About two weeks ago, I saw the identical scene between an immature Cowbird
begging from an obliging Dark-Eyed Junco here at the Stanford Medical
Center. It was a little amusing seeing a bird feeding one about twice its
overall size. Also, I was so taken by the scene that as I stood and watched,
the Cowbird then shifted it's attention to me and hopped up to me for a
handout.
Hannes Vogel
[[email protected]]
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From: south-bay-birds-bounces+hvogel=[[email protected]]
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Sent: Tuesday, June 28, 2005 6:01 PM
To: [[email protected]]
Subject: south-bay-birds Digest, Vol 7, Issue 188
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Today's Topics:
1. Junco and cowbird (Hintermeister Jan-AJH130)
2. Band-tailed Pigeons (Ruth Troetschler)
3. CCRS and EEC birding ([[email protected]])
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Message: 1
Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 10:24:05 -0700
From: Hintermeister Jan-AJH130 <[[email protected]]>
Subject: [SBB] Junco and cowbird
To: [[email protected]]
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<[[email protected]]>
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Yesterday outside my office window at Kifer and Lawrence in Sunnyvale, I had
a Dark-Eyed Junco feeding a young Brown-Headed Cowbird. I've seen the
pictures of a small parent feeding a much larger chick but this was the
first time I've seen it live. The cowbird was on a tree branch doing the
wing-fluttering begging behavior and the junco flew in with food.
This comes about a week after I heard a very exciting cowbird talk by
Stephen Rothstein at the Mono Basin Chautauqua. For all its negative
impacts, the Brown-Headed Cowbird is a remarkable species. For example,
unlike all other songbirds, the cowbird song (the gurgling intro followed by
high pitched whistle) turns out to be not learned but is innate, i.e. young
cowbirds isolated from other cowbirds will develop a normal song. The
cowbird also has a flight whistle that is learned and has dialects over
geographical areas like many other songbirds.
Jan Hintermeister
Santa Clara, CA
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Message: 2
Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 14:45:37 -0700
From: Ruth Troetschler <[[email protected]]>
Subject: [SBB] Band-tailed Pigeons
To: [[email protected]]
Message-ID: <p06110400bee7749d0f62@[209.209.14.163]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed"
Band-tailed Pigeons have been eating millet on my patio for the last
week. When I first saw them on Saturday, I thought it was a one time
thing, but this is becoming a habit. The loud flapping noise from
the wings is distinctive.
This is an usual species for lowland Los Altos.
Ruth Troetschler
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Message: 3
Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 19:43:05 EDT
From: [[email protected]]
Subject: [SBB] CCRS and EEC birding
To: [[email protected]]
Message-ID: <[[email protected]]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
All,
At the Environmental Education Center this morning Frank Vanslager and I
had
16-18 WILSON'S PHALAROPES (mostly in New Chicago Marsh), one RED-NECKED
PHALAROPE (second island in Salt Pond A16), two BLACK SKIMMERS (third island
in
the Salt Pond), up to eight LEAST SANDPIPERS and one breeding plumage
WESTERN
SANDPIPER (sandpipers mostly on the second island). A PEREGRINE FALCON was
on a power tower in Salt Pond A18. Earlier we had checked out the Coyote
Creek Riparian Station ponds in hopes of finding a Little Blue Heron but
alas, no
joy. Sigh!
Take care,
Bob Reiling
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End of south-bay-birds Digest, Vol 7, Issue 188
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