HOME
CAMERAS
Latest Pictures
Streaming Video
FORUM
Forum Home
FAQ
Show Unread Posts
Show Recent Posts
My Messages
Calendar
Who's Online
Stats
BLOGS
Imprints
FalconWatch
STORES
Our Stores
The Scrape
Rfalconcam Zazzle
Birdorable
ARCHIVES
Photo Archive
Archive viewer
Quick-N-Dirty 30
Video Archive
The Dailies
YouTube
Albums
Banding Day 2008
DONATE
Sponsorship Corner
Corporate Sponsors
Individual Donors
LEARN MORE
Education
History
GVAS and Kodak
Rochester's Falcons
Family Tree
Falcon Information
Introduction
Physical Description
Flight and Hunting
Courtship and Nesting
Falcon Lifecycle
Falcon Habitat
Subspecies and Range
Endangered Species
Peregrine's Future
Falconry History
Falconry Today
More Information
Rochester Weather
Weather Radar Maps
Shaky's Info Page
About Us
Privacy Policy
Contact us
THE FORUM
29-Nov-24, 01:05:38 PM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Note
: The views expressed on this page are not necessarily those of GVAS or Rfalconcam.
Home
Help
Search
Calendar
Login
Register
Rfalconcam Forum
>
Other Nature Related Information
>
General Nature Discussion
>
ABCs of birds - Letter S
Pages:
1
2
[
3
]
4
5
Go Down
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: ABCs of birds - Letter S (Read 30199 times)
0 Members and 4 Guests are viewing this topic.
Annette
Never Leaves 'Puter
Like Count: 147
Offline
Posts: 5,016
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #30 on:
07-Dec-10, 02:16:37 PM »
Snow Bunting
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snow_Bunting
Logged
Aafke
Falcon
Like Count: 715
Offline
Posts: 1,039
Kingfisher
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #31 on:
07-Dec-10, 03:29:45 PM »
S
is for
S
helduck
The Shelduck is a large kind of Duck.
We have lots of them. In Spring there are lots of babies and they create large groups of babies, 2 young female birds take care of them, they call it creches.
a few movies:
love is in the air for the Shelducks, look at the funny headmoves
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyMCnbMlsOs
for a little while out of the water
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w3Qn-q3eT6s
greetings Aafke
Logged
Feed the birds!!!!
anneintoronto
Guest
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #32 on:
07-Dec-10, 08:41:43 PM »
S
is for
Starling
(classified in the phylum Chordata , subphylum Vertebrata, class Aves, order Passeriformes, family Sturnidae) Mynahs, grackles, and (usually) the oxpeckers, are all part of the startling family! Also called the
Common Starling
by those with a grudge!!
Okay, I'll take on the
Not Beloved Starling
. In general, they are not liked, to put it mildly, as they form loud & noisy flocks and are just a plain ol' nuisance, as they drive smaller, more desirable birds away. Why
is
smaller always better...? They are actually Old World birds, which were introduced into New York, in the latter part of the 1800s, thinking that the Starlings would eat away their problem with an infestation of bugs, but, once they were full to the brim of their crops, they flew on and spread efficiently across the entire North American Continent. Gotta love a survivor!! Well, maybe not... Anyway, Starlings have black feathers, which are iridescent and caught in the right light, show lovely yellow dots mixed in with greens and blues. They have a long, yellow bill which is good for debugging and stabbing berries and recognisable short, stubby tails ("Short tail = Starling, Long tail = Grackle" Learned that saying when I just a little squirt!) . At night, they love to pick a house covered with vines, fitting every last tail in and creating such a racket that neighbours have been known to secretly rip the vines down in the dark of night, much to the consternation of the house owner!! Really! Oddly enough, the word to describe a bunch of these characters is a "murmuration" -- why I don't know, as they sure don't murmur... They also are known to form into incredibly huge ribbons doing an amazing dance across the sky! It is quite breath-taking! Check this out:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_9175000/9175793.stm
The strange thing for me was that we had no Starlings all Summer! The wee sparrows were in seventh heaven! Nothing to fight with over food, except the pigeons, and they were faster! But, when I was trying to go to sleep at 5am, it was quiet...too quiet!! No Starlings! I asked for an immediate delivery from Rochester, but none came until a few days ago... It's murder getting anything over our Canada-USA border!! And the duty tax...well, never mind.
