Mourning Dove

Zenaida macroura Linnaeus

 

 

 

Field Guide IDs:
NG-236; G-166; PE-180; PW-pl 23; AE-pl 322; AW-pl 349; AM(II)-142


Nest
Location
Nest
Type
Eggs &
Mating System
Dev. &
Parental Care
Primary &
2ndary Diet
..
Foraging
Strategy
MF
I: 13-14 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
CONIF
GROUND
0 - 40 feet
MF
2
(2-3)
MONOG
F: 12-14 DAYS
MF
GRAIN
FOLIAGE GLEAN

BREEDING:

Desert (near water) to open woodland, agricultural areas with scattered trees, suburbs. Typically 2-3, but occ 3-6 broods.

DISPLAYS:

Courtship: male performs gliding, spiraling aerial display over female with wingtips held below body; on ground struts before female with feathers spread and head nodding.

NEST:

In fork of horizontal tree branch, on ground, on deserted nest of other species, or anywhere else providing solid support; flimsy, usu of crossed sticks and twigs (occ grass, weed stems) lined with fine materials. Female builds but male brings materials. Built in 1 - 3 days; often reused.

EGGS:

White, unmarked. 1.1" (28 mm).

DIET:

Seeds, including waste grain from cultivated fields, compose >99% of diet. Young fed crop milk for 3 days, then also seeds; entirely seeds by 6-8 days.

CONSERVATION:

Winters s to c Panama. Rare host of both cowbird species. Range expanding northward.

NOTES:

Champion of multiple-brooding among N.A. birds. Most abundant dove in N.A.; most widely hunted and harvested game bird. Pair bonds occ persist >1 nesting season. Flock for much of year, but not colonial breeder. Eggs always covered: male incubates most of day, female remainder of day, all night. Clutches of 3-4 likely due to brood parasitism by another Mourning Dove. Males produce crop milk 4-6 days longer than females.

STANFORD. NOTES:

Common to abundant resident throughout campus. Highly flexible in its use of nesting substrates; nests in a variety of trees and shrubs but also uses planters, artificial ledges, the eaves of buildings, and even old nests of other species.

ESSAYS:

Visual Displays; Feeding Birds; Bird Milk; Who Incubates?; Range Expansion; Brood Parasitism

REFERENCES:

Leopold et al., 1981; Leopold and Dedon, 1983; Westmoreland et al., 1986.

Except for Stanford Notes, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988).