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How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

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Page 1: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

How to Identify a Bird

Environmental Explorations 2012

Page 2: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Identification

• Size of bird• Field marks• Behavior• Song• Habitat• Range

Page 3: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Size

• 3 common standards– Sparrow, 5-6 inches long– Robin, 9-11 inches long– Crow, 17- 21 inches long

Birds are classified as larger than or smaller thanFor example a hummingbird would be classified

smaller than a sparrow

Page 4: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Field Marks

• Distinctive features used to identify a bird• Includes features such as– Color– Bill (beak) size and shape– Tail size and shape– Markings such as wings stripes, patches or color

Page 5: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Robin

• For example a robin has gray head wings and tail and an orange breast. These are all field marks.

Page 6: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Northern Flicker

• White patch on tail, can you see any other field marks

Page 7: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Eastern Meadowlark

• Has a black V on its yellow breast, do you see any other field marks?

Page 8: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Behavior

• Feeding– Woodpeckers cling to trunks of trees as they drill

inside the wood to find insects– Nuthatches walk head first down a tree trunk

Page 9: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Behavior continued

• Turkey vultures soar with wing tips up• Raptors (eagles and hawks) fly with wing tips

straight or slightly down tilted

Page 10: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Attack

Page 11: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Song

• In many birds, song is special activity of males during breeding season– Used as defense of territory– Attract females by repertoire– Bird song can be used to identify as well as count

numbers of birds

Page 12: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Habitat

• Feeding and nesting sites are very specific by species

• Types of habitats include marsh, meadow, woodland, seashore, lakeshore, backyard, city

• Storms may blow birds off course during migration and they end up in strange habitats

Page 13: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Confused Herring Gull

• Often show up inland during a storm, blown west by wind

Page 14: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Geographic Range

• This is where a bird can be found• We have northern species and southern

species• We have eastern and western species• We have wide range species and narrow range

species• Some bird species occur worldwide and others

are specific to very small areas such as a valley

Page 15: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Range maps

• All bird guide books have a section of range maps

Page 16: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Another Range Map

Page 17: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

And Another

Page 18: How to Identify a Bird Environmental Explorations 2012

Other Bird Behaviors

• Imprinting: the first thing, living or nonliving a baby birds sees as it hatches is recognized forever as its mother

• Philopatry: wherever a bird is born it comes back to that same spot to breed and raise its young, important to migration, also explains why bird populations sometimes increase dramatically, example ducks at BRHS