I am attaching three photos -- none of which is much good, but you can find Starlings in them, if you get out your magnifying glass!
These trees have been sitting covered with uneaten red berries, until the Starlings finally appeared a few days ago! Now these birds are in ecstaticy! Sorry about the litter -- very windy day and I'd already picked up my 10 pieces of litter for the day... Oh yeah -- the black spots are the Starlings!
Again, the red berries, the black things, which are the Starlings!
This is tricky... In the sky, to the (picture's) right of the obnoxious round sign is a large murmuration of Starlings heading for said sign and the building around it, including the metal staircase. This was at the intersection Yonge and Dundas Streets -- right downtown. There were hundreds and hundreds of them and could be heard over the downtown noises, which is impressive! It was interesting how no one else was interested -- although I stopped several groups of people and pointed the Starlings out... Anyway, get out those magnifying glasses or you'll just have to trust me!
And, just in case you are into architecture, more than birds, here is another definition of Starling:
star·ling
• n. a wooden pile erected with others around or just upstream of a bridge or pier to protect it from the current or floating objects. (The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2006 )
Each to his or her own!
Anne in Toronto
«
Last Edit: 07-Dec-10, 09:17:00 PM by anneintoronto
»
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #33 on:
07-Dec-10, 09:09:27 PM »
Quote from: Aafke on 07-Dec-10, 03:29:45 PM
S
is for
S
helduck
The Shelduck is a large kind of Duck.
Aafke, your photographs and videos are wonderful! Thank you so much for sharing! And for thanks also for devising this ABC of birds!
Gayle
Logged
dale
Falcon
Like Count: 276
Offline
Posts: 1,368
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #34 on:
07-Dec-10, 09:43:13 PM »
Quote from: gayle on 07-Dec-10, 09:09:27 PM
Aafke, your photographs and videos are wonderful! Thank you so much for sharing! And for thanks also for devising this ABC of birds! Gayle
I second that. Thank you again, Aafke. This was a great idea.
Logged
Patti from Kentucky
Tiercel
Like Count: 58
Offline
Posts: 581
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #35 on:
07-Dec-10, 09:54:02 PM »
S is for
S
ulphur-bellied Flycatcher.
This bird is primarily a Mexican/Central American bird, but some of them hang out in the mountains of southeastern Arizona, which is where I saw it.
Here's more info on the bird:
http://identify.whatbird.com/obj/396/overview/Sulphur-bellied_Flycatcher.aspx
Logged
Patti from Kentucky
Tiercel
Like Count: 58
Offline
Posts: 581
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #36 on:
07-Dec-10, 09:59:12 PM »
S is for
s
ucky picture of a
S
carlet Tanager! Taken in Lake Erie this past may, where, like a typical tanager, they like to hang up high in a dark tree canopy, where the camera's flash doesn't reach.
One of my favorite tanager experiences was at a forest in Western Kentucky where we saw a pair in a large oak flying out one a time to catch bees in mid-air!
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #37 on:
07-Dec-10, 09:59:56 PM »
Snow Geese
More on Snow Geese. As Patti pointed out, conservation have worked far too well as populations are now in the millions. The tundra breeding grounds are being degraded and as other species prefer the same areas, those populations are suffering. A big reason for the rebound of snow geese is the good condition of the birds on their winter grounds. In Northern California, for example, in the northern end of the Central Valley the principal agricultural crop is rice. In the fall, rice growers flood the paddies allowing the geese to harvest the gleanings. In addition, wild life reserve areas are planted in crops specifically for birds to harvest.
Bag limits on snow geese have been increased to 20 per day. Even so hunting has not dented the population.
Below are some flocks in Northern California.
There are some amazing photographs from above in the tundra in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land by Subhankar Banarjee.
