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Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Weedy and
cultivated fields, open decid and riparian
woodland. Occ 2 broods. DISPLAYS:
Male song-flight on
level (rather than typical undulating) flight,
rapidly flapping wings. NEST:
In branch fork,
often woven so tightly that nest holds water; of
forbs, other pliable veg, lined with plant down.
Caterpillar webbing and spider silk often used to
bind outer rim. Male may collect some nest material
and give to female. EGGS:
Pale blue or
bluish-white, unmarked. 0.6" (16 mm). DIET:
Includes seeds of
decid trees, forbs (esp composites), grass, floral
buds, berries. Young fed regurgitant of milky seed
pulp; few insects. CONSERVATION:
Winters s to n
Mexico (and along coast to Veracruz). Common
cowbird host. Declined in n e as House Sparrows
increased. NOTES:
Commonly change
mates between years; females show nest-site
tenacity. Nests usu near water. Male feeds female
on nest; female may call to male to be fed, begs
when he appears with food. Females may sit on eggs
95% of the time! Hatching asynchronous,
increasingly so as season progresses. Late nester
except in CA and s w; older birds nest earlier than
younger birds. Winter flocks up to 300 common,
often with siskins, redpolls. Fairly common
migrant and winter resident in various habitats
virtually throughout campus. Often forages in
flocks (occasionally at feeders) during the
nonbreeding season. ESSAYS: Bird
Biology and the
Arts;
Site
Tenacity;
Mixed-Species
Flocking;
Incubation
Time;
Incubation:
Heating Eggs;
Brood
Reduction;
Cowbirds REFERENCES:
Middleton, 1978,
1979; Skagen, 1987.
Spinus
tristis Linnaeus
NG-452; G-320; PE-272; PW-pl 55; AE-pl 385; AW-pl
408; AM(III)-344
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
10-12 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
1
foot - 30 feet
(To
60 feet)
(3-7)
MONOG?
MF
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). |