is going old-time black-and-white movie with the Bridled Titmouse! A year-round resident of the southwest US and Mexico, the Bridled Titmouse forages with other species (chickadees, nuthatches, vireos) in oak forests. They're the only member of the family Paridae (titmice and chickadees) in North America that uses cooperative breeding to raise young.

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #scicomm #sciart #birdglamour

Last updated 1 year ago

continues Goose Glam with the Emperor Goose! If you want to see the Emperor Goose, you’ll have to head north: the summer habitat of the Emperor Goose is around the Bering Sea, Alaska, and northeast Russia, with 90% of geese nesting on the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta. They dine on mussels, barnacles, eelgrass, and sea lettuce. They are currently listed as a Vulnerable Species, but their numbers have been slowly increasing since 2017.

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 1 year ago

's Goose Glam continues with Ross's Goose! I Wintering in south-central US and breeding along the Arctic coastlines, look for these small white (white morph) and white and brown/black (blue morph) geese with migrating flocks of Snow Geese as they forage in fields during stopovers on their migration from the US to the Arctic Circle. Females incubate the eggs while the males stand guard!

#sciencemua #scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

loves Arctic-breeding birds & the Brant is no exception! You may see them along the East and West Coasts, eating eelgrass and large green algae, as they migrate to breeding territories on the Arctic Coasts. You may have a chance of seeing Brants: they are becoming a more common sighting in flooded fields and salt marshes closer to human habitation. They form life-long pairs (social monogamy) but will mate with other Brants during the mating season.

#sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

A short intermission from Duck , brought to you by Pygmy Nuthatches! They love ponderosa pine forests in western and southern North America, including south BC! I haven't seen one here yet, but I hope to change that! I may have seen them near Boulder, Colorado, but I really need to see one here! Pygmy Nuthatches form large extended family group flocks, and family members will help their relatives care for the young!

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #sciart #scicomm #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

continues Duck Glam with the Black-bellied Whistling Duck! These long-legged ducks spend more time walking or perching in trees than any other duck! They're cavity nesters that form lifelong pair bonds with their mates. Females sometimes lay their eggs in other nests, in a behavior called "egg-dumping."

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

continues Duck Glam with the Ring-necked Duck! The rusty red "neck ring" is hard to see, but males definitely have a bold-colored blue, white, and black bill! Thousands will land on Minnesota lakes to feed on wild rice in the fall and form large migration flocks in the winter. They breed in freshwater marshes and bogs in the boreal forests in North America!

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

Wait...are you a female Mallard, or the glamorous American Black Duck? These eastern North American ducks don't have a white stripe on their blue-indigo wing patch & have a darker brown body. They have a fossil record going back at least 11,000 years to the Ice Age in Florida and Georgia! As a paleontologist, it is absolutely fascinating that you can use bones to tell apart the American Black Duck from the very similar Mallard!

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

is back! Let's start off my Duck Glam obsession with the Green-winged Teal: the smallest dabbling duck in North America! Winter flocks are as large as 50,000! You can see these tiny ducks on shallow ponds & flooded fields. Green-winged Teals don't use the same wintering spots every year: they like to try out different locations, especially the males that didn't find mates last year: they try their luck with a different group of wintering females.

#sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

Plover males make a show nest during their mating display! Females chose their mates based on the nest-building skills displayed by the male! Piping Plovers are a Red List species: please don't disturb their sandy beach nesting sites! There are only 8400 Piping Plovers estimated to be left in the whole world, so they need us to make good decisions.

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #sciart #scicomm #12daysofbirdmas

Last updated 2 years ago

On the 7th Day of Birdmas gave to me 7 Tundra Swans a-swimming! These Arctic nesting swans stay in flocks until they start breeding. Swans have to be tough: there are a lot of egg and nestling predators like foxes, weasels, wolves, bears, and several species of sea birds!

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #12daysofbirdmas #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

On the 6th Day of Birdmas gave to me 6 Snow Geese laying! In Canada, we see Snow Geese as they migrate from their winter territories in the US & Mexico to their Arctic breeding grounds. Migrating and winter flocks have lookouts to watch for predators while the rest of the flock forages and rests. Snow Geese chicks are well-developed when hatched, and are able to maintain their own body temperature just a few days after hatching!

#sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #12daysofbirdmas #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

On the 5th Day of Birdmas gave to me 5 Golden...Ring-necked Pheasants! A popular gamebird, they were introduced to North America in 1773 and are now found in the Midwest, Plains states, Canada, and Mexico. They're gorgeous pheasants, but they do compete with local game birds, including nest parasitism in grey partridges, prairie chickens, several duck species, rails, grouse, and turkeys.

#sciart #scicomm #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #12daysofbirdmas #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

On the 4th Day of Birdmas gave to me 4 Calling Birds...or is it "Colly Birds" as in the 1780 lyrics? "Colly" is an English expression for "coal-black", so here's a Red-winged Blackbird! Red-winged Blackbirds are very territorial and polygynous: males have up to 15 mates! However, only 1/4 to 1/2 of the nestlings in a male's territory are actually fathered by that male!

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #12daysofbirdmas #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

If the cold snap has you down, Blue-winged Teal is for you! Blue-winged Teal do not like the cold: they are the first to migrate south from their North America ponds and wetlands and the last to migrate north from their winter grounds of Central and South America! These dabbling ducks are the second most abundant duck in North America, second to the Mallard. Females decide where to nest by scouting wetlands while flying.

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #sciart #scicomm #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

The female Wood Duck has a different but serious ! Her complex patterns of browns and greys give the female a subtle elegance. They start forming their mating pairs in January. They readily use nest boxes and you can attract a pair if you have trees next to a pond or a lake. They nest quite high up: ducklings will jump from 50-foot-high nest cavities and land completely uninjured!

#scicomm #sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

showcases the adorable Bufflehead! These ducks can be seen during the winter along the coasts and in the US, but they breed in the northern US and in Canada almost exclusively in Pileated Woodpecker and Northern Flicker cavities! Old, dead trees are important habitats for many, many birds. Buffleheads have been in North America for a while: the oldest Bufflehead is known from a 2-million-year-old fossil from California!

#sciart #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

The Goldeneye Glam Series completes with the rich browns and grey-white speckles of the female Barrow's Goldeneye plumage! Goldeneyes are known for laying eggs in other ducks' nests, but they also do ducky daycare! Several clutches group together and are cared for by one female: these daycares are called creches!

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #scicomm #sciart #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

The Goldeneye Glam series continues with the Barrow's Goldeneye male breeding plumage! Barrow's Goldeneyes are more common on the coasts but can be seen further inland in western North America. These cavity nesters love nest boxes. Around Lake MΓ½vatn in Iceland their local name is hΓΊsΓΆnd (house duck) and it's considered a source of pride to have a nest box and host these colorful mountain lake ducks!

#sciart #scicomm #BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #GlamorousByNature #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago

It's Winter Duck Season with a Goldeneye Comparison! Male Common Goldeneyes perform elaborate courtship displays in winter & spring with 14 different moves including the β€œhead throw kick:" he bends his head back then thrusts forward & kicks up water with his feet!

#BirdGlamourOfNorthAmerica #GlamorousByNature #birdglamour

Last updated 2 years ago