Tuesday 26 September 2017

Red-breasted Nuthatch


Red-breasted Nuthatches are the trouble-makers of your backyard bird community. The nuthatches in our back yard, at least, are out of control. They’re Chatty Cathys, and their annoying “een – een – een – een” can be heard all day long. To prepare for the coming winter, they select the best-quality sunflower seeds from our feeder and hide them in various secret locations around the yard (including in the roof, in the vegetable garden where the seeds have germinated, and in the nooks of the bark in the surrounding trees.) In order to select the best seeds they have to get rid of the ones that aren’t up to snuff, which means that for every seed they take they spit out four onto the lawn. They’ve been making such a mess that we’ve installed a net underneath the feeder to catch their rejects.

The chickadees often eat the rejects right out of the net.
During the breeding season, Red-breasted Nuthatches smear the entrances to their nests with sticky conifer sap, applied with either their beaks or bits of bark used as paintbrushes. In order to avoid the sticky mess themselves, they will dive right through the entrance without touching it. This is likely a strategy to discourage competitors for nesting holes and nest predators.

Ultimately, the nuthatch decided that this tree wasn’t a good enough hiding spot, so he took the seed away somewhere else. I might pretend to have disdain for this species, but in truth I always admire animals who are an annoyance to humans.
He tried jamming the seed even deeper into the nook, but ultimately gave it up as a bad choice. Maybe he was concerned that I knew his secret and would try to steal it later on.

Tuesday 19 September 2017

Sanderling




According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word Sanderling comes from Old English words meaning “sand-ploughman.” True to their name, this species spends most of its time along the shoreline eating whatever small critters they can find. Sanderlings are a species of sandpiper, a group known as “peeps” because of their high-pitched, peep-y calls. Peeps are notoriously hard to identify and I hope I’m not embarrassing myself by making a public ID error, though it wouldn’t be the first time and probably won’t be the last!

I saw this young bird at Blackie Spit, Surrey, on September 16. Based on her speckled back she should be a juvenile bird, only a few months old and freshly arrived in Metro Vancouver from her birthplace in the Arctic. Sanderlings overwinter as far north as Alaska and as far south as Argentina (as well as in Eurasia and Australia)!

Also at Blackie Spit was a Western Sandpiper, who looked so tired from his migration that he was about to fall asleep right on the beach. Many birds will fly almost nonstop on migration, only occasionally landing at stopover sites to have a quick nap and a snack before moving on.




Tuesday 12 September 2017

Common Nighthawk


“Nighthawk” sounds to me like Marvel’s latest super-villain, but (you guessed it) it’s actually a species of bird in the nightjar family. They do, however, share many traits with fictional villains, including an exaggerated arrogant set of the beak (or nose, as the case may be) and the desire to skulk around at twilight. But their cousins, the whip-poor-wills, sing out their names in the dead of night, so at least nighthawks don’t advocate for the abuse of children.

Common Nighthawks prefer to hunt at dawn and dusk rather than the dead of night, and are sometimes seen out in the middle of the day. Their beaks seem small in profile, but they can open their mouths almost as wide as their head. This strange super-power helps them to funnel flying insects into their mouths, as nightjars feed entirely on insects throughout the year. Depending on their location, nighthawks will eat anything from flying ants to mosquitoes, and after experiencing a summer in Canada’s boreal forest anyone who eats mosquitoes is a superhero to me.

This species can be found in the summer in a few locations in the Lower Mainland, including Iona Island. They choose to nest anywhere where they might best camouflage, including beaches, burnovers, and gravel rooftops. They’ve recently left Canada for greener (i.e. more insect-infested) pastures in South America. I saw this bird in Saskatchewan’s Grasslands National Park on August 11. 

Unfortunately, Common Nighthawks are now listed as Threatened under Canada’s Species at Risk Act, possibly due to the overuse of insecticides causing an overall decrease in their food source.