The Bewick`s Wren - Neighborhood Naturalist
Transcription
The Bewick`s Wren - Neighborhood Naturalist
Nature you can find in town and the nearby countryside Corvallis, Oregon Bewick’s Wren Winter 2014-15 Willamette Valley is linked to important discoveries about bird behavior and songs. In 1969, Donald Kroodsma was a graduate student at Oregon State University. He was in need of a research subject and was inspired by a Bewick’s Wren singing in his Corvallis backyard. For the next two years, he studied Bewick’s Wrens at William L. Finley National Wildlife Refuge. He recorded songs, studied their behavior and tracked their movements. That research inspired a life-long quest to decipher the dynamics of bird song. Today, with the work of Kroodsma and other field researchers, we know much more about bird songs and behavior. he Bewick’s Wren (pronounced like Buick) is a little brown bird with a lot of spirit and a loud, melodious voice. It’s common, and there may be one in your backyard right now, or at least somewhere nearby. T In the mid-20th century, it was assumed that young male songbirds learn their songs only from their fathers. During his Bewick’s Wren research, Kroodsma discovered otherwise. After he fledges, a young male will practice singing, but these utterances are more like awkward babbling compared to his father’s polished performance. His song isn’t perfected until after he establishes a new territory. In the dominance struggle with the local males around his new home, he assimilates their songs. A similar learning pattern is common among many songbirds, such as the Song Sparrow (covered in our Winter 2008 newsletter). We’re lucky to have Bewick’s Wrens. In some eastern states, their numbers have declined or they’ve vanished altogether. I think many people don’t notice them because they live in the brush and they rarely visit bird feeders. But scientists have noticed them, and the Bewick’s Wren in the In most regions, including the Willamette Valley, the Bewick’s Wren population is nonmigratory. Kroodsma determined that this leads to song dialects. Since these birds learn their songs from other local birds, they develop a unique song culture. A human analogy is the development article and illustrations by Don Boucher photography by Lisa Millbank Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 1 The nest cup is built within a cavity or on a concealed ledge. It has a foundation of twigs and is lined with grass, moss, hair and/or feathers. of regional accents. In contrast, migration tends to mix up the population. When these young males learn to sing, they’re exposed to songs from birds who were raised in different regions. The result is a more uniform song culture. In 1997, I was on a mission to learn local bird songs, and the Bewick’s Wren was one of my biggest challenges. My bird sound CDs weren’t much help, and now I know why. Each Bewick’s Wren can have a repertoire of 13 to 20 different songs. If you consider all the regional dialects throughout its wide range, it means that there are far more unique songs than any bird sound collection can cover. So, identifying the Bewick’s Wren song is not like instantly recognizing a song on the radio—it’s just not that simple. The eggs are about ⅝” long (shown here at actual size), and are whitish with scattered dark speckles. A band of spots encircles the larger end. Fortunately for birders learning to identify the Bewick’s Wren by sound, there’s an easier alternative to the song. It commonly makes a sharp, angry-sounding buzz that it uses to scold any creature that seems to threaten or annoy it. It’s easy to upset or annoy one. Unlike birds who dwell in the treetops, a Bewick’s Wren has a vested interest in what’s going on near the ground. If you pursue a singing wren in a thicket, it’s likely to scold you once you get too close. Conversely, a canopy-dwelling bird singing high in a tree may not even acknowledge your existence. Some species have simple songs that they don’t learn, and they sing nearly the same wherever you find them. The group of songbirds that includes flycatchers, phoebes and pewees are born with the ability to sing accurately. When these birds are raised in captivity, away from others of their kind, they sound just like birds in the wild. There have been similar experiments on Bewick’s Wrens raised in captivity. They did sing, so there is an unlearned aspect to their song. While vaguely similar in sound quality to wild wrens, the song patterns of these captive wrens were highly simplified. Although it’s a challenge, birders can learn Bewick’s Wrens by sound. There are no shortcuts. Birders who know their local Bewick’s Wren songs have spent many hours listening to them in the field. I can offer some guidance, however. All notes in the