Field
Guide IDs: BREEDING:
Coniferous-deciduous
woodland. Occ 2 broods. DISPLAYS:
Courting male
fluffs conspicuous yellow flank feathers while
bobbing, bowing, and singing to female. Male
performs nest-building display while slightly
crouched with body horizontal, usu without nest
material in bill. NEST:
Usu in conifer tree
(in e) or in oak (in w); well made, basketlike deep
cup, suspended by rim from prongs of forked twig,
usu rounded, of grass, forbs, shredded bark, plant
fibers, spider web, cocoons, decorated with lichen,
lined with fine grass, hair. Male selects
site. EGGS:
White, spotted with
browns, black, esp near large end. 0.8" (20
mm). DIET:
Almost entirely
insects; fleshy fruits compose 25% of diet in
January, but only 4% year-round. CONSERVATION:
Winters s to Costa
Rica, Cuba. Common cowbird host; if cowbird egg
laid first, often builds second floor of nest to
cover it. NOTES:
Males occ start
building one or more nests before pairing. Fearless
around nest; female is a close sitter. Parents
divide fledged brood and leave nest area. Recent
studies indicated w and e populations two separate
species. Formerly known as Solitary
Vireo. ESSAYS: Decline
of Eastern Songbirds;
Cowbirds;
Species
and Speciation;
Parental
Care. REFERENCES:
James, 1978;
Martindale, 1980.
Vireo cassinii Xantus de Vesey
NG-308; G-262; PE-228; PW-pl 49; AE-pl 450; AW-pl
516; AM(III)-100
Location
Type
Mating System
Parental Care
2ndary Diet..
Strategy
I:
14? DAYS
ALTRICIAL
(3-5)
MONOG
MF
HOVER
&
GLEAN
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). |