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Birds of New York

Birds of New York. Created By: Joe Gilchrist. New York State Bird. The Eastern Bluebird is the bird of New York State. Found in open woodlands and in park like habitats and on farmlands with scattered trees. Key field marks are blue upperparts, red breast and throat, white belly.

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Birds of New York

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  1. Birds of New York Created By: Joe Gilchrist

  2. New York State Bird • The Eastern Bluebird is the bird of New York State. • Found in open woodlands and in park like habitats and on farmlands with scattered trees. • Key field marks are blue upperparts, red breast and throat, white belly.

  3. Mourning Dove • Found in open woodlands, agricultural areas, suburban areas, and open habitats. • Key Field marks are brownish grey upperparts with black dots and gray underneath. Also it has a brownish grey tail with blackish grey tail feathers. • Both sexes of this bird incubate the eggs and care for the young.

  4. Tufted Titmouse • Found in forests and woodlands, including riparian woodlands; also frequents suburban and residential areas, and park-like habitats with tall trees. • Has a distinct crest; plumage is enhanced by rusty flanks. Note black forehead; black-crested form of this species, formerly recognized as a distinct species, occurs in the southwestern portion of Tufted Titmouse's range.

  5. Black Capped Chickadee • Found in woodlands, parks, suburban areas, and in residential areas; may occur almost anywhere that there are at least a few trees and shrubs present. • Field marks include black cap and bib, grayish back and wings, and white under parts. • Both sexes incubate the eggs and care for the young. Incubation lasts approximately 11-13 days

  6. Northern Cardinal • Found in thickets, hedgerows, brushy areas, woodlands with dense undergrowth, along forest edge, and in suburban and residential areas; in drier areas of its range, also frequents scrub and riparian woodland habitats. • Along the Atlantic coast, resident breeding range extends from southern Nova Scotia south to southern Florida; and west to southern Ontario, southeastern Manitoba, southeastern South Dakota, west-central Nebraska, western Kansas, northeastern Colorado, southern New Mexico (and south into Mexico), central and southeastern Arizona, southeastern California, and central and southern Baja California.

  7. BLUE JAY • Found in forested areas, open woodlands, and park-like settings, including urban and suburban residential areas. • Field Marks include the pale gray under parts with bluish-black, v-shaped necklace; bluish upperparts, with black barring and white spotting on wings and tail; and the blue crest. This bird features a variety of calls, even imitations of hawks.

  8. Dark-eyed Junco • Found in a variety of wooded habitats, along forest edge, in clearings and bogs, and in adjacent brushy areas; during migration and winter, also frequents open woodlands, grassy and brushy fields, hedgerows, park-like habitats, and residential areas • Field marks include Pink bill, white belly, white outer tail feathers. Wings, back, tail, head, and upper breast coloration varies from gray, to slate-colored, to brown

  9. Blue Footed Booby • The blue footed booby is not a bird of New York it is natively located in only two locations which are Puerto Vallarta Mexico and the Galapagos Islands. • This bird is extremely diverse looking with its blue feet and gray face. • A booby A booby has long, brown, pointed wings that can measure an average152 cm across.

  10. Sources List • http://www.newyorkbirds.com/ • http://www.birdzilla.com • http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Sula_nebouxii.html

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