Friday, 4 March 2022

Bird that sounds like a turkey?

Please write an article about what bird sounds like a turkey. A lot of people think that turkeys sound like they’re gobbling or clucking but there are actually many different types of birds that sound like turkeys. Some birds have a deep voice while others have a high pitched one. There are also some birds that sound more like ducks than turkeys. You can learn more about these birds by writing an article on them.

The blackbird is a songbird, which means it sings and makes music. It is found in most parts of the world except Antarctica. Its name comes from its black coloration. They live in trees and bushes. Their songs are often described as “liquid notes” because of their musical quality.

The great tit is a common European passerine bird. It is a member of the family Paridae. It is known for being very social, and will often form flocks. This bird is named after the great tit (Parus major). Great tits are native to Europe, Asia, North Africa, and North America.

The blue jay is a large American crow-like corvid. It is a common species throughout much of Canada and the United States. Blue jays are omnivorous, eating both plant material and animal matter. They are highly intelligent, and have complex communication systems.

The cuckoo is a brood parasite. Cuckoos lay eggs in other birds' nests, where they hatch out and raise the young as if they were their own. In return, the host parents feed and protect the cuckoo's offspring until they fledge. The term "cuckoo" comes from the Old English cucu, meaning "rooster."

The domestic chicken is a domesticated fowl, descended from the red junglefowl (Gallus gallus), which is itself a domesticated subspecies of the grey junglefowl (G. g. murghi) of Southeast Asia. Domestic chickens are raised primarily for meat, although egg production is another important factor. Chickens are commonly kept as pets, especially in urban areas.

The domestic duck is a domesticated version of the mallard. Ducks are popular as waterfowl due to their ability to swim well and dive. They are usually kept as pets, but may be hunted as gamebirds.

The domestic goose is a domesticated version, or variant, of the Anatolian landrail. Geese are usually kept as pets; however, they may be hunted as game.

The domestic pigeon is a domesticated version or variant of the rock dove. Pigeons are usually kept as pets. However, they may be hunted for sport.

The domestic quail is a domesticated version (variant) of the bobwhite quail. Quails are usually kept as pets and eaten as food.

The domestic rabbit is a domesticated version/variant of the hares. Rabbits are usually kept as pets or used for hunting.

The domestic turkey is a domesticated version and variant of the Meleagris gallopavo. Turkeys are usually kept as pets but may be hunted as food.

The European starling is a domesticated version. Starlings are usually kept as pets though may be hunted as game birds.

The guinea pig is a domesticated version that originated in South America. Guinea pigs are usually kept as pets although they may be hunted as food animals.

The kookaburra is a domesticated version originating in Australia. Kookaburras are usually kept as pets whereas they may be hunted as prey.

The ostrich is a domesticated version originally from southern Africa. Ostrichs are usually kept as pets with some individuals being hunted as food.

The domestic dog is a domesticated version derived from wolves. Dogs are usually kept as pets as well as used for hunting.

 

Questions

Questions used across top search results:

  • How can you tell a male from a female wild turkey?

A male has a redhead and neck, while a female has a grayish-brown head and neck. Males also have a black tail tip, while females do not.

What does a turkey call sound like?

A turkey gobbles when it wants to attract mates. A turkey will make this noise by opening its mouth wide and making a loud “gub” sound. This sound is made by forcing air through the nasal cavity.

How long does it take for a turkey to reach sexual maturity?

It takes about two years for a turkey to mature sexually.

How old is a wild turkey?

Wild turkeys live up to 20 years old.

Where did the name turkey come from?

Turkeys were first called turkies because they were thought to be related to the Turdus genus of thrushes. In 1580, the English word turke was used to refer to 

Monday, 31 January 2022

Dark-throated Oriole (Oriolus xanthomas)

 Size: About that of the Myna.

Field Characters:

Dark-throated Oriole is a species of family Oriolidae. The brilliant golden-yellow bird has a jet-black head, throat, and upper breast. It has black in wings and tail, as sexes alike. It is found singly or in pairs, arboreal, in wooded country.

Distribution:

The whole of the Indian empire expected the arid portions west of a line from Kathiawar through Mount Aboo to the Sutlej Kiver. In the Himalayas, the bird can be found up to about 4,000 ft. Three races are recognized for differences in size and details of coloration, viz., the largest northern xanthornus, the intermediate peninsular maderaspatanus, and the smallest Ceylonese ceylonensis. It is resident over the greater part of its range but also moves about locally to some extent.

Habits:

This oriole, like the last, is a bird of well-wooded country and groves of large trees, often in the neighborhood of human habitations. It has a variety of loud melodious calls which in general are very like those of the Indian Oriole. A harsh monosyllabic note commonly uttered is mistaken for one of the Tree-Pie's. Otherwise, there is no appreciable difference between the habits of the two species. The natural habitat of this oriole is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests.

Nesting:

The principal months in India are from April to July, but in Ceylon, it apparently breeds from October to May. The structure and size of the nest do not differ from those of the Indian Oriole, but the eggs are somewhat smaller, pinker, and less glossy. Orioles of both species, along with such other mild-mannered birds as doves and babblers, often build in the same tree as holds a nest of the Black Drongo.

That this is by design rather than accident can scarcely be doubted considering how frequent the occurrence is. It is certain also that the birds must thereby enjoy a degree of protection against marauders like crows and tree-pies. King Crow will tolerate the proximity of his harmless dependents with complacence, but a crow has only to show himself in the precincts of the nest tree to be furiously set upon and beaten off by the valiant kotwal and his wife.

Other Names

The other names of Dark-throated oriole are black-throated oriole, black-headed oriole, and Malaysian oriole. Also, the black-headed oriole shouldn’t be confused with the species of a similar name, (Oriolus larvatus).

Sunday, 2 January 2022

BENNU BIRD

The Bennu bird, albeit little known nowadays, is an extremely important figure in the solar myths. The first mentions of Bennu date from the Pyramid Texts of the Old Kingdom: the bird was associated with (or was one of the forms of) the creator god Atum, which in turn was an aspect of the sun god Re (Atum was the evening sun, Khepri the morning sun and the nominal Re the midday sun). Later, during the Middle Kingdom, Bennu was considered the ba of the sun god Re, which originated Atum. The ba is one of the souls that make up things in Egyptian beliefs; it is roughly equivalent to our notion of personality. Bennu is said to have flown over Nun, the primordial ocean, right before creation. He finally perched on a rock and let out a loud cry (in the sense of the usual animal call), which broke the primeval silence. This first cry was said to have determined what was and what was not to be in the soon-to-be-unfolded creation by the hands of Atum. 

