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Red-Headed Woodpecker. Red-Headed Woodpecker. Melanerpes erythrocephalus Beech and oak mast, seeds, nuts, berries, fruit, insects, bird eggs, nestlings, mice. Call a loud "tchur-tchur." http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Red-headed_Woodpecker.html. Ring-necked Pheasant.
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Red-Headed Woodpecker • Melanerpes erythrocephalus • Beech and oak mast, seeds, nuts, berries, fruit, insects, bird eggs, nestlings, mice. • Call a loud "tchur-tchur." • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Red-headed_Woodpecker.html
Ring-necked Pheasant • Male Female
Ring-necked Pheasant • Phasianus colchicus • Scratches on ground and digs with bill for food. • Male crows with a loud, harsh "koork-KOK.“ • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Ring-necked_Pheasant.html
Wild Turkey • Meleagris gallopavo • Acorns, nuts, seeds, fruits, insects, buds, fern fronds, salamanders. • Male display an explosive gobble. Call a rather nasal yelp. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Wild_Turkey.html
American Robin • Male Female
American Robin • Turdus migratorius • Invertebrates, especially earthworms, and fruit. • Song a musical whistled phrase, "cheerily, cheer up, cheer up, cheerily, cheer up." Call note a sharp "chup." Also a very high-pitched thin whistling note. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/American_Robin1.html
Eastern Bluebird • Female Male
Eastern Bluebird • Sialia sialis • Insects and small fruits. • Song a rich warbling whistle broken into short phrases: "Tu-wheet-tudu." Also a dry chatter.
Northern Cardinal • Male Female
Northern Cardinal • Cardinalis cardinalis • Seeds, fruits, buds, and insects. • Song a series of clear whistles, the first down-slurred and ending in a slow trill. "Cheer, cheer, cheer, what, what, what, what." Call a sharp "chip." • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Northern_Cardinal1.html
American Goldfinch • Male Female
American Goldfinch • Carduelis tristis • Seeds, especially of composite flowers. Few insects. • Song a long series of twittering and warbling notes. Common contact call a "tsee-tsi-tsi-tsit," often given in flight. May be described as "per-chic-o-ree" or "po-ta-to-chip." • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/American_Goldfinch.html
Barn Swallow • Hirundo rustica • Flying insects. • Song: a twittery series of squeaky notes, often with dry rattle in the middle. • Song: a twittery series of squeaky notes, often with dry rattle in the middle.
Blue Jay • Cyanocitta cristata • Arthropods, acorns and nuts, fruits, seeds, small vertebrates. • Very vocal; make a large variety of calls. Most frequent call is a harsh "jeer." Also clear whistled notes and gurgling sounds. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Blue_Jay.html
Northern Oriole • Male Female
Northern Oriole • Icterus galbula • Caterpillars, fruits, insects, spiders, and nectar. • Song: a series of rich whistled notes interspersed with rattles. Call: a chatter. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Baltimore_Oriole.html
Ruby Throated Hummingbird • Male Female
Ruby Throated Hummingbird • Archilochus colubris • Flower nectar, small insects, and tree sap. Comes to hummingbird feeders. • Rapid squeaky chipping. Humming sound from wings. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Ruby-throated_Hummingbird.html
Common Raven • Corvus corax • Omnivorous. Eats meat, eggs, insects, grain, fruit, garbage, and carrion. • Omnivorous. Eats meat, eggs, insects, grain, fruit, garbage, and carrion. • http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/audio/Common_Raven.html
Sources • www.whatbird.com • www.birds.cornell.edu • http://www.naturesongs.com/tyrrcert.html#cora
Blackburnian Warbler Breeds in mature coniferous and mixed coniferous/deciduous forests. No other North American warbler has an orange throat. Cerulean Warbler Breeds in forests with tall deciduous trees and open understory, such as wet bottomlands and dry slopes. It nests and forages higher in the canopy than most other warblers. Warblers
Spotted Sandpiper Breeds in a variety of habitats, such as shoreline, sagebrush, grassland, forest, lawn, or park. The female may store sperm for up to one month. Greater Yellowlegs Breeds in muskeg, wet bogs with small wooded islands ,and forests (usually coniferous) with abundant clearings. Its low densities and tendency to breed in inhospitable, mosquito-ridden muskegs make it one of the least-studied shorebirds on the continent. Aquatic Wading Birds
Red-breasted Nuthatch Mature and diverse stands of coniferous forests, especially spruce, fir, larch, and cedar. The Red-breasted Nuthatch applies sticky conifer resin globules to the entrance of its nest hole. Scarlet Tanager Breeds in deciduous and mixed deciduous/coniferous woodlands, especially mature forests. On the wintering grounds in South America the Scarlet Tanager joins mixed species foraging flocks with flycatchers, antbirds, woodcreepers, and resident tropical tanagers. Ground Nesting Birds
Continued • Burrowing Owl • Lives in dry, open areas with no trees and short grass. (prairies) • The Burrowing Owl collects mammal dung and puts it in and around its burrow. The dung attracts dung beetles, which the owl then captures and eats.
