Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Deciduous forest,
open and riparian woodland, pine-oak association,
parks. ? broods. DISPLAYS:
? NEST:
On horizontal
branch; loosely built of grass, forbs, Spanish
moss, lined with fine grass. EGGS:
Pale blue, pale
green, marked with browns, occ wreathed or capped.
0.9" (23 mm). DIET:
Includes esp bees
and wasps, few spiders. CONSERVATION:
Winters from c
Mexico s to w Ecuador se to Amazonian Brazil, but
most abundant in lowlands in wide variety of
forest, woodland, and scrub. Range reportedly
contracting in e U.S. Uncommon cowbird
host. NOTES:
Frequently raids
beehives and paper wasp nests to obtain larvae and
adults. Where range overlaps with Scarlet Tanager,
the two species respond aggressively to each
other's songs and countersing; coexist by partial
habitat shift maintained by interspecific
aggression. Solitary in winter, apparently holding
exclusive feeding territories. ESSAYS: Interspecific
Territoriality;
Vocal
Functions;
Territoriality. REFERENCES:
Shy,
1984b.
Piranga rubra Linnaeus
NG-392; G-306; PE-260; PW-pl 53; AE -pl 417; AW-pl
449; AM(III)-194
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
12 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
10
feet - 35 feet
3-5
MONOG?
MF
HOVER
&
.....GLEAN
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). |