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- Path: sparky!uunet!dziuxsolim.rutgers.edu!pilot.njin.net!birchall
- From: birchall@pilot.njin.net (Shag)
- Newsgroups: rec.birds
- Subject: Re: Dull birds here....
- Message-ID: <Dec.29.12.23.09.1992.1297@pilot.njin.net>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 17:23:09 GMT
- References: <1540001@hpwrce.mayfield.hp.com>
- Organization: Screaming in Digital, the Queensryche Digest
- Lines: 46
-
- tonyz@hpwrce.mayfield.hp.com (Tony Zugates) writes:
-
- >While visiting the East Coast last year, I noticed quite a number of
- >brilliantly colored birds. Red, yellow, blue... they were a joy to watch.
-
- >I don't know much about birds...I watch them with my father after filling
- >the feeder out back in San Diego. But it seems even here in the SF bay
- >area, most birds lack brilliant colors seen in the East. I would imagine
- >that because this region is considered "desert" or arid/semi-arid that
- >the birds here are significantly different in color scheme, feeding habits
- >etc..
-
- >Can anyone explain why? It seems that if birds use brilliant colors for
- >mating etc that we would find them here also since there are large areas
- >of forest etc.. Or is it just that they are lacking in the large uban
- >areas...
-
- Large urban areas would probably figure into it, yes. A quick scan through
- my bird book indicates that there _are_ some very pretty birds on the west
- coast, but you might have to do something else to see them.
-
- - Hummingbirds (which I haven't seen here in NJ) tend to be really neat, I
- think you might want to look into putting up a hummingbird feeder.
- - Common flicker (red-shafted race) - red, grey, brown, black, and a polka-dot
- chest. Unfortunately, not the type of bird you'd see in the city.
- - Red-breasted sapsucker - red head, red+yellow breast. Also not urban.
- - Bluebirds - you've got 2 species of them out there.
- - Yellow Warbler (and a few other yellowish warblers)
- - Yellow-headed Blackbird (look in a marsh)
- - Northern Oriole (Bullock's race) - nice orange and black bird.
- - Western Tanager - red head, yellow body, black wings. Pine woods.
-
- There are a lot of species that are only found in one half of the country,
- and I don't really have an explanation for why there seem to be more colorful
- ones in the east. If the book is to be believed, there seem to be the most
- colorful ones in the _south_, so maybe birds in colder areas (northern and/or
- mountain) aren't as colorful. [Of course there was the Mountain Bluebird,
- which prefers high altitudes, so there goes that theory.]
-
- -Shag
-
- --
- Shag | Operator, ShagNET | Editor of "Screaming in Digital"
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