From Flocks to Nests

Mourning dove flock on a fence in winter (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

13 April 2022

In spring a change occurs in mourning dove behavior as large flocks we see in winter disperse to nest. Some flocks move north while locals break up into couples and fan out to choose a territory.

It is hard to notice when the change occurs so I graphed my eBird count of mourning doves (Zenaida macroura) in Frick and Schenley Parks, January 2021 through 9 April 2022.

My eBird counts of mourning doves in Frick & Schenley, 1 Jan 2021 through 8 April 2022 (data from Kate St. John)

The change is pretty dramatic. Just 1-5 birds from March through September, then over 40 December through February. The largest flocks were at the Frick Environmental Education Center where they sunned in the trees above the feeders. 100 mourning doves in January!

Mourning dove flock in winter sun (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

This year the count dropped below 10 in early March as they paired up. Some pairs maintain their bonds throughout the winter. Others get to know each other in the spring.

Wary pair of mourning doves in California (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

On territory the male visits potential nest sites and calls to his mate to inspect them. She gets to choose. (His nest call is 3 notes like this).

According to Birds of the World: To build the nest he brings small twigs, etc. which he delivers to her while standing on her back(!) She arranges them around her while using her body to form a simple bowl. Nest building usually takes 7–10 hours spread over 2–4 days.

The loosely built nest looks messy. Sometimes you can see through it from below.

Mourning dove nest with egg (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

And they mate. She lays her first egg within 2 days of nest completion. Subsequent eggs are one or two days apart.

Mourning dove pairs share incubation as they wait for the eggs to hatch in 14 days. Surprisingly neither bird has a brood patch but it works anyway.

The chicks are fed by regurgitation and grow up to resemble their parents. They fledge in 13-15 days, sooner if frightened.

Adult with two almost grown chicks (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Juveniles remain in speckled plumage through August. By winter they look like adults.

Juvenile mourning dove in September (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

And in October mourning doves gather in flocks again. The process starts over from flocks to nests.

UPDATE 13 April 2022: Today at Frick Park I talked with someone who has a mourning dove nest in their yard while 16 mourning doves hung out near the feeders. Flocking and nesting were simultaneous today.

(photos from Wikimedia Commons; click on the captions to see the originals)

Scratch and Sniff

Scratching a spicebush branch with my thumbnail (photo by Kate St. John)

12 April 2022

We’re used to the idea that flowers smell sweet but did you know that some twigs and buds have scents too? Scratch and sniff to find these three.

Spicebush (Lindera sp.) stands out right now with yellow flowers in balls along the branches. Scratch and sniff the twig, as I am doing above. It smells like spice, almost nutmeg.

Spicebush at Schenley Park, 9 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

Before this tree leafs out, scratch and sniff a bud on a bitternut hickory (Carya cordiformis). It smells like lemons.

Bitternut hickory buds, Schenley Park, 9 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

Juniper berries (Juniperus sp.) are a favorite food of cedar waxwings (Bombycilla cedrorum) on spring migration. Last week I found 40 of them feasting at the junipers near CMU’s Morewood Gardens parking lot.

Scratch or crush a berry. It smells like gin. … Or so they say. I haven’t smelled gin in years because I don’t like it.

Juniper berries from Devonshire Street at CMU (penny for scale), 8 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

Try it and see.

(photos by Kate St. John)

This Year’s Bird Flu: How to Protect Birds

Domestic rooster (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

11 April 2022

Avian influenza, also called bird flu, is in the news lately because a highly contagious strain has made it to North America from Eurasia. Though not dangerous to humans, this year’s strain is easily caught by some bird species, most notably chickens. Here’s what it is and what we can do to protect birds.

What is this virus? As USDA explains, “Avian influenza is caused by an influenza type A virus which can infect poultry (such as chickens, turkeys, pheasants, quail, domestic ducks, geese, and guinea fowl) and wild birds (especially waterfowl).” Various strains are always in the wild but the low pathogenicity versions do not cause illness in wild birds or chickens. Every few years, however, a highly pathogenic (HPAI) strain surfaces that is extremely infectious, fatal to chickens, and rapidly spreads in domestic poultry.

This year’s HPAI strain has already devastated many poultry farms.

Which birds have died? USDA is tracking the virus and reports that millions of commercially raised chickens and turkeys have already died this year. As of 7 April 2022 the total death count was more than 24.2 million, the vast majority of which — more than 16 million — were Commercial Layer Chickens. That’s why the price of eggs has gone up. (See USDA commercial and backyard flock statistics here.)

If you are a poultry farmer, have backyard chickens, or have captive birds in a zoo or rehab facility you’ll want to heed USDA’s advice to protect your birds. Accordingly the Pittsburgh Zoo, the National Aviary, and HARP’s wild bird rehab facility in Verona are taking precautions. (See this Post-Gazette article.)

Should we worry about wild birds? Not so much. Wild birds maintain their own social distancing whereas domestic poultry live in crowded conditions on factory farms.

