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ORN Lab 10

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called tyrants because they are very territorial -ID: rictal bristles (due to feeding habits) ... Tiny, chubby birds with short, bright crowns. Behavior: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ORN Lab 10


1
ORN Lab 10
  • Photos courtesy of
  • http//www.birds.cornell.edu/programs/AllAboutBird
    s/BirdGuide/

2
Order Passeriformes Perching Song Birds
  • Suborder Tyranni Suboscine passerines
  • 1 family (Tyrannidae)
  • Suborder Passeres Oscine passerines
  • 22 families (covering 15 today)

3
Family Tyrannidae tyrant flycatchers
  • -called tyrants because they are very territorial
  • -ID rictal bristles (due to feeding habits)
  • -Habitats varied
  • -Feeding eat insects
  • -Can be diagnosed in field by
  • feeding behavior they often dart
  • off a branch to snag an insect,
  • then perch again
  • -If insect is too large, they will
  • carry it back to their perch, and
  • beat it on a limb until it is
  • tender enough to eat

4
Olive-sided Flycatcher -streaky olive
sides -found in coniferous forests -vocalization
quick 3 beers. Beer, beer, beer. http//www.bird
s.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Olive-sided_Flyc
atcher1.html
Eastern Phoebe -dark bill body -dips/wags tail
when perched -found in parks, farms, etc.
Vermillion Flycatcher (male) -Latin name means
fire-headed -perches on shrubs in semi-arid
areas
Scissor-tailed Flycatcher (m, f) -found in open
habitats -forked tail for maneuverability (belowm
ale see also female)
Western Kingbird -yellow bird w gray
throat -found in open, arid country
Eastern Kingbird -black and white bird w
white-tipped tail -found in farms, orchards, and
open areas near water
5
Family Laniidae Shrikes
-Predatory lifestyle -large, hooked bill -but,
not very strong claws -thus, it catches prey
(birds, insects, small mammals), and impale
them on barbed wire, or thorns, which it uses
to hold prey while it rips it up -Found in
open areas Loggerhead Shrike -gray bird with
black mask
6
Family Vireonidae Vireos
  • ID
  • Small bodies, yellowish, gray, or olive-green
    plumage
  • Often have spectacles
  • (closely related to shrikes)
  • Short, slightly hooked bills
  • Behavior
  • Secretive
  • But, have melodious, incessant songs
  • Feeding forage for insects by slowly searching
    leafs and shrubs
  • Host of Brown-headed Cowbird
  • Example of nest parasitism

7
White-eyed Vireo -yellow/white eye ring
(spectacles) -wing bars
Red-eyed Vireo -prominent eye stripe (no
spectacles) -solid wings
8
Family Corvidae Jays, magpies, crows
  • ID
  • Long, strong bill
  • Nasal tufts (bristles), plus auriculars
  • Feeding
  • Omnivorous
  • Behavior
  • Aggressive, gregarious birds with harsh voices
  • Often mob other birds to prey on nests, etc.

9
American Crow -eats carrion and live
prey -intelligent
Blue Jay -work together to feed on nests of
American Robin and Northern Mockingbird
Green Jay -found in south TX in wooded, tropical
Areas near the Rio Grande -thus, coloring
provides camouflage
10
Family Alaudidae Larks
  • ID
  • Tufts and crests on head
  • Streaky back, light front
  • Habitat
  • Open country, grasslands, deserts
  • Behavior
  • Often seen walking or running on ground, rather
    than flying
  • Horned Lark
  • Only native lark to N. America

11
Family Hirundinidae Swallows
  • ID
  • Small bill, commissural point below eye to
    provide wide gape for catching insects on the
    wing
  • Fast, agile flyers with long, pointy wings and
    streamlined bodies
  • Feeding
  • Insects, while flying
  • Nesting
  • Some (barn swallows, cliff swallows, for example)
    are colonial nesters. So, you often see large
    groups of their mud nests on buildings (and, in
    other areas)

12
Purple Martin -Very dependent upon the martin
houses people put up for them -Beneficial (eat
harmful insects around gardens)
Barn Swallow (adult, immature) -long, forked
tail -mud nests are cup shaped (colonial
nesters) -see juvenile (this is an adult)
Cliff Swallow -square tail -mud nests are gourde
shaped (colonial nesters)
13
Family Paridae Chickadees and Titmouses
  • ID
  • Small, plump, drab plumage (grayish)
  • Habitat
  • Deciduous forests, suburbs
  • Feeding
  • Eat insects, berries, seeds
  • (will hang upside down, holding seed with 1 foot,
    and open seed by hammering with bill)
  • Behavior
  • Very agile and active