Very little is known of Bennu’s cult, but his role in the solar mythology of Heliopolis probably made him very important in the region’s cults. Bennu’s titles were “He who Came into Being by Himself” and “Lord of Jubilees”, reflecting, respectively, his selfgenerative birth and its long life. Bennu is usually depicted as a heron (Fig. 5A), sometimes atop of the benben stone (the rock or mound where it first perched, which represents Atum/Re) or on a willow tree (which represents the god Osiris). But where did Osiris come from in this story? Bennu became linked with Osiris as a symbol of anticipated rebirth in the Underworld; as such, the bird is sometimes depicted wearing Osiris’s atef crown (a feathered white crown; Fig. 5A). Rarely, Bennu is depicted as a heron-headed man. Bennu appears as a persona only in the very first game in the series (P1). 

Its depiction in the game is completely stylized and rather bizarre (Fig. 5C), not being very reminiscent of a heron at all. However, the official artwork of the Bennu in the Shin Megami Tensei series is more similar to the Egyptian drawings (compare Figs. 5A and 5B). Nevertheless, it has a short neck and a long and curved beak, looking more like a hybrid of a vulture and an ibis than a proper heron. In addition, it wears not the atef crown of Osiris, but the headdress of the goddess Hathor (the sun disk amid cow horns), which has nothing to do with the Bennu. Archaeological remains found in the United Arab Emirates, dating from the Umm an-Nar period (2600–2000 BCE), contained bird bones, some of which belonged to a large heron. 

These bones were deemed to belong to a new species, which was named Ardea bennuides Hoch, 1979 (its common name is “Bennu heron”). This now extinct species is considered to have been the inspiration for the Bennu – for an idea of what the animal might have looked like, take a look at the grey heron (Fig. 5D), which belongs to the same genus. The date of the remains of the Bennu heron coincides with Egypt’s Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period (Table 2). However, the Bennu only started to be depicted as a heron later in Egyptian history, during the New Kingdom. Back in the Old Kingdom days, we find another bird that might have been the first inspiration for the Bennu – and it has absolutely nothing to do with a heron. 

This bird is the yellow wagtail, Motacilla flava Linnaeus, 1758 (Fig. 5E), which in the Pyramid Texts is considered a representation of Atum himself. A Finally, I should say something about another famous mythological bird, the phoenix. The Greek historian Herodotus visited Egypt during the 5th century BCE. There, he learned about the Bennu bird from the priests and called very modest bird for such an important role, perhaps? it Phoenix in his native language (the name was likely derived directly from “Bennu”). In later Greek tradition, the phoenix was often likened to an eagle, but kept the characteristics of its origin: its role as a sun-bird and a symbol of resurrection, its self-generative birth and its long life. These characteristics might have given rise to the legend that the phoenix is reborn anew in a fiery conflagration, like the sun rising at dawn. As such, we may consider that Bennu is also present in the games P2-IS and P2-EP, under the guise of “Phoenix”. In this depiction, the persona is clearly following the Greek eagle tradition.


Thursday, 25 November 2021

WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A SPRING AND AN ARTESIAN

 People who live in the city do not have to worry about wells or springs. The city supplies them with water. But out in the country and in some suburbs. Obtaining a water supply may be quite a problem. Such water may come from a spring or a well. A spring is a water that flows from a natural opening in the ground during the rainfall, part of the WELL? Water soaks into the soil and rocks through small spaces and cracks and is pulled down by gravity as far as the openings in the rocks will allow At different levels below the surface of the land there is a zone where all the openings in the rocks are completely filled with water.

This is called "the underground zone". The upper surface of it is called the water table". In valleys or other low places in the land surface, below the water tables. Springs occur where there are cracks in the rocks. In other words, the water that has been stored up there escapes as spring water. Some springs flow all year because they receive water from deep within the ground-water zone. Other springs flow only in the rainy season when the water table is at its highest level. 

An artesian well is a well from which the water bubbles up naturally above the surface of the earth. An artesian well is formed when a layer of loose rock gravel or sand is sand between two layers of solid rock. The loose gravel or sand has spaces to hold the water. So we have three lavers-solid rocks above and below and a porous layer that is like a pipe between them. These three layers are not horizontal, they lie at an angle. Water enters the middle layer at the top end. Farther down, if an opening is made, there is a pressure that makes the water spurt out and we have an artesian well.

Monday, 1 November 2021

The British Magpies


One for sorrow, two for joy but what do you get for 100 or even 150 Magpies Pica pica? Groups of this size are not uncommon, and indeed the antics of large gatherings of Magpies were described by the Reverend Darwin Fox to his cousin, Charles Darwin, who subsequently wrote:

“The common magpie used to assemble from all parts of Delamere Forest, in order to celebrate the 'great magpie marriage'. They had the habit of assembling very early in the spring at particular spots, where they could be seen in flocks, chattering, sometimes fighting, bustling, and flying about the trees. The whole affair was evidently considered by the birds as one of the highest importance. Shortly after the meeting they all separated, and were then observed to be paired for the season.” (Darwin 1871)

The Magpie is a small-to-medium-sized member of the crow family (Corvidae).  The adult males weighed 248 g and adult females 223.3 g. The sexes are identical in plumage, but the size difference between the sexes is often apparent if they are seen side by side. The Magpie has a wide geographic distribution, breeding throughout most of Europe and Asia, North Africa, and western North America.

Geographic variation exists, generally in terms of body size and the relative amounts of black and white plumage. Inevitably, a species with such a broad geographic range occupies a wide range of habitats, from the semi-arid desert in North Africa, and the prairies of North America, to Alaska's boreal forests. In Britain, its habitat includes the lush farmland of lowland England and the windswept moors of the Peak District. The estimated breeding population of Magpies in Britain and Ireland to be about 250,000 to 500,000 pairs.

This is a resident population, and there is no immigration into Britain from the Continent. In Britain, the Magpie has undergone a population increase during the past 40-50 years. Therefore an increase has also resulted in the spread of Magpies into the urban areas.

This increase in abundance has been met with a variety of responses: obviously, Magpie enthusiasts have welcomed it, but they are pretty thin on the ground. The commonest response has been concern over song-bird populations (see page 598). Ringing recoveries show that Magpies rarely undertake long-distance movements. That the median distance between the natal nest and first-breeding location was just 447 m, equivalent to moving 1.8 territories.

As with other passerine species, females tended to move farther (497 m,) than males (350 m), although this difference was not statistically significant. The median distance between annual breeding attempts was even less: males 15 m and females 27 m. A significantly higher proportion of females bred in more than one territory during their life (13/48; 27%) than did males (5/ 64; 8%). This occurred because males which lost their partner were still able to defend their territory alone and invariably remained there.

In contrast, a lone female could not maintain a territory, so, if she lost her partner, she usually moved to another territory to repair. These results probably reflect Magpie dispersal fairly accurately; we regularly searched all surrounding areas for color-ringed birds, and, in ten years of enthusiastic Magpie recording by the Sheffield Bird Study Group, we had only four reported sightings of individuals more than 2 km from where they had been ringed. Magpies are monogamous, and a breeding pair defends an all-purpose territory.

In most studies of Magpies in Britain and the Continent, territories average about 5 ha in extent. The population can be divided into two sectors, the breeders and the non-breeders. In some areas, non-breeding individuals may comprise 20-40% of the total Magpie population.

Non-breeders are usually one-year-old and two-year-old birds (rarely three- and four-year-olds) that live as part of a loose flock ranging over the territories of established pairs. The flock is organized into a dominance hierarchy, with males generally being dominant over females.

This occurs partly as a result of the difference in body size between the sexes. The situation is rather more complex than this: the date that a young Magpie entered the non-breeding flock also had a marked effect on its status, with late arrivals achieving the lowest status. The pattern is by performing an ambitious experiment that involved hand-rearing and releasing 44 Magpies into the study area at different times. This result also explains why late-hatched young had the lowest likelihood of surviving to breed.

Providing that they survive long enough, Magpies start to breed in their first or second spring: mean ages of first breeding were for males 1.6 years and for females 1.4 years (this difference is not significant). Breeding Magpies in our study area (based on re-sightings of color-ringed birds) had a life expectancy of 2.0 (female) to 3.5 years (male).

The oldest Magpie we recorded died in its 9th year. However, the ringing recoveries provide a similar longevity record: 9.7 years. These data were obtained in an area where Magpies were unmolested; obviously, mortality rates will vary in different areas.

Diet and feeding behavior

Magpies are omnivores and will eat pretty well anything: we have seen them eat pears, dog faces with relish, attack a mole Talpa europaea, catch, kill and eat voles (Microtinae) as well as eating the berries of whitebeam, acorns, and household scraps.

It is difficult to build up an accurate picture of any species' diet because different study techniques have different biases associated with them. The stomach contents of shot Magpies and analyzed Magpie pellets and droppings. During summer, the bulk of the adult and nestling diet comprised grassland invertebrates (beetles, caterpillars, spiders, leather jackets, and earthworms). In winter, much more vegetable matter (e.g. seeds, bulbs) was eaten. A very little evidence that Magpies took many songbird eggs.

Like many other crows, Magpies hoard excess food. There is, however, not the slightest evidence that Magpies are specifically attracted to (or steal) bright objects such as money or rings. The food-hoarding behavior of the Magpies has some detail. Most food-hoarding by Magpies is short-term, with items recovered within just one or two days, unlike the Jay ‘Garrulus glandarius’ and nutcrackers Nucijraga, which cache acorns and pine seeds, respectively, in the autumn and eat them in the following breeding season. All but one of 3,184 caches by Magpies were made in the ground, usually in areas of short grass.

A Magpie typically filled its pouch with food, flew or walked to the cache site, and then made a hole in the ground with its bill. It then ejected the food into the hole and covered it with a stone, twig or piece of dead grass. We found caches extraordinarily difficult to relocate. On several occasions, we watched a Magpie hoarding food and maintained a fix on the hoarding place through a telescope while the other person walked into the field of view. This narrowed our searching area to about 0.2 m2, but we rarely found caches without a lot of trouble.

So how do Magpies relocate their caches? Although some experiments that Marmioc their sense of smell to find hidden food, they probably rely mainly on their well-developed spatial memory to relocate caches. We regularly saw Magpies fly directly to a point in their territory and recover cached food; unlike us, they found the food immediately, without having to dig up half the field. This strongly suggests that they could remember its precise location.

Squirrels and the Acorn Woodpecker store food in a single 'larder' which they then defend against other animals, but Magpies are 'scatter hoarders', dispersing their caches over a fairly wide area. Territorial Magpies hoarded within the territory and (by definition) non-breeders cached food within their home range, but these two categories of birds had different hoarding strategies.

Territorial Magpies made their caches much closer together than did non-breeding Magpie. To determine whether this spacing was adaptive, some field experiments; to test the idea that the difference in cache spacing was important in terms of the birds' likelihood of recovering them.

Grids of artificial caches at different densities were (laboriously) set out. Each cache, which consisted of 7.5 g of grain, had a two-pence piece placed under it, so that it could be relocated using a metal detector, but without providing any visual cues for Magpies. After four days, the grids were re-examined to record the proportion of caches still present. The experiment showed that the caches placed closest together suffered the greatest losses.

Subsequent observations showed that Magpies spaced their caches according to the rate at which the artificial caches had been lost in those same territories. In other words, the Magpies were able to assess the intensity of cache loss (probably through the number of other Magpies in the immediate vicinity) and space their caches accordingly. A territorial Magpie could afford to space its caches close together because no Magpies (other than its mate) were likely to enter the territory and raid the caches.

On the other hand, non-breeders generally foraged in a flock, and, once one Magpie discovered a food item (from a cache or otherwise), other flock members rapidly congregated in that area. In other words, if a non-breeder made its caches as close together as a territorial Magpie, it would almost certainly lose much of its hidden food to other flock members. By caching at a low density, flock Magpies reduced this risk.

Breeding biology

Nest-building may start very early; we have occasionally seen Magpies building on mild days in late December and early January, even though eggs are not laid until late March. Magpies may build a new nest or they may re-use or add to an old one. If a new nest is built, it is constructed in four distinct stages: an anchor, a superstructure, a mud bowl, and a lining. Once the Magpies have decided upon a nest site, the first place twigs there; these are followed by mud or clay, which forms the anchor.

Twigs are added to this to make the superstructure, including the domed roof. Once the superstructure nears completion, the mud bowl is started; and when this is finished the lining of hair and rootlets is added. Nest-building may be spread over two months, or a new nest may be knocked up in less than a week, Well-constructed nests are very durable and may last many years. One can tell quite a lot about the owners just by examining the nest.

One-year-old Magpies and first-time breeders generally build very poor nests—often not much better than bulky nests of Woodpigeon Columba palutnbus. In contrast, established breeders sometimes build fortress-like nests. One of our long-lived color-ringed birds built a particularly robust nest every year; the roof was especially dense, such that the nest contents were completely concealed from the outside.

Moreover, the roof was interlaced with spiky twigs of hawthorn Crataegus, making nest inspection particularly difficult for us. Most Magpie nests are roofed and found that 61 out of 79 nests (77%) were roofed and that 66% of those produced at least one chick, whereas only 5% of nests without a roof produced young.

Nests are built in a variety of locations, from the tops of 30-m beeches to scrubby willows Salix or hawthorns just a meter or so high. In some parts of the study area, Magpies had a wide choice of trees in which to nest; in others, at higher altitudes, there was little or no choice, since many territories contained only a single tree or bush. In treeless urban areas of Sheffield, we have found Magpie nests in British Rail watchtowers, on electricity pylons, and inside factories.

Egg-laying commenced in late March, and the annual median laying date (the date on which 50% of pairs had laid their first egg) varied from 10th to 24th April. Much of this variation was attributable to spring temperatures: in warmer springs, laying started earlier, and this, in turn, was almost certainly the result of warmer temperatures increasing the availability of the Magpie's invertebrate food.

Magpies are single-brooded, and the clutch consists of three to nine eggs; the mean number varied only slightly between years, from 5.5 to 6.3 eggs. Clutch size also varied within a season, with the earliest breeders generally producing the largest clutches. This in turn was a result of older Magpies breeding earlier and producing larger clutches than young Magpies.

If the first clutch is lost, a replacement will be laid, and, in our study area, almost always in a new nest. Replacement nests were always within the territory, but were often difficult to find, because, unlike first nests, they were usually built when the trees were in leaf. Magpies would lay up to four clutches in a season if necessary.

Incubation lasts for about 18 days and is undertaken entirely by the female. The male feeds the female on the nest, and the extent to which he does this helps to determine their likelihood of success. Females that are not looked after by their partners have to leave their eggs more often to feed themselves, and this increases the risks of the eggs being taken by predators.

There were two main causes of egg loss: small boys (which we cured of the habit rapidly) and Carrion Crows. Carrion Crows and Magpies are arch enemies; they compete for food and probably nest sites, and Carrion Crows will eat Magpie eggs or chicks at any opportunity. As a result, Magpies breeding close to a pair of Carrion Crows generally had relatively low breeding success. In one year, we estimated that over 30% of all Magpie breeding attempts failed as a result of Carrion Crow predation.

The Carrion Crow catches an adult Magpie in flight and kills it. Magpie nestlings leave the nest after about 24 days. We weighed, measured and color-ringed nestlings at 14 days after hatching; later than this and we would have risked them 'exploding' from the nest. After fledging, the young remain with their parents for about six weeks; in one or two cases (out of about 1,000) young Magpies stayed with their parents in the territory until the following breeding season. In our study, breeding success averaged about two nestlings per pair, although some pairs were very successful and raised large broods, whereas others failed to rear any young at all.

This is reflected in the lifetime reproductive success of Magpies: 60% of females and 40% of males failed to produce any young during their lives. During the course of our study, the Magpie population doubled, examined the effect of this increase in Magpie density on breeding success. Interestingly, there was no effect on either clutch size or breeding success, but there was a strong effect on juvenile survival.

The proportion of Magpies surviving through their first year was negatively (and significantly) correlated with breeding density. This indicates that density-dependent mortality of juvenile Magpies is one of the factors regulating Magpie populations.

Reproductive behavior

Many bird species, like the Magpie, traditionally regarded as monogamous, are now known to be less monogamous than once thought. The female’s trouble they went to protect their paternity. If similar things went on among birds: it soon became apparent that they did. Established pairs of Magpies live in their territories all year round, but the male and female may operate independently for much of the time.

From just before and during egg-laying, however, the male never lets the female out of his sight, remaining close beside her and following her every move. If she flies, he follows. If she walks behind a wall, he moves so he can still see her. Why should the male be so keen to keep close to his partner at this time?

The answer is that he is guarding her against the sexual advances of other males. Male Magpies are remarkably randy and regularly try to mate with neighboring females. On several occasions, we saw a male sneak (literally) into the adjacent territory, using the vegetation as cover, approach the female, and attempt to mate with her.

Most of these extra-pair copulation attempts were unsuccessful because they were cut short by the male partner chasing the intruding male. The closest that I saw a male come to being successful occurred when a guarding male fell asleep. His head lolled onto his breast, and, in so doing, fell below the top of the wall so that he could no longer see his female, who was foraging close by. Within a second or two of this happening, the male from the adjacent territory flew across and mounted the female. I think that local contact was not achieved; the female called during the mating attempt and this alerted her partner, who woke up and flew down and chased the other male and his partner.

This would be the end of the incident, but there was a further development. When this extra-pair copulation attempt occurred, the female had already laid part of her clutch, but her partner immediately started to build a new nest in a tree adjacent to the original nest. The female laid the rest of her clutch in the original nest but never started to incubate. Instead, she subsequently produced a repeat clutch in the new nest. The interpretation was that the male partner did not want to risk the fact that his female may have been fertilized by the other male. Hence, waste his effort by rearing chicks that may not have been his own.

Subsequent studies have shown that both mate-guarding and extra-pair copulations are widespread among many bird species and that such extra-pair mating can result in extra-pair paternity. Magpies showed some interesting extra-pair responses to a tame, caged female placed in their territory.

If the male approached the tame female alone he invariably courted and attempted to mount her. But if the pair approached the 'intruder' together, they were always aggressive towards her. Often the male would approach on his own and start to court the female, only to be followed a minute or two later by his partner.

As soon as he heard his female approaching, the male's courtship switched to aggression. The human analogy is obvious. It is perhaps surprising that we have actually seen as many, or probably more. The extra-pair mating attempts then have pair mating. The courtship between Magpies is infrequent. It consists of the male circling the female with his wings flapping and tail held high and twisted to one side. Mating is brief (1-2 seconds) and very rarely seen. On the basis of prolonged and detailed field observations, Magpies probably copulate only about three times for a clutch.

Groups and Territories

Magpies are regularly seen in groups, from half a dozen to over 100 birds, and these groups may occur for a variety of reasons: mobbing, feeding, roosting, and 'ceremonial purposes. Magpies may assemble to mob predators such as foxes, cats, weasels, rats, or owls, but mobbing groups are usually small (up to ten birds) and disintegrate fairly quickly.

Non-breeding Magpies live as members of a flock, but these flocks are very loose, and all members come together only if food is locally abundant (e.g. if muck has recently been spread in a field). In our study area, the Magpie population density was high; the largest feeding flocks that we saw consisted of about 50 birds, but feeding groups of 20-30 were not unusual. Groups also occur where territories abut, and the pairs perform parallel walks along their respective boundaries.

If the territory boundaries were unknown to the human observer, these birds would appear to be a 'group'. The largest groups occur at roosts or pre-roost gatherings, where over 100 may congregate. In our study, most Magpies roosted in small groups (of about 30 individuals) close to or within their daytime range, but, just 2 km away, a roost of 150-200 Magpies existed throughout the autumn and winter. These birds roosted in hawthorn bushes in an area of dense scrub, but they entered the bushes only just before dark. Prior to this, the birds assembled in a pre-roost gathering in a field some 200 m away.

The observations support the idea that Magpie communal roosts contain mainly non-breeding Magpies while established breeders roost singly or in pairs within their territory. The final category of the group is that about which Darwin wrote, now generally known as 'ceremonial gatherings'. These groups are rarely as large as pre-roost gatherings, although they have sometimes been depicted as such.

The average size of 225 ceremonial gatherings is to be nine Magpies (range 3-24). Gatherings occurred at all times of year but were most frequent during January to March (i.e. just before the breeding season). They also tended to occur more frequently in the morning than in the afternoon. The function of ceremonial gatherings has been discussed for a long time and suggested functions included pair formation and competition for nest sites or territories. Only through having individually color-marked birds of known status were we able to work out what was going on in these gatherings.

Initially, most gatherings that we observed were in progress when we first saw them, but we soon discovered that the key to understanding them was to see them from their inception. Gatherings were usually initiated by one or two non-breeding Magpies, usually the most dominant members of the non-breeding flock. Single initiators were always males, and 80% of groups of two were paired birds. Gatherings were started in the following way: the bird would fly unusually high and would then swoop directly down into occupied territory.

There they would instantly be met by the territory owners, who would call and chase them. This in turn would attract non-breeders in the vicinity and the holders of adjacent territories (only rarely did breeders 'leapfrog' territories to join a gathering). Almost all the 'action' during a gathering occurred between the initiators and the territory owners. The other birds were present as mere spectators. Sometimes, however, one of these would be accidentally drawn into the chasing and calling if it was attacked by mistake, resulting in the apparent 596

The Magpie chaos typical of these gatherings means the duration of gatherings was ten minutes and the maximum was 70 minutes. In most cases, the gathering soon subsided and the initiators left the territory, followed by the other individuals dispersing. What is happening is as follows. Competition for territories is intense. In our study area, all available space was occupied by territorial Magpies and a large pool of potential breeders (the non-breeding flock) existed. Instead of passively waiting for a vacancy to arise, say through a territory owner dying, the most dominant flock birds attempted to obtain a territory by force.

They visited territories in a deliberately provocative manner, confronting the owners in order to monitor the strength of their aggression. In most cases, the initiators quickly backed down and left, but, occasionally, they found a pair whose territory was less strongly defended. They then appeared to press home an attack, harassing the owners with repeated visits and prolonged chasing. In a few cases, the territory owners were evicted, in others, the gathering initiators carved out a very small piece of ground for themselves. If this occurred, it was usually at the junction of two or three territories (the point where the defense was weakest).

Once they had obtained a foothold there, the invaders gradually expanded the territory until, after a week or so, it was sufficiently large for breeding. We estimated that a third of the territories were obtained in this way. Evicted territory holders usually disappeared (which probably means they died) or became members of the non-breeding flock (which was genetically equivalent to being dead, for none of these birds ever bred again). Why did other Magpies turn up as spectators at gatherings? I think the reason is that it was in the interests of all nearby birds to know what was going on. A change in territory ownership could, through a domino effect, lead to a change in fortunes for these other birds as well.

A change in the ownership of one territory sometimes resulted in a succession of subsequent changes. There were two other ways in which Magpies could obtain territories:

(i)                 Replacement

(ii)               What we called 'squeezing in.

The replacement was straightforward: one or both members of a territorial pair died or disappeared and their places were taken by non-breeders, without a gathering.

Squeezing-in consisted of pairs taking advantage of the decline in territorial aggression that occurred after egg-laying. These birds simply squeezed in at the junctions of existing territories, without a gathering. Those that squeezed in, however, usually did so too late to breed in that season.

Bird and territory quality

The effect of bird and territory quality on reproductive success was examined in detail. This showed that some territories were occupied more (and others less) than expected by chance, a result that suggests that territories differed in their quality.

Furthermore, analysis of territory composition showed that the number of years in which the territory was occupied was positively (and significantly) correlated with the relative amount of grazing land (short grass with cattle or horses) in the territory. Several other lines of evidence indicate that this is a good measure of territory quality:

(i)                 Magpies obtain most of their food from such areas above.  

(ii)               The breeding success was positively correlated with the relative amount of grazing land in the territory. It is also found territory quality to be important in affecting the Magpie's breeding biology: his studies indicated that food availability determined the quality of a territory.

The importance of the experiment is by providing some Magpies with the additional food prior to egg-laying. Fed birds lay earlier, produced larger eggs and clutches, and reared more young than did unfed birds. In our study area, territory quality was obviously important, found that bird quality played a bigger part than territory quality in determining breeding success.

The disentangle the effects of territory and bird quality on breeding parameters (such as clutch size and laying date). That is by looking at these parameters when the same territories were occupied by different birds. However, these parameters for the same birds breed in different territories.

This analysis showed that about 60% of the variation in clutch size, egg size, and breeding success was attributable to bird-quality effects, whereas territory quality accounted for less than 10% of the variation in breeding success.

Magpies and song-birds

Magpies have been much in the news in Britain in recent years: their increasing abundance in urban and suburban areas has evoked some strong reactions regarding their possible effects on garden songbirds. Some city councils have even contemplated Magpie culls.

Also, the magpie killing and eating a young Blackbird “Turdus merula” while the Blackbird parents fly around frantically calling is not a pretty sight. But many of those who would happily shoot Magpies for such behavior tell of their excitement at seeing a Sparrow-hawk “Accipiter nisus” take a Starling “Sturnus vulgaris” from the bird-table.

