The bohemian waxwing got its name for 
the red waxy tips on mature feathers, and for its bohemian behavior. 
These beautiful birds are very nomadic when following food sources and 
their large flocking instinct leads to a communal type of protection and
 sharing of food. Therefore; with their vibrant colors and sleek 
appearance, bohemian waxwings are a favorite on any birder’s life list. 
Bohemian Waxwings are sleek, masked birds with rare red, waxy deposits 
at the tips of their secondary feathers. They’re grayish-brown with 
white and yellow wing-patches and yellow terminal tail-bands. They’ve 
unique crested heads, black throats, and black masks lightly lined with 
white.
Their heads have a Rufous 
tinges, and their under-tail coverts are Rufous. Adolescents have most 
of the aforementioned field marks, but are mottled gray-brown and lack 
the feather-tips. Bohemian Waxwings feather-tips seem to rise in number 
and size as the bird’s age. The only bird in Washington United States 
that could be confused with a Bohemian Waxwing is a Cedar Waxwing, a far
 more common relative. Cedars birds are smaller and browner than 
Bohemians and have yellow tinges underneath. But they have lack the 
Rufous under-tail coverts and white and yellow wing markings of Bohemian
 Waxwings.
Bohemian Waxwings habits 
includes to breeds in open areas and edges of boreal forests, habitually
 in places with sparse tree cover above brushy understory. In winter 
season, they can be found in a diversity of habitats, as long as there 
is fruit available. They habitually congregate in towns with abundant 
plantings of fruit-bearing trees. Bohemian Waxwings are monogamous, and 
both members of the pair help build the nest, which is habitually on a 
horizontal branch of a spruce tree. Their nest is a loose, open cup made
 of grass, twigs, and moss, lined with feathers and fine grass.
The
 female incubates four to six eggs for about fourteen to fifteen days. 
Normally both parents feed the young bird, which leave the nest at 
fourteen to eighteen days. The young normally stay adjacent to the nest 
and are fed by the parents for another few days. Moreover; family groups
 may stay together through the fall. The Fruits which are rich in sugar 
have deficient in other nutrients, so it must be eaten in huge 
quantities. Bohemian waxwings have a big liver which supports him to 
convert sugar to energy. They can metabolize ethanol formed from the 
fermentation of those sugary fruits more proficiently than humans, but 
May still become intoxicated, occasionally fatally. Waxwings habitually 
drink water or eat snow in winter, since the sugar in their fruit diet 
tends to dehydrate the birds through an osmotic effect. In the summer, 
the fruits are juicier and water is less of a problem.
Bohemian
 Waxwings behavior may be mixed in with other common Cedar Waxwing 
flocks during the winter. They habitually perch atop trees to forage for
 fruits and berries. However in summer conditions, they fly out to catch
 aerial insects, but they’re primarily likes fruit-eaters, a trait that 
dictates much of their behavior. Bohemian Waxwings eat almost nothing 
but fruit in the winter, relying on the berries of mountain ash, 
juniper, holly, and others. They also forage on fruit crops and 
ornamental plantings. Bohemian Waxwings are susceptible to alcohol 
intoxication, and even death, from eating fermented fruit. Like most 
songbirds, they feed insects to their young at first, but switch to 
feeding the young berries within a few days.
The
 bird’s migration is nomadic and irruptive species roams in search of 
food sources, rather than undertaking a typical migration. However; food
 availability seems to be a more imperative predictor of winter presence
 than temperature or latitude. Populations fluctuate considerably from 
year to year, but Christmas Bird Count Data reveals a slightly declining
 long-term trend. Maximum Bohemian Waxwings in Washington are northern 
breeders that come down into Washington in winter. In many years they’re
 fairly common in winter in northeastern Washington Ferry, Douglas, 
Okanogan, Stevens, and Pend Oreille Counties, particularly in cities and
 towns where they feed on fruit trees. In few years they’d extend 
farther west into the Columbia Basin, and can rarely be seen west of the
 Cascades. Bohemian Waxwings are erratic breeders in Washington in the 
North Cascades at Hart's Pass and Holman Pass.


























Hi, why have you used my Bohemian Waxwing in your BLOG without asking? Don't you know that is illegal? Remove my work ASAP!
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