song are precise, clear and loud. There are no weak sounds, no sloppy notes nor any tremolo. The songs are usually musical and I find them to be delightful. In the Willamette Valley, its songs aren’t likely to be confused with our other wren species, but some songs may resemble those of a Song Sparrow. It’s common for the wren to make one or more soft, wheezing notes between each song. Most songs include common, recognizable phrases. There are nuanced aspects of their A Bewick’s Wren spends a considerable amount of its time hunting songs, like timbre and tone, that are difficult to describe in brush, small trees and brambles. Although wrens have a habit of verbally. I know birders, like me, who feel confident that they can identify a Bewick’s Wren by sound alone. cocking their tails, this one’s tail is relaxed. Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 2 Willamette Valley Wrens Bewick’s Wren Pacific Wren The Bewick’s Wren has a bold white eye stripe, pale throat, and a dark cap and back. The Pacific Wren is our darkest and smallest wren. It’s the only wren found deep in shady conifer forests. House Wren The House Wren is smaller and plainer than the Bewick’s, with no “eyebrow.” It’s only here during spring and summer. Marsh Wren Brown Creeper The Marsh Wren looks most like the Bewick’s, but has a dark patch on the back with white stripes. Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 3 The Brown Creeper isn’t a wren, but looks similar. It habitually hitches up tree trunks. It keeps its stiff tail braced against the tree. It has short legs, a white belly and lacks barring on the tail. But there’s a limit to our confidence, since all of us have encountered an unfamiliar song, only to find out it’s a Bewick’s Wren. But as mentioned before, I can always rely on that buzzy scold call. Watch a video featuring Bewick’s Wrens songs at www.neighborhood-naturalist.com Bewick’s Wrens may sing just about any time of year. Not long after the winter solstice, singing gradually becomes more frequent and intense, peaking in spring. Nest building is started by the male in March, and later, the female helps finish it. They build in a cavity, like a tree hole or nest box, and prefer cavities that are near or among brush or small trees. They’ll readily use human buildings like sheds or barns where they can find concealed ledges or hidden cavities. Sometimes they’ll nest in neglected objects like flower pots, cans, boots or junked cars. The nest is a cup made of sticks lined with dead leaves, feathers, moss and/ or hair. An average clutch is about 5-7 eggs. The female incubates the eggs and both parents raise the babies. After they fledge, they remain in their parents’ territory for a few weeks. From mid- to late summer, they set off to find their own territories, which may be between 100 yards to several miles away. And it is then that a young male will perfect his song. Their habitat is nearly any brushy place below 2000 feet, such as forest clearings, along streams and lakes, backyards, parks, hedgerows and forests with open canopies. They eat insects, spiders and similar small prey almost exclusively. They were historically common east of the Mississippi but have been reduced to a few, small remnant populations. One reason for this could be human changes to their habitat. Another factor is competition with House Wrens. House Wrens overtake Bewick’s Wren nests and territories and sometimes destroy Bewick’s Wren nests. The House Wren’s range has been expanding in the east, which has coincided with the Bewick’s Wren’s decline. In the west, the two species coexist without the same impact on the Bewick’s Wren. In fact, Bewick’s Wrens have been expanding their range into new areas, even into places already occupied by House Wrens—so perhaps there are other factors involved in the decline of eastern Bewick’s Wrens. At least there are no indications that our western Bewick’s Wrens are under a significant threat. Which is good, because if you haven’t yet become familiar with this feisty and loud wren, there are plenty to find! ó Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 4 North American Deer Mouse Article and photography by Lisa Millbank, illustrations by Don Boucher A s the stars come out on a January night, shrill squeaks and the rustling of fallen leaves betray the presence of the North American Deer Mouse. Though they look something like House Mice, they’re not closely related. Part of a diverse group of 56 native species in the genus Peromyscus, North American Deer Mice are widespread across the continent, living everywhere from deep forests and subalpine meadows to pastures and coastal plains. There are almost seventy subspecies of this highly variable little mouse. Here in western Oregon, our subspecies (Peromyscus maniculatus rubidus) has darker coloration, large, sensitive ears and a long, semi-prehensile tail that helps it clamber through brushy thickets and climb trees. In eastern Oregon’s arid lands, pale mice with shorter tails scamper across the sagebrush steppes. While making its nightly rounds, a North American Deer Mouse feeds on practically anything edible. In spring and summer, it shows a preference for insects and spiders, along with some leaves and fruit. Fall and winter marks a shift toward fungi (such as truffles and mushrooms) and seeds. If the deer mouse finds quantities of nuts or seeds, it caches the surplus inside a hollow log or a vacant burrow. Deer mice gnaw on shed antlers and bones, possibly for a mineral supplement or to wear down their ever-growing incisors. These mice may play an important role in spreading the spores of fungi and the seeds of many plants, as do many other native rodents. We set up an infrared camera near a Dusky-footed Woodrat’s house one time, hoping to capture videos of the woodrat emerging from its enormous fortress of sticks at A North American Deer Mouse is at home in the dark, dusk. Perhaps the woodrat had met its fate in the claws of with large eyes and sensitive whiskers to help it navigate, a Bobcat or a Great Horned Owl, because it never showed and a keen sense of smell to detect food, predators and other up. Instead, a tiny North American Deer Mouse emerged deer mice. While its nocturnal habits generally protect it from the woodrat’s home. It spent each night industriously from hawks, it’s hunted by a myriad of predators, from collecting hawthorn seeds and returning to cache them owls to Coyotes, Bobcats, Striped and Spotted Skunks, inside its spacious mouse palace. weasels and snakes. Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 5 If it’s not lucky enough to find a vacant woodrat house, a North American Deer Mouse will take advantage of any cozy, sheltered place it can find. A hollow tree, a rock pile, an old bird nest or another animal’s burrow will do, and these mice occasionally reside in homes, cabins and outbuildings. The deer mouse builds its nest with bits of moss, feathers, dried grasses, fur, chewed paper, or other suitable materials. During harsh winter weather, the North American Deer Mouse relies on its food caches, its well-insulated nest and its ability to go into a daily period of torpor to conserve energy. It doesn’t enter a long-term state of hibernation like many rodents do. Instead, during daylight hours, the mouse will allow its body temperature to drop as low as 55°F. It awakens from torpor before nightfall. Groups of This nest, located under some sheet metal, is just the right size for up to fifteen deer mice will huddle together in communal a family of five North American Deer Mice. The mice formed bits nests to stay warm when the weather’s chilly. In early spring, of dried moss into a cup with an inside diameter of about 4 inches. I lifted a piece of sheet metal and found a group of five mice curled up together. Deer Mice and Public Health In western Oregon, North American Deer Mice are the primary carriers of the Sin Nombre hantavirus, which can cause a severe respiratory disease in humans, with a 38% mortality rate. The mice are unaffected by the virus. The risk of contracting hantavirus is very low in western Oregon, with one non-fatal case reported from Linn County in 2012. Hantavirus can be transmitted in several ways, but the primary mode of transmission is through airborne particles of urine, saliva or feces. The risk of infection is highest when people clean outbuildings or attics where deer mice are present. Sweeping causes virus-laden droplets of deer mouse waste to become airborne, and these are inhaled into the lungs. The CDC recommends spraying any rodent-contaminated surfaces with a bleach solution before sweeping to reduce the risk of transmission. North American Deer Mice (and other rodents) are also reservoir hosts of the tick-borne diseases babesiosis, ehrlichiosis and Lyme disease. Protecting the full array of natural predators helps ensure that deer mouse populations don’t grow to a level that will increase the risk to public health. And to put the danger in perspective, the presence of North American Deer Mice is an extremely small risk compared with many commonplace hazards in life, such as driving cars. I don’t worry much about limited contact with wild deer mice in their natural habitat. This baby North American Deer Mouse has been weaned recently and is now on its own. Youngsters have gray fur. Most of the time, though, deer mice are fairly solitary, each with its own territory. A male’s territory may overlap with a female’s, but neither will share its home range with a mouse of the same