All Around Town has received its first audio submittals! Listen to a group of Red-winged Blackbirds, a pair of Great Horned Owls, and a House Finch with a lot to say. And winter warblers are here! Find out what birds our members and friends have observed lately in their yards and neighborhoods.
FEEDERWATCH STARTS SOON
Count birds for science this winter! FeederWatch runs from November through April, and you can join anytime during the season. You don't need feeders or a yard, and you don't need to count at home either - pick a spot that you can observe often and follow a schedule that you decide. If you're already looking out your window at birds, this project is a good match for you, and it helps birds. Learn more in our Avocet article and sign up here. Photo: Curt Bianchi
All Around Town
Pine Siskin
Pine Siskin
by Dave Zittin
Every once in a while Pine Siskins appear in our backyard. These birds “irrupt” or move into areas in great numbers where food is abundant. These irruptive flights occur in the winter and are caused by poor availability of food over their northