birding

tags: Canyon Towhee, Pipilo fuscus, birds, Image of the Day My good friend, Dave Rintoul, has just returned from a much-deserved vacation camping in the Chiricahuas and Gila Wilderness area and sent a couple images to share with you. Canyon Towhee, Pipilo fuscus, in Chaco Canyon. Image: Dave Rintoul, June 2008 [larger view].
tags: Black-Throated Sparrow, Amphispiza bilineata, birds, Image of the Day My good friend, Dave Rintoul, has just returned from a much-deserved vacation camping in the Chiricahuas and Gila Wilderness area and sent a couple images to share with you. Black-throated Sparrow, Amphispiza bilineata, in Chaco Canyon. Image: Dave Rintoul, June 2008 [larger view].
tags: Birds in the News, BirdNews, ornithology, birds, avian, newsletter Male prothonotary warbler, Protonotaria citrea in breeding plumage. Image: Dave Rintoul, KSU [OMG view]. Birds in Science New research led by Dr Melanie Massaro and Dr Jim Briskie at the University of Canterbury, which found that the New Zealand bellbird is capable of changing its nesting behaviour to protect itself from predators, could be good news for island birds around the world at risk of extinction. The introduction of predatory mammals such as rats, cats and stoats to oceanic islands has led to the extinction…
tags: northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis, birds, Central Park, Image of the Day Mama knows best. Image: Bob Levy, author of Club George [larger]. The photographer, Bob Levy, writes; Remember my story about Mama and Papa Bank Rock: Behind the Green Mesh (see this website May 25, 2008, also see part 2 and part 3)? Well, apparently Mama is still convinced she is invisible as she continues to incubate her eggs. To date, with the exception of a few bird-watchers, she has gone undetected. When Mama Bank Rock got off the nest during my last visit I stood on tiptoe to get a look inside.…
tags: northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis, birds, Central Park, Image of the Day Mama and Papa Bank Rock: Behind the Green Mesh. Image: Bob Levy, author of Club George [larger]. The photographer, Bob Levy, writes; Finding the Bank Rock nest had been fully constructed was a satisfying discovery but I felt I still did not have the information I wanted. Without seeing either cardinal at the site I did not know if it was still active or if it had abandoned. I decided to continue my walk but come back later for another look. I returned forty minutes later. I stopped twenty feet away and…
tags: northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis, birds, Central Park, Image of the Day Mama and Papa Bank Rock: Behind the Green Mesh. Image: Bob Levy, author of Club George [larger]. The photographer, Bob Levy, writes; I returned to the park two days later. It was raining lightly but steadily so my camera was tucked inside its case. The light was poor for both photography and bird-watching but from about fifteen feet away I saw evidence that Mama Bank Rock had indeed returned to her nest. A gleaming white object was tucked behind the fence where the Northern Cardinal and I had last met.…
tags: Birds in the News, BirdNews, ornithology, birds, avian, newsletter "Not skulking" Lincoln's Sparrow, Melospiza lincolnii. Image: Dave Rintoul, KSU [larger view]. People Hurting Birds The number of lesser scaup is dwindling, and it could be an invasive species that does them in. Invasive snails and parasites are attacking these and other ducks on the Upper Mississippi. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials say with no natural predators, the snails and the parasites are thriving, and killing off a duck population that is already in trouble. The snail has helped kill nearly 50,000…
tags: Long-toed Lapwing, Long-toed plover, Vanellus crassirostris, birds, Image of the Day Fourth in a series of non-passerine images by this photographer. Long-toed Lapwing, also known as the Long-toed plover, Vanellus crassirostris, which is endemic to southeastern Africa. Image: John Del Rio [larger view].
tags: Hamerkop, Scopus umbretta, birds, Image of the Day Second in a series of non-passerine images by this photographer. Hamerkop, Scopus umbretta, also known as the Hammerhead Stork or the Anvilhead. Image: John Del Rio. [larger view].