Merlin Breeds in open country from open coniferous woodland to prairie, occasionally in adjacent suburbs. The Merlin does not build a nest, but instead takes over old nests of other raptors or crows. It sometimes nests on top of domed magpie nests rather than in the nest cavity. Cooper’s Hawk Breeds in deciduous, mixed, and coniferous forests. Becoming more common in suburban and urban areas. A Cooper's Hawk captures a bird with its feet, and will squeeze it repeatedly to kill it. It does not bite the prey to kill it in the fashion of falcons, but holds it away from its body until it dies. It has been known to drown its prey, holding a bird under water until it stops moving Order FALCONIFORMES - Family ACCIPITRIDAE - Subfamily Accipitrinae Falcons
Spotted Owl In northern part of range, lives in old-growth coniferous forests. An individual Spotted Owl may not breed every year. Some do not breed for periods of five to six years. Barred Owl Forested areas, from swamps and riparian areas to uplands. (deciduous) The belly feathers of some Barred Owls are pink. This coloring may be the result of eating a lot of crayfish. Owls
Owls Continued • Short-eared Owl • Open country, including prairie, meadows, tundra, moorlands, marshes, savanna and open woodland. • The Short-eared Owl may compete with the Barn Owl in some areas. Some successful nest box programs to attract Barn Owls have coincided with the decline of the Short-eared Owl in the same area.
Black-capped Chickadee Deciduous and mixed deciduous/coniferous woodlands, open woods and parks, willow thickets, and cottonwood groves. The Black-Capped Chickadee hides seeds and other food items for later recovery. Mountain Chickadee Coniferous Forests Juvenile Mountain Chickadees leave their home territories about three weeks after fledging. The young birds settle in a new area by late summer, and usually remain in that spot all their lives. Chickadees
Black-capped Chickadee Mountain Chickadee Chickadee’s continued
Common Grackle Found in a variety of open areas with scattered trees, including open woodland, boreal forest, swamps, marshes, agricultural areas, urban residential areas, and parks. It will follow plows for invertebrates and mice, wade into water to catch small fish, and sometimes kill and eat other birds at bird feeders. Baltimore oriole Breeds along woodland edges and open areas with scattered trees, especially deciduous trees. The Baltimore Oriole hybridizes extensively with the Bullock's Oriole where their ranges overlap in the Great Plains. Blackbirds
Brown Creeper Coniferous and mixed coniferous-deciduous forests. Distinctive in habits and morphology, the Brown Creeper is a small, well-camouflaged bird of woodlands. White-breasted Nuthatch Found in mature deciduous forests, especially near openings and edges. Also parks and suburbs with large trees. Nuthatches gather nuts and seeds, jam them into tree bark, and hammer or "hatch" the food open with their bills. Nuthatches
Sources • www.birds.cornell.edu • www.naturesongs.org