In addition, avian flu is primarily caught by ducks, geese, swans, chickens, wild turkeys, pheasants and quail. Some raptors catch it, though in low numbers. Songbirds are at low risk.

As of 7 April 2022, USDA testing of dead wild birds has found 637 cases in the U.S. 88% were water-related birds, notably mallards and snow geese. 11% were raptors. The highest raptor death toll was among black vultures who roost communally. (See USDA wild bird statistics here.)

Notice the order of magnitude here: 24.2 million poultry deaths versus 637 wild bird deaths.

Interestingly, the species most susceptible to avian influenza are closely related and stand alone in the the phylogenomic supertree below (pale green branch at bottom right = ducks, geese, chickens, pheasants) while those least susceptible are least related to ducks and chickens.

Phylogenomic supertree of birds, a clockwise spiral from oldest to newest (image from MDPI, July 2019)

Should you stop feeding wild birds? Audubon Society of Western PA says there is no need to stop feeding wild birds but as always you should clean your feeders every week. Here’s ASWP’s advice from their website.

Bird flu advice from Audubon Society of Western PA, April 2022

And finally, here are two quotes from the New York Times:

Nearly all the nine billion chickens raised and slaughtered in the United States each year can trace their lineage to a handful of breeds that have been manipulated to favor fast growth and plump breasts. The birds are also exceptionally vulnerable to outbreaks of disease. “They all have the same immune system, or lack of an immune system, so once a virus gets inside a barn, it’s going to spread like wildfire,” said Dr. Hansen, the public health veterinarian.

Andrew deCoriolis, the executive director of Farm Forward says: “Instead of asking how factory farms can prevent infections that originate in the environment, which is how they frame it now, we should be asking how they can prevent infections that originate on factory farms,” he said. “If we keep raising more and more animals in these conditions, we should expect the exact outcome we’re getting because that’s how the system is set up.”

New York Times: Avian Flu Spread in the U.S. Worries Poultry Industry, Feb 24, 2022

(photo from Wikimedia Commons, phlyogenomic supertree from MDPI, wild bird advice from ASWP; click on the captions to see the originals)

April Showers Bring …

Purple dead nettle, Toms Run, 6 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

10 April 2022

This week’s showers brought …

  • Almost-blooming native trees including eastern redbud (Cercis canadensis) in Frick Park.
Redbud flowers in bud, 7 April 2022 in Frick Park (photo by Kate St. John)
  • Swelling buds and leaf out on the yellow buckeyes (Aesculus flava) in Schenley Park.
Yellow buckeyes in Schenley Park: buds and leaf out! (photos by Kate St. John)
  • and Mud Season!
Mud season! after a trek in Schenley Park, 9 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

This year’s cold weather delayed the trees compared to last year on this date. For comparison see Spring Green from 10 April 2021.

And finally: Why did it Rain, Sun, Rain, Sun over and over again yesterday? The National Weather Service radar shows a flock of discrete self-contained rain clouds moving over the landscape.

National Weather Service radar part of eastern US, 9 April 2022, 6:43pm

(photos by Kate St. John; radar map from NWS)

Feaking

Rubbing his beak, this bald eagle is feaking (photo by BC Coastal Dry Belt, Creative Commons license on Flickr)

9 April 2022

New word for the day.

Feaking  – The act of rubbing the beak against a surface for cleaning or maintaining beak shape, often done after eating.

Definition from the National Eagle Center

The word feak originated in falconry in the early 16th century, derived from the German word fegen which means cleanse or sweep. Despite what auto-correct assumes, there is NO R in feak.

In this video, the female bald eagle is feaking on the edge of a nest platform in the rain.

And here’s a peregrine feaking after her meal.

Feaking isn’t confined to raptors. Learn the several reasons why birds do it at National Audubon’s article: Here’s Why Birds Rub Their Beaks on Stuff.

(photo from BC Coastal Dry Belt on Flickr; videos embedded from YouTube)

Let’s Get Outdoors This Spring

Spring birding at McMichael Road, 20 May 2017 (photo by Kate St. John)

8 April 2022

This week’s showers bring new flowers and birds. Let’s get outdoors to enjoy them with fellow nature lovers in the Pittsburgh area.

Each link below goes to a current outings list that is updated as new outings are scheduled.

  1. Birdblog Outings: A list of outings I’ll lead in the next few months. Stay tuned for details on 24 April, 14 May and 22 May, plus more to come.
  2. Botanical Society of Western PA: Find wildflowers & learn to ID plants in our area.
  3. Three Rivers Birding Club: Lots of birding opportunities in western Pennsylvania!
  4. Western PA Mushroom Club outings and events. Find and learn to identify mushrooms.
  5. Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy, Spring 2022 events: Walks, birding, yoga, kids’ activities, etc. in Pittsburgh city parks big and small.

Let’s get outdoors!

(photo by Kate St. John)

Pittsburgh’s Peregrine Soap Operas

Terzo at Third Avenue, 8 June 2021 (photo by Lori Maggio)

7 April 2022

In recounting Beauty’s life in Rochester and the soap opera she experienced in 2012 I’m reminded of two notable soap operas among Pittsburgh’s peregrines.

