Translate

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Species of the Month


This month’s species of the month was supposed to be a lichen called lipstick cladonia, but for being a widespread lichen there is very little information about it. So I changed it to something a little easier to research. This past weekend I saw my first eastern bluebird, so that’s what you get this month.
Scientific name: Sialia sialis
Kingdom: Animalia (animals)
Class:   Aves (birds)
Order: Passeriformes (perching birds)
Range: east of the Rockies from southern Canada to Honduras
Habitat: open areas with trees  
Lifespan: 6-10 years, mortality highest in first year
Diet: primarily insects, also seeds, nuts, and berries
Male bluebird with a cricket (Audubon Field Guide)
Predators: Snakes, house cats, raccoons, black bears, American kestrels. Flying squirrels and chipmunks are egg predators. House sparrows and European starling kill bluebirds and/or compete for nesting sites.
Conservation Status: no special protection
Male with brilliant blue on full display (Smithsonian)
Other Information: Bluebirds are a social, yet territorial bird. At times they gather in flocks, but will also defend a nesting territory and feeding territory from other bluebirds. They also have an interesting dynamic with tree swallows. Two pairs of bluebirds will not nest in boxes that are next to each other, and bluebirds will drive away tree swallows if only one box is available. However, placing two boxes side by side will allow the bluebird and the swallow to coexist as neighbors. Male bluebirds have a brilliant blue backside and red breast; females are dull gray with brownish breast. Her eggs are blue, but sometimes white, in clutches of 3-7. Eggs hatch after 13-16 days and the young fledge nest 2-3 weeks after hatching. Pairs may mate twice in a season, and sometimes the young from the first clutch will help raise the second clutch.
Female bluebird looking with muted colors (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)
Information this month comes from the good folks at University of Michigan's Animal Diversity Web again.

No comments:

Post a Comment