Such double standards mean that there can be no grounds for condemning Magpies for the emotional trauma they cause bird-lovers. The real question must be whether Magpies take sufficient numbers of songbirds (adults, young, or eggs) to reduce their populations significantly. More research is required to resolve this. Though, there are several points that should be kept in mind:

(i)                 The results from the Common Birds Census (CBC) show that Magpie numbers have increased. Hence, they do not show a decrease in the numbers of Blackbirds, Song Thrushes “Turdus philomelos”, Dunnocks “Prunella modularis” or Collared Doves “Streptopelia decaocto”, are the main targets of Magpie attacks. The most CBC plots are in rural rather than suburban or urban areas, however, so we still need more information on this topic.

(ii)               The suburban song-bird populations exist at densities much greater than they do in traditional, woodland habitats;

(iii)              The ringing recoveries and other types of the study point out that the main predator of garden birds is the domestic cat. How many bird-lovers also own a cat? Virtually all the information which we have obtained on Magpies during the last few decades has been obtained through the use of color-marked individuals. These studies have been conducted primarily with rural Magpies. Hence, a similar investigation of Magpies in suburban and urban areas would provide an interesting comparison and would allow us to assess the impact of Magpies on songbirds. Clearly, we should reserve judgment on this issue until we have some hard facts.


 

Reference - British Birds VOLUME 8 2 NUMBER 12 DECEMBER 1989

 

Sunday, 31 October 2021

The scientific name of Moltoni’s Warbler

 Moltoni’s Warbler has been known either as subalpine and moltonii. The latter name,

given by Orlando in 1937, has been in wide use, but as Baccetti et al. (2007) pointed out

subalpine is valid and has priority. The Temminck type specimen of subalpina is reputedly

long since lost due to insect damage (fide Baccetti et al. 2007), and requests to the Leiden and

Paris museums have not changed that.

The type was described (Temminck 1820b) as a female, but based on Temminck’s plate

(see below), its lead-grey upperparts, and prominent pink underparts, I conclude that the

specimen was a male. According to Temminck, the type had ‘a beautiful vinaceous color’

below. The adjective used (Fr. ‘vineuse’, vinaceous) is the same that Ridgway (1912) used

for such a pink, and because males of all other Subalpine Warbler populations possess

more orange-brown or reddish underparts it is probable that Temminck was struck by the

unusual and attractive pink of male Moltoni’s Warbler when he described subalpina. In his

Pl. 6, no. 2, a painting of subalpine shows an adult bird with lead-grey crown and mantle

typical of males, and pink, not orange-red, underparts. Temminck specifically states that

the bird in the said plate was the only known specimen, sent to Temminck by Bonelli,

making it the holotype by monotypy. There can be no doubt that Temminck’s plate refers

to this taxon, making subalpine the oldest available valid name, with priority over moltonii

Orlando, 1937.

That the type locality ‘near Turin’ could fit not only Moltoni’s Warbler but theoretically

also Eastern Subalpine Warbler is of subordinate importance given the existence of

Temminck’s plate and Temminck’s (1820b) statement that the plate depicted the unique

specimen. Furthermore, it clearly shows the characteristic tail pattern of Moltoni’s Warbler,

with the square white tips to the penultimate feathers excluding Eastern Subalpine Warbler.

Temminck published information on his Sylvia subalpina twice in 1820. First (Temminck

1820a) was the plate in August 1820, along with a wrapper giving the scientific name of

this and other taxa depicted in the six plates comprising this part of the Planches coloriées

of Temminck & Laugier, wherein Baron Laugier took no part in naming taxa (cf. Dickinson

2001). The second was a description in the Manuel d’ornithologie (Temminck 1820b), published in

October 1820 (see item 3681 in the Bibliographie de la France, issue no. 43, of 21 October 1820).

Interestingly, Temminck (1824) depicted a perfectly identifiable Eastern Subalpine

Warbler, presumably subspecies albistriata, in Pl. 251. The contrast between the dark rufousred

breast and white belly is striking. In the text, the bird is labelled as the male Sylvia

subalpina. The painting was based on a bird collected by a Mr Heckel in Silesia, Poland,

near the German border (if correct, obviously a spring overshoot since the usual breeding

range today runs south of the Alps east to south Bulgaria and western Turkey, and is not

thought to have been substantially different then). However, Pl. 251 appeared four years

later than Pl. 6 and does not depict the type of subalpina, which name must be linked to the

bird on Pl. 61.

Sunday, 24 October 2021

Hummingbirds and Food Plants

 Hummingbirds and their food-plants rely to a large extent on each other for food supply and pollination service, respectively. This mutual relationship has co-evolved for millions of years and across the Americas involving over 330 hummingbird species and an estimated nearly 8000 plant species relying on hummingbirds as their principle pollinators.

Although birds other than hummingbirds also act as pollinators, hummingbird plant interactions are one of the most striking examples of bird-plant co-evolution, and the associated morphological adaptations have been studied intensively e.g, Snow.

 These studies have found that plants adapted to hummingbird pollination typically are odorless, have a long and narrow conspicuous orange-red tubular corolla, and produce extensive dilute nectar - broadly matching the sensory capabilities, morphology and energetic demands of hummingbirds. Similarly, hummingbirds show an array of features considered nectar-feeding adaptations, such as the capability to hover, a specialized tongue, highly specialized and variable bill morphologies, as well as a minute body size.

The smallest of all birds is the Bee Hummingbird (Mellisuga helenae) endemic to the Cuban archipelago, including the main island of Cuba and Isle of Youth (formerly Isle of Pines), in the West Indies. Of the 15 hummingbird species endemic to the West Indies, the Bee Hummingbird is the only species considered threatened on the IUCN red list.

Although the Bee Hummingbird is the smallest bird in the World, is categorized as Near Threatened and its population size is clearly declining, only very basic information regarding its distribution and reproduction has previously been reported. Almost nothing is known about its feeding ecology. For instance, apart from the record of some 15 food plants, nothing is reported about its preferred food plants or the overlap in flower use with the larger-sized Cuban Emerald (Chlorostilbon ricordii) - the only other resident Cuban hummingbird.

We here: 1) identify and describe the floral traits of several food plants the Bee Hummingbird uses; 2) report to what extent the Cuban Emerald uses the same flowers as the Bee Hummingbird; and 3) compare our data on flower use with those previously reported, and discuss how our results could direct future studies beneficial for the conservation of the Bee Hummingbird.

Each of the identified ten plant species visited by the Bee Hummingbird belongs to different plant families, of which one species (Antigonon leptopus) was introduced to Cuba. The remaining nine plant species are either native or endemic to Cuba (Table 1). Most of the ten flowers visited by the Bee Hummingbird - of which nine were also visited by the Cuban Emerald, as well as insects, such as bees and butterflies - have floral traits that fall outside the traditional ornithophilous syndrome, noticeably most flowers had little nectar and a short, white corolla, although some had more vivid colors.