14
Carolina Chickadee -Have oreo head -common at
bird feeders -call chick-a-dee-dee-dee http//
www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Carolina
_Chickadee.html
Tufted Titmouse -gray bird with gray crest
Black-crested Titmouse -used to be considered a
sub-species Of tufted titmouse -gray bird with
black crest
15
Family Sittidae Nuthatches
  • ID
  • Small, stubby birds with strong bills and nails,
    and short tails
  • Lifestyle
  • Tree climbers
  • Climb up, down, and around tree trunks (not
    branches) very acrobatic
  • They are the only birds that go down tree trunks
    head-first
  • White-breasted Nuthatch (m, f)
  • Blue back, black cap, white chest
  • (male top, fem. bottom)

16
Family Certhidae Creepers
  • ID
  • Small, slim, stiff-tailed
  • Long, thin, decurved bill
  • Lifestyle
  • Tree climber spirals up and down tree trunks
    (not branches)
  • Uses bill to probe under bark for insects
  • Uses stiff tail to prop itself up on tree
  • Brown Creeper
  • Streaked plumagecamouflage against tree bark
    (inconspicuous)

17
Family Troglodytidae Wrens
  • ID
  • Small, brown, chunky birds
  • Slim, slightly decurved bills
  • Have small tails that they hold cocked upwards
  • Feeding
  • Use bills to probe for insects in bark and rock
    crevices
  • Behavior
  • Energetic and loud

18
Cactus Wren (white eye stripe) -arid
habitats -nests and roosts in thorny cacti and
bushes -largest wren in N. America -streaky back,
spotted chest, barred wings and tail
Canyon Wren (gold nape) -found in open canyons,
ravines -rufous belly, white chest
Carolina Wren (white eye stripe) -found in
wooded areas, suburbs -rusty color above, buffy
below
House Wren -found in gardens, parks, wooded
areas -dirty brown color
19
Family Regulidae Kinglets and allies
  • ID
  • Tiny, chubby birds with short, bright crowns
  • Behavior
  • Active birds that jump around on tree branches
    eating insects
  • Also see them hovering in place eating insects
  • Often see mixed flocks of kinglets, chickadees,
    titmouses, and nuthatches
  • Ruby-crowned Kinglet (m, f)
  • Distinct white wing bars, dusky underparts
  • Male with ruby crown (top) female bottom

20
Family Muscicapidae Gnatcatchers and allies
  • ID
  • Small, thin tails
  • Feeding
  • Forage for insects on branches
  • Will beat insects against tree to kill them
  • Behavior
  • Very active
  • Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (m, f)
  • Black tail edged in white
  • Male (see specimen) has blue-gray color above
  • Female (at right) is gray above

21
Family Turdidae Thrushes and allies
  • ID
  • Often have brown backs and spotted chests
  • Large eyes and slender bills
  • Narrow, notched bills help them feed on insects
    and fruit
  • Feeding
  • Eat insects, worms, snails, berries

22
Eastern Bluebird (ad, imm) -Adult (left)red
chest immature (right)streaky chest
American Robin -found often on lawns
Hermit Thrush -tiny, rufus tail coverts, dull
spots on chest -beautiful song http//www.birds.co
rnell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Hermit_Thrush.html
Wood Thrush -large, rufus head, dark breast spots
23
Family Mimidae Mimics
  • ID
  • Strong, long, decurved bill
  • Long tails
  • Behavior
  • Mimic other birds songs
  • Feeding
  • Often forage on ground for invertebrates

24
Gray Catbird -dark gray, black cap, chestnut
undertail coverts -catlike call
Northern Mockingbird (ad, imm) -Gray, dark tail
and wings white stripe on wings -TX state
bird -Common and conspicuous -Adult (below) w
gray chest immature (see specimen) has streaked
chest compare immature (white on tail) to
thrushes
Curve-billed Thrasher -found in arid climates
25
Family Sturnidae Starlings and allies
  • ID
  • Chunky, dark, glossy birds
  • Gregarious and bold
  • European Starling (fallspring)
  • Introduced in US in 1880s
  • It thrives in disturbed habitats (cities, parks,
    farms)
  • Often out-competes native birds for
    cavity-nesting space
  • Fall plumage black w white spots (top)
  • Spring plumage spots worn off (bottom)

26
Family Bombycillidae Waxwings
  • ID
  • Waxy tips on secondaries
  • Feeding
  • Eat berries
  • They form migrant flocks that move to where the
    berries are
  • Likewise, breeding coincides with berry
    production
  • Have a high, whistling call
  • Cedar Waxwing
  • Often heard on campus (not seen)
  • http//www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/C
    edar_Waxwing.html
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