140 likes | 261 Views
Educators… These teaching slides were created by the BirdSleuth K-12 team. We welcome you to share these slides with your students! You may edit this file, but please do not distribute this file (neither original or edited versions).
E N D
Educators… • These teaching slides were created by the BirdSleuth K-12 team. We welcome you to share these slides with your students! You may edit this file, but please do not distribute this file (neither original or edited versions). • Other resources pertaining to this content can be found at: www.birdsleuth.org/webinar-series/nesting. • Need help or have questions? Please contact BirdSleuth at birdsleuth@cornell.edu or consult the BirdSleuth website at www.birdsleuth.org. Join BirdSleuth on our social networks at: • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/BirdSleuth/40097433976 • Twitter: https://twitter.com/BirdSleuth • Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/birdsleuth/boards/ • Version 2.0 July 17, 2014
Find and defend a territory Find a mate Build a nest and lay eggs Incubate eggs Feed and raise nestlings Fledge from the nest Stages of the Breeding Cycle
Find and Defend a Territory Breeding territory: contains resources needed to live & raise young Males sing to tell rivals to “keep out” Protect nest and food resources
Build a Nest… Birds use a huge variety of materials to build nests Twigs, sticks, leaves Lichen Mud Hair, fur, feathers Spider webs Yarn, string, dental floss And many more!
Scrape Domed Pendulous cup Cavity Platform
…And Lay Eggs A clutch is the eggs laid by one female during a single nesting attempt Laying time varies Inter-egg intervals vary
Incubate Eggs Developing chicks must be kept at a certain temperature Mostly done by “brooding,” (adult bird sits on its eggs or young to warm them)
Chicks Hatch Chicks use an egg tooth to break through the shell Pipping is the process of breaking through the shell
Hatchlings Altricial hatchlings—completely dependent on their parents Precocial hatchling—more developed and more independent
Fledge from the Nest When a nestling: Is able to leave the nest, but not necessarily fully capable of flight Has acquired its first complete set of flight feathers Term usually used for altricial nestlings