Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Woodland, scrub,
chaparral. 2 broods. DISPLAYS:
Courtship of calls,
trills, and posturing. NEST:
Gourd-shaped
hanging pocket, woven around and supported by
twigs; of moss, lichen, leaves, cocoons, grass,
flowers, secured by spider web, lined with plant
down, hair, feathers. Built in 13-51
days. EGGS:
White, unmarked.
0.6" (14 mm). DIET:
Includes spiders.
Young fed undigested, solid food. CONSERVATION:
Winter resident.
Rare cowbird host. NOTES:
Pairs disturbed
during nest building, egg laying, or incubation
often desert, change mates, and build new nest.
When clutch complete, male and female roost in
nest. Both sexes brood. Pair show high tolerance
for other Bushtits in territory, allowing them to
forage and even take part in nesting activities.
Highly gregarious except when breeding, moving
about in family groups after nesting, then in loose
flocks of 6-30 (up to 70), often associates with
kinglets, wrens, titmice, warblers, and chickadees.
Groups roost huddled in tight mass, saving energy
from reduced heat loss. Iris of eye is pale cream
in adult females, dark brown in juveniles and adult
males. Populations in s w with black-eared males
previously regarded as separate species,
Black-eared Bushtit. Common to abundant
resident throughout campus in a wide variety of
habitat types. Often found in large flocks,
occasionally exceeding 50-75 individuals,
throughout most of the year (except early in the
nesting season ). ESSAYS: Metabolism;
Bird
Guilds;
Birds,
DNA, and Evolutionary
Convergence;
Eye
Color;
Flocking;
Temperature
Regulation REFERENCES:
Chaplin, 1982;
Ervin, 1977.
Psaltriparus minimus Townsend
NG-330; G-232; PW-pl 45; AW-pl 485;
AM(II)-334
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
12 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
4
feet- 25 feet
(To
50 feet)
MONOG
MF
FRUIT
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). |