Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Savanna, dry open
country, agricultural lands, riparian woodland. ?
broods. DISPLAYS:
Male performs
frenetic courtship flight, darting into air,
fluttering, vibrating feathers, and
trilling. NEST:
Usu on horizontal
branch against or near trunk of tree or on
human-built structure; of variable materials,
thickly and finely lined with hair, cotton, plant
down. EGGS:
White, creamy,
pinkish, mottled with browns, gray, lavender, occ
concentrated at large end. 1.0" (24 mm). DIET:
Insects and
berries. CONSERVATION:
Winters from s
Mexico s (except Yucatan) to s w Costa Rica. Rare
cowbird host. Range has expanded since 1900 as
suitable nest sites became available due to
expanding agriculture. NOTES:
Reproductive
success varies with insect abundance; when insects
abundant, clutches are larger and initiated
earlier, nestlings are fed more often and grow
faster. On territory very aggressive toward crows,
hawks, etc. Uncommon migrant
and rare summer resident at the Dish, fairly rare
elsewhere on campus. Most common in spring, but
occasionally a pair will linger to nest at the
Dish. Feeds on insects while making long sallies
over open fields. ESSAYS: Passerines
and Songbirds;
Bills;
Masterbuilders;
Range
Expansion REFERENCES:
Blancher and
Robertson, 1984, 1987; MacKenzie and Sealy,
1981.
Tyrannus verticalis Say
NG-298; G-206; PE-194; PW-pl 41; AE-pl 467; AW-pl
421; AM(II)-286
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
18-19 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
15
feet - 30 feet
(5
feet - 40 feet)
(3-7)
MONOG
MF
POUNCE
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). |