And to totally blow your mind see the video of 1.2 million snow geese at Squaw Creek National Wild Life Refuge in Missouri:
http://vimeo.com/3856735
Gayle
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #38 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:03:07 PM »
Snow Geese (yet again)
Still more snow geese!
These photographs are of snow geese in the air. By the last one they finally get it together!
Gayle
Logged
Patti from Kentucky
Tiercel
Like Count: 58
Offline
Posts: 581
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #39 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:12:43 PM »
Quote from: gayle on 07-Dec-10, 09:59:56 PM
Snow Geese
More on Snow Geese. As Patti pointed out, conservation have worked far too well as populations are now in the millions. The tundra breeding grounds are being degraded and as other species prefer the same areas, those populations are suffering.
Gayle
I shot several videos and photos that attempted to capture the snow geese phenomenon, and couldn't quite do it...but there were only a few tens of thousands at the refuge I visited, not over a million! I know I should be wringing my hands over the degradation of the breeding grounds (and I am concerned about that), but experiencing thousands of birds swirling in a chaotic, cacophonous mass is one of those top 20 wildlife experiences...
Patti
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #40 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:31:02 PM »
Sandpiper
I found this little beauty in the Pribilof's and made no attempt to further identify it!
Years ago when I first became seriously interested in birds, a friend and I were strolling along Ocean Beach in San Francisco. We came upon a group of small sand pipers flitting in and out with the waves, Confident that I could identify them once I got to my book, I memorized the characteristics. At home, my book showed fifty or so sandpipers. Since then, I eschew labels and enjoy them for their themselves!
Gayle
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #41 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:37:22 PM »
Song sparrow
This is a lovely rendition by Rod McIver, a writer and painter of nature.
Gayle
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #42 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:42:09 PM »
Starling
I'm with you, Anne. Starlings may be nuisance foreigners, but individually, they are nice to look at and watch the iridescence change colors n the sunlight!
Gayle
Logged
gayle
Juvie
Like Count: 82
Offline
Posts: 338
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #43 on:
07-Dec-10, 10:52:25 PM »
Southern White-faced Scops Owl
This is a fully nocturnal small owl of South Africa. A screen shot from safari.tv.
Gayle
«
Last Edit: 07-Dec-10, 10:59:45 PM by gayle
»
Logged
Patti from Kentucky
Tiercel
Like Count: 58
Offline
Posts: 581
Re: ABCs of birds - Letter S
«
Reply #44 on:
07-Dec-10, 11:21:16 PM »
Quote from: gayle on 07-Dec-10, 10:42:09 PM
Starling
I'm with you, Anne. Starlings may be nuisance foreigners, but individually, they are nice to look at and watch the iridescence change colors n the sunlight!
Gayle
Gayle, I'm sure you have a photo of a starling, but isn't this a grackle?
Logged
Pages:
1
2
[
3
]
4
5
Go Up
Print
Rfalconcam Forum
>
Other Nature Related Information
>
General Nature Discussion
>
ABCs of birds - Letter S
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Rochester Falcons
-----------------------------
=> Rochester Falcons News
=> Rfalconcam Website News
=> Rfalconcam Now
=> Falcon Watches
=> Satellite Tracking
=> Rochester Falcon Discussion
=> Rochester Falcon Offspring
=> Rochester Falcons History
-----------------------------
Other Nature Related Information
-----------------------------
=> Falcon Web Cams
=> Raptor Web Cams
=> Other Nature Web Cams
=> General Nature Discussion
-----------------------------
Member Activities
-----------------------------
=> Birthdays
=> Vacations and Holidays
=> Events
=> Puzzles
=> Pets
=> Auctions and Sales for Fundraising
-----------------------------
Support
-----------------------------
=> Frequently Asked Questions
=> Help!
=> Camera Problems
-----------------------------
Resources
-----------------------------
=> Polls
=> Keepers
=> Files
=> Links
-----------------------------
Anything Else
-----------------------------
=> Totally OT
Loading...
Sponsored By
powered by Shakymon