sex. The mice communicate with one another with scent markings and squeaky calls. When alarmed, they perform a “drum roll” by tapping their forefeet against dry leaves or sticks, making a distinctive buzzing sound. North American Deer Mice can breed almost any time of year in our mild climate, but they’re least likely to do so during the colder months. When a female enters estrus, nearby males will attempt courtship. Researchers studying these mice have learned that the male “sings” a a series of ultrasonic calls that seem to facilitate mating. A normal litter is three to five baby mice, born after a gestation of three to four weeks. In some litters, the young have different fathers. The babies weigh about two grams Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 6 Deer Mouse Predators Coyote Bobcat Northern Saw-whet Owl Gopher Snake at birth, and like all baby mice, they’re naked and pink, with sealed ears and eyes. If the mother feels that the nest site is not secure, she’ll move her young. Very young babies will cling to her nipples as she walks. She carries larger babies in her mouth, one at a time. By the time they’re one month old, they’ll have grown full coats of gray fur, and their mother evicts them from her territory soon after weaning. Within a couple of months, they’ll be having babies of their own. ⁄ – ½" wide 5 16 ¼ – 7⁄16" long These beautiful, abundant little mice usually go unnoticed, like other small, nocturnal creatures. It may take a real effort to find them. I look for sleeping mice under old tarps, boards, sheet metal or slabs of bark. Look for their tiny tracks in fine silt. Or take a moonlit walk in A front foot track in wet silt. It has a distinct palm with three pads the winter woods, and listen as they rummage around in and two heel pads behind it. Like most rodents, a front track registers four toes while a rear track (not shown) registers five. dry leaves. ó Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 7 Similar Mice Pacific Jumping Mouse (Zapus trinotatus) This mouse has an extremely long tail and legs modified for jumping, and lives in streamside thickets. It hibernates, and doesn’t enter houses. It has a strongly contrasting dark stripe down its back. North American Deer Mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) The North American Deer Mouse is the only mouse in our area with a white belly and a bicolored tail. The coat color is somewhat variable. Meadow voles (Microtus sp.) Several species of voles are common throughout our area. They’re plump, short-tailed, hamster-shaped rodents with small, furry ears. This is probably a Gray-tailed Vole (Microtus canicaudus). House Mouse (Mus musculus) The House Mouse is a Eurasian rodent and the most common mouse found inside buildings. Its coat is usually evenly gray, with no contrasting markings. Neighborhood Naturalist promotes interest about nature in mid-Willamette Valley backyards, neighborhoods, and countryside. 2855 NE Lancaster St. Corvallis, OR 97330 Subscribe ©2014 Don Boucher and Lisa Millbank 541-753-7689 [email protected] www.neighborhood-naturalist.com 4 issues per year By mail: $15/year E-mail:free Neighborhood Naturalist, Winter 2014-15 v12 #4 • page 8 printed on recycled paper EVENTS Naturalist Adventures Third Sunday of the Month, 9am. See maps on website February 15, Jackson-Frazier Wetland, Corvallis. Meet at parking lot at north end of NE Lancaster St. March 15 Luckiamute State Natural Area. Meet at North unit. From Spring Hill Drive go north on Buena Vista Rd. for 1.2 miles. Watch for sign for “Luckiamute North” access road. April 19 McDonald Forest. Meet at Peavy Arboretum, please check map at www.neighborhood-naturalist.com/neighborhood-naturalist_events.htm for exact location. May 17 Bald Hill Park, Corvallis. Meet at Oak Creek Dr. parking lot. June 21 Woodpecker Loop and/or Mill Hill, Finley National Wildlife Refuge. Meet at Woodpecker Loop parking area from Finley Refuge Rd. Rain or cold will not prevent us from going out and enjoying nature. Remember to dress for rainy and/or cold weather. May be canceled without notice if road conditions are dangerous. For other events or more information: www.neighborhood-naturalist.com Don Boucher, 541-753-7689, [email protected] Consider a Gift Subscription 4 issues a year • seasonal 8-page • full color Printed copy (by mail)—$15 per year E-mail subscriptions are free e-mail them this link www.neighborhood-naturalist.com make checks payable to: Don Boucher Your name q check here if you’d like to remain anonymous name of subscriber (recipient) address address line 2 citystate zip phone (optional) E-mail pay securely and quickly online with PayPal www.neighborhood-naturalist.com make checks payable to: Don Boucher 2855 NE Lancaster St. Corvallis, OR 97330