tags: Birds in the News, BirdNews, ornithology, birds, avian, newsletter Red-crested Turaco, Tauraco erythrolophus. Image: John Del Rio [larger view]. Birds in Science Surface tension can be a wonderful thing. It helps some insects walk on water. It allows the dappling of raindrops on the hood of a car. And, a new study in Science shows, it enables certain birds to eat. Like many birds, phalaropes, small shorebirds with long, thin beaks, feed by pecking, but phalaropes peck at water, capturing droplets, on the order of a tenth of an inch in diameter, which can contain tiny crustaceans or…
tags: northern cardinals, Cardinalis cardinalis, birds, Central Park, Image of the Day You do not have to be a photography expert to notice that the only thing in focus in this image is the green mesh in the foreground and even then you might have to enlarge it to see that it is so. To appreciate why I relish this photo a detailed explanation is necessary. Of course that might be said about many of my other images too but none more so than this one: at least so far. Image: Bob Levy, author of Club George [larger]. The photographer, Bob Levy, writes; You will, I hope, recognize that there…
tags: Oology And Ralph's Talking Eggs, conservation, ornithology, oology, Carrol L. Henderson, book review People's methods for learning about the lives of birds have varied throughout the decades. Today, birders learn about their feathery subjects by using binoculars, telescopes, sound recording devices and cameras, while ornithologists and molecular biologists add further insight by analyzing avian DNA, transponder data and satellite information. But such powerful technologies have not always been available, so people have relied on other methods to learn about birds. For example, between…
tags: peregrine falcon, Falco peregrinus, birds, urban birds, image of the day Male peregrine falcon, Falco peregrinus, named Eric who lives and breeds in a city in North America. who replaced "Erik", the former resident on his current territory in a city in North America. Image: John P. Baumlin [larger view]. This image is being shared with you by bird artist, John P. Baumlin, who writes; I've been following your blog for some time and have been enjoying the bird images you posted along the way and thought you might like to see this one. It is a male Peregrine, one of a pair that are…
tags: Birds in the News, BirdNews, ornithology, birds, avian, newsletter Yellow-Throated Laughing Thrush, Garrulax galbanus. Image: John Del Rio. [larger view]. Birds in Science News A team of researchers recently described fossils from two Lower Eocene parrots that were discovered in Denmark. Analysis of the fossils reveals that one of the ancient parrots, named Mopsitta tanta, is the largest fossil parrot found so far and it has the most northerly distribution yet known. Further, it resembles modern parrots almost as closely as younger fossils found from the Miocene, making it the…
tags: birding, bird books, Bird Field Guide, The Young Birder's Guide to Birds of Eastern North America, Bill Thompson III, book review One of the most common questions that I am asked is "how can we get our internet- and video game-addicted kids interested in the out-of-doors?" Since I am an internet-addicted semi-adult, I can say that one way to get kids interested in nature is to make it accessible to them, and perhaps the best way to do this is through books. A new field guide was just published whose target audience is kids between the ages of 8 and 12 years old. This remarkable book,…
tags: mountain bluebird, Sialia currucoides, birds, Washington state, Image of the Day Male mountain bluebird, Sialia currucoides. This bird surprised birders in Washington state by visiting Bainbridge Island one weekend in April 2008. Image: Eva Gerdts, 2008 [larger view].
tags: Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Regulus calendula, birds, Kansas, image of the day Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Regulus calendula, with insect egg or pupa in beak Image: Dave Rintoul, KSU [larger view].
tags: Yellow-rumped warbler, Dendroica coronata, birds, Kansas, image of the day Yellow-rumped warbler, Dendroica coronata, After Hatch Year male. Image: Dave Rintoul, KSU [larger view].
tags: Prothonotary warbler, Protonotaria citrea, birds, Kansas, image of the day Male prothonotary warbler, Protonotaria citrea in breeding plumage. I went out this morning specifically to see if I could get a good image of a prothonotary warbler and I managed to get one. Image: Dave Rintoul, KSU [OMG view].
tags: bird watching, Bill Thompson Thanks to the good people at Houghton Mifflin Publishing House, I am meeting Bill Thompson, the editor of Bird Watcher's Digest and author of several books, tomorrow afternoon. Needless to say, I am excited to meet Bill and to see Houghton Mifflin's offices, and to attach faces and voices with the names of those people who mail me their lovely beautiful books and email me appreciative and encouraging messages about my book reviews (Thanks, you guys!) Houghton Mifflin recently published a book by Bill Thompson, The Young Birder's Guide to Birds of Eastern…