This indicates that the Bee Hummingbird uses plants with generalized pollination systems as has also been reported for plants visited by small hummingbirds on Trinidad, Tobago, and other islands in the West Indies.

Conclusions. A total of 15 plant species from 15 different genera had previously been reported to be visited by the Bee Hummingbird, but no study had described their floral traits. Of the herein-reported ten food plants, only one species (Hamelia patens) occurs in the 15 genera previously listed as being visited by the Bee hummingbird. Many of the previously reported food plants in the Zapata Swamp were observed in March–June during the breeding season of the Bee Hummingbird, whereas the food plants we here report bloom in the latter part of July, outside the breeding season of the Bee Hummingbird.

In Cuba, the dry season extends from November to April, whereas the wettest months are from June to October (Garrido & Kirkconnell 2000). Therefore, it seems likely that the flower community largely changes between the dry and the rainy season, roughly coinciding with the termination of the Bee Hummingbirds breeding season.

This is the first step in identifying the floral niche of the Bee Hummingbird. We recommend that a quantitative field study be undertaken to evaluate the floral overlap in the context of floral use and availability, and behavioral interactions with the Cuban Emerald (Vaurie 1957) and insect-pollinators, such as the potential negative impact of the non-native honeybee (Apis mellifera). Comparing the herein reported food plants of the Bee Hummingbird with the plant species indicates that it would be essential to examine both dry season and rainy season floral overlap and behavior.

It would also be interesting to study the effect of introduced plants, forest loss, and degradation on the feeding behavior of the Bee Hummingbird. Finally, we recommend that field studies are also conducted in other areas than the Zapata Swamp, e.g., in the Bee Hummingbirds strongholds in the low-lying Guanahacabibes peninsula in western Cuba and in the eastern mountains of Cuchillas del Toa and Sierra Cristal. This should prove valuable for the conservation of the Bee hummingbird, an endemic and threatened species of the Cuban archipelago, West Indies. 


Tuesday, 19 October 2021

CURLY DOCK Rumex crispus

Curly-leaved dock, Yellow dock, Sour dock, Indian tobacco POLYGONACEAE

Buckwheat Family

SIZE = Plant: 2–4 feet, basal rosette is winter-hardy.

Flower: = 1/6 inch, in slender spikes. With 6 sepals, no petals.

LEAVES = 6–12 inches; with wavy, curled margins.

BLOOMS = March-May

At least fifteen Rumex species inhabit Texas and several ranges into the Houston area. While none has showy flowers, the docks are nevertheless conspicuous plants with interesting features. Curly dock, R. crispus, is the largest and most common of the local species. A native of Europe, this alien has become established in fields and disturbed ground throughout the United States. A stout perennial from a heavy taproot, it has a hardy rosette of leaves that remains green all winter, lining Houston roadsides even when other vegetation is withered and brown.

Curly dock is easily recognized by its long, slender leaves with crisped and wavy margins. The flowering stem reaches four feet, with tiny green flowers arranged on slender, branching spikes. There are six sepals in two ranks, but the flowers have no petals. Brown, heart-shaped, three-winged fruits fill the terminal spikes in late summer and fall.

While some authors regard curly dock as a “noxious weed,” natural-foods enthusiasts praise it as a rich source of vitamins A and C. Tull suggests using the young leaves as a substitute for spinach in salads or as cooked greens. Large doses, however, may cause gastric distress. Native Americans ground dock seeds and used the meal in bread, but Tull points out that removing the papery husks entails a great deal of work for a small amount of flour. Dormon also notes that the Chitimacha Indians of southern Louisiana used curly dock, which they called “deer’s-ears,” for dyeing their cane baskets.


Herbalists consider tea from the dried roots of the dock to be an excellent “blood purifier” and use it for a variety of skin diseases, rheumatism, liver ailments, and sore throats. It may either cause or relieve diarrhea, depending on the dosage, the season of the year, and the concentration of tannins and other chemicals in the plants.

Plain-tailed Warbling-finch

Plain-tailed Warbling-finch Poospiza alticola restricted to the high Andes of north-west Peru (Cajamarca to Ancash), this species inhabits shrubby forest and mixed Polylepis-Gynoxys woodland at 2,900-4,600 m. It seems to favor ravines, but it is scarce even in optimum habitat. High-altitude woodlands are now highly fragmented and further habitat loss and degradation are predicted. The main causes are cutting for firewood and a lack of regeneration due to burning and overgrazing. Other threats include the change from camelid to sheep and cattle farming, erosion and soil degradation caused by agricultural intensification, road construction, and afforestation with exotic tree species. Although it occurs in Huascarán National Park (Ancash), habitat degradation continues. The estimated population is around 500 to 1600 birds.


Thursday, 30 September 2021

How Water Change the Lands

Water means life. Without water we, along with the plants and animals we depend on, all die. Water covers 70% of the Earth’s surface. Water is the creator of life, but it is also the destroyer. Drownings, flooding, tsunamis, and drought (a lack of water) claim thousands of lives each year. That makes water the perfect subject for myths. Water seeks low ground, always flowing downhill, rushing, tumbling, roaring to get lower toward sea level. Streams, rivers, and creeks swirl, gurgle, tumble and flow across the landscape. These waterways are always tucked along the bottom of gullies, valleys, and canyons. Waterways are never found riding a ridgeline or marching across the crest of a hill. 

Most origin myths begin with water (oceans) and the heavens already in existence. From these, some being forms land and creates life. Literally, hundreds of creation myths begin by saying that in the beginning, the world was all water. In myths, water usually affects the land (once land exists) only as a flood. Myths from hundreds of traditional cultures talk about the great flood that scoured the landscape, wiped out early evil or unjust civilizations, and gave humanity a second chance. Even landlocked cultures in arid regions the Sioux and Arapaho tribes, for example, have myths of a great flood that covers the Earth and kills almost all living beings. 

The biblical flood of Noah is one of the few foods that can be traced to a specific geologic cause and event. Most exist in mythology even though there is little evidence that they ever happened in physical reality. Water is also the source of fog and mist—creepy earthly shrouds that seem to invite mystery, supernatural events, or the arrival of evil. The action of water, especially acidic waters, creates caves and caverns. These empty spaces in the Earth’s mass have always been viewed as dark and mysterious places. 