On Throw Back Thursday read about the Westinghouse Bridge in 2015 and Terzo’s secret life in 2020.

(photo by Lori Maggio)

End Of An Era: Beauty is Gone

Beauty with two eggs, 2 April 2019, Rochester NY (photo from rfalconcam)

6 April 2022

For those of you who remember Dorothy, the matriarch peregrine at the Cathedral of Learning 2002-2015, you may also remember her daughter Beauty who nested in Rochester, New York. Sad to say Beauty passed away yesterday at her nest. She was 15 years old.

Beauty had a very colorful life:

  • She hatched at the Cathedral of Learning in May 2007, daughter of Dorothy (from Milwaukee, WI) and Erie (from Columbus, OH). She was nicknamed Beauty by my friend and fellow peregrine watcher Karen Lang(*).
  • By Spring 2009 she was in Rochester NY where she won nesting rights from the 13 year old matriarch Mariah. See Pitt Alumna wins nest site in Rochester, NY.
  • In Spring 2011 Beauty’s mate, Archer, neglected her for a while. Peregrine watchers figured out that Archer had another mate 4 miles away and that female, Unity, was Beauty’s niece! See Peyton Place for Dorothy’s Girls.
  • In February 2012 Unity injured Beauty in a fight and reigned in Rochester while Beauty went to rehab. See Beauty Injured in Rochester, 10 Feb 2012.
  • Seven weeks later Beauty was released from rehab and immediately flew back home, only to find an egg in her nest. Who put it there and where was she? The story is incredible! See Whose Egg is This?
  • The 2012 nesting season worked out after all — Family Portrait in Rochester — and so did the subsequent years.
  • At age 15 Beauty lived nearly as long as her mother Dorothy who died at 16.

It’s the end of an era for Rochester peregrine watchers. Their Queen is dead, but soon I’m sure they will have a new queen.

Read more about Beauty at the Rfalconcam Imprints blog.

See a video tribute to Beauty embedded in this tweet:

(*) Sadly Karen Lang passed away last month, three weeks before Beauty.

(photo of Beauty from Rfalconcam in 2019)

USS Irvin Eaglets Hatching Soon

Screenshot from USS Irvin Works Eaglecam via PixCams on YouTube, 5 April 2022

5 April 2022

Early yesterday morning the mother bald eagle at the USS Irvin nest in West Mifflin turned her eggs and revealed a pip. You can see the pip in the video below.

Watch the USS Irvin Works Eaglecam for the first egg to hatch today.

video from PixCams on YouTube

This nest is only 5 miles away, as the crow flies, from the Hays bald eagles. For more information on this site see: New Eagle Cam at USS Irvin Works in the Mon Valley.

(screenshot and video from USS Irvin Works eaglecam via PixCams on YouTube)

Early Warblers and Spring Ephemerals: What to Expect in April

Louisiana waterthrush (photo by Steve Gosser)

4 April 2022

Spring was on hold during last week’s long hard frost but it’s coming back this week. Here’s what to expect outdoors in the Pittsburgh area.

The earliest warblers arrive in April before the leaves open.  Last weekend a Louisiana waterthrush returned to Tom’s Run Nature Reserve in Sewickley PA. Look for them walking along clean streams, bobbing their tails, and singing their very loud song.

Purple martin scouts are back at Harrison Hills County Park and Murrysville Wetland Community Park and tree swallows have returned to Moraine State Park. Watch for northern rough-winged swallows, barn swallows, and the rest of the purple martins in the weeks ahead.

Tree swallow (photo by Jessica Botzan)
Tree swallow (photo by Jessica Botzan)

Yellow-throated warblers will return to Pittsburgh area creeks and streams on or before 20 April. You’ll hear them before you see them, walking the high trunks and larger branches of sycamores. 

Yellow-throated warbler (photo by Anthiny Bruno)
Yellow-throated warbler (photo by Anthony Bruno)

Watch for gray catbirds, blue-gray gnatcatchers, and ruby-crowned kinglets returning soon.

Meanwhile, don’t miss April’s ephemeral wildflowers.

Snow trillium (Trillium nivale) was out in full force yesterday at the Botanical Society of Western PA walk at Little Sewickley Creek in Westmoreland County.

Snow trillium, Little Sewickley Creek, Westmoreland County, 3 April 2022 (photo by Kate St. John)

Soon we’ll see spring beauty, spicebush, hepatica, harbinger-of-spring, bloodroot, spring cress, twinleaf, violets and more. 

Spicebush in bloom, Schenley Park 2013 (photo by Kate St. John)
Spicebush in Schenley Park, 13 April 2013 (photo by Kate St. John)
Bloodroot blooming at Cedar Creek Park, Westmoreland County, 19 April 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
Bloodroot at Cedar Creek Park, Westmoreland County, 19 April 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

For more details check out my Pennsylvania Phenology page.

It’s a good month to be outdoors.

(photo credits: bird photos by Steve Gosser, Anthony Bruno and Jessica Botzan.  Plant photos by Kate St. John)