Caverns are doorways to the underworld and to the land beyond death. To many people, it seemed wrong and unsettling that solid Earth should have such holes and gaps as if caves represented a mistake or the work of a demon. Certainly, water deeply affects even controls life. But does water affect the land itself? Earth Scientists study the land, not the life upon the land and certainly not the marine environment. Does water alter land? Is our land different because of the action of water or the presence of water? 

Does a study of the land require a study of water and the water cycle? A few creation myths try to explain the origin of the oceans and of water. Virtually none, however, focuses on the effect of water on the land, on how water changes the land. Water creation stories typically rely on the mischief, greed, or misdeeds of a character to trigger catastrophic events that create the sea in a great flood. In one especially inventive story from Thailand, villagers decide to build bigger and bigger kites to win a kite-flying tournament. 

A clever man, helped by a gang of children, builds a kite bigger than houses, bigger than fields, bigger than valleys. A great storm blows in and lifts this enormous kite. The man and the children try to hold on, clutching at trees, grass, rocks, and even the ground itself. But the storm lifts the kite high into the sky, pulling people and a great chunk of the Earth with it. The hole left behind forms the Bay of Siam. The bay fills with water that bubbles up from below, and the water spills over to create the oceans. The chunk of Earth flies up to become the moon. 

The kite sails even higher to become a constellation of stars in the twinkling night sky. In a myth of the Tiano people of the Caribbean Islands, a famous hunter is killed by a hurricane. His magical bow is placed in a calabash and, when his people are in desperate need, this calabash splashes out fresh fish. Greedy boys break the calabash, and out-pour all the waters of the oceans and seas. In a Venezuelan myth, the sea is trapped in a greedy pelican’s egg. The pelican wanted to hoard all the fish for itself. 

A curious and mischievous boy cracked open the egg and out spilled the ocean to cover everything except the mountaintops that became islands. Water means life. Without water we, along with the plants and animals we depend on, all die. Water covers 70% of the Earth’s surface. Water is the creator of life, but it is also the destroyer. Drownings, flooding, tsunamis, and drought (a lack of water) claim thousands of lives each year. 

That makes water the perfect subject for myths. Water seeks low ground, always flowing downhill, rushing, tumbling, roaring to get lower toward sea level. Streams, rivers, and creeks swirl, gurgle, tumble and flow across the landscape. These waterways are always tucked along the bottom of gullies, valleys, and canyons. Waterways are never found riding a ridgeline or marching across the crest of a hill. Most origin myths begin with water (oceans) and the heavens already in existence. From these, some being forms land and creates life. 

Literally, hundreds of creation myths begin by saying that in the beginning, the world was all water. In myths, water usually affects the land (once land exists) only as a flood. Myths from hundreds of traditional cultures talk about the great flood that scoured the landscape, wiped out early evil or unjust civilizations, and gave humanity a second chance. Even landlocked cultures in arid regions—the Sioux and Arapaho tribes, for example have myths of a great flood that covers the Earth and kills almost all living beings. The biblical flood of Noah is one of the few foods that can be traced to a specific geologic cause and event. 

Most exist in mythology even though there is little evidence that they ever happened in physical reality. Water is also the source of fog and mist creepy earthly shrouds that seem to invite mystery, supernatural events, or the arrival of evil. The action of water, especially acidic waters, creates caves and caverns. These empty spaces in the Earth’s mass have always been viewed as dark and mysterious places. Caverns are doorways to the underworld and to the land beyond death. 

To many people, it seemed wrong and unsettling that solid Earth should have such holes and gaps as if caves represented a mistake or the work of a demon. Certainly, water deeply affects even controls life. But does water affect the land itself? Earth Scientists study the land, not the life upon the land and certainly not the marine environment. Does water alter land? Is our land different because of the action of water or the presence of water? Does a study of the land require a study of water and the water cycle? 

A few creation myths try to explain the origin of the oceans and of water. Virtually none, however, focuses on the effect of water on the land, on how water changes the land. Water creation stories typically rely on the mischief, greed, or misdeeds of a character to trigger catastrophic events that create the sea in a great flood. In one especially inventive story from Thailand, villagers decide to build bigger and bigger kites to win a kite-flying tournament. 

A clever man, helped by a gang of children, builds a kite bigger than houses, bigger than fields, bigger than valleys. A great storm blows in and lifts this enormous kite. The man and the children try to hold on, clutching at trees, grass, rocks, and even the ground itself. But the storm lifts the kite high into the sky, pulling people and a great chunk of the Earth with it. The hole left behind forms the Bay of Siam. 

The bay fills with water that bubbles up from below, and the water spills over to create the oceans. The chunk of Earth flies up to become the moon. The kite sails even higher to become a constellation of stars in the twinkling night sky. In a myth of the Tiano people of the Caribbean Islands, a famous hunter is killed by a hurricane. His magical bow is placed in a calabash and, when his people are in desperate need, this calabash splashes out fresh fish. 

Greedy boys break the calabash, and out pour all the waters of the oceans and seas. In a Venezuelan myth, the sea is trapped in a greedy pelican’s egg. The pelican wanted to hoard all the fish for itself. A curious and mischievous boy cracked open the egg and out spilled the ocean to cover everything except the mountaintops that became islands.


Wednesday, 29 September 2021

Buff-tailed Sicklebill

As its name implies, the most distinctive characteristics of the Buff-tipped Sicklebill are its extreme bill shape and pale cinnamon-buff outer tail feathers with white tips. The sexes are very similar, but young birds can easily be distinguished from adults by pale feather edges on the wings and smaller patches of blue iridescence at the nape. The two subspecies are also very similar, but subsp. gracilis has a less heavily streaked belly and shorter bill than the nominate. 

Sicklebills have relatively short wings for such large hummingbirds, which reduces their flight efficiency and explains their tendency to perch rather than hover when feeding at flowers. Their long tails bob almost constantly, even at rest. In the narrow zone of overlap between the two sicklebill species, the Buff-tailed seems to prefer more open and disturbed habitats than the Whitetipped Sicklebill. Its nest is similar to that of the White-tipped, comprising a loosely woven cup secured with spider silk to the underside of a large leaf.

DISTRIBUTION Subsp. condamini occurs in the eastern Andes of southeastern Colombia, Ecuador, and northern Peru; subsp. gracilis occurs in the eastern Andes of Peru and northwestern Bolivia

HABITAT Undergrowth, wooded ravines, and stream sides in humid forest, swampy forest, bamboo groves, edges, overgrown clearings, plantations; 600–10,850 ft (180–3,300 m)

SIZE Length: 51⁄8–57⁄8 in (13–15 cm).

Weight: 8–12.5 g

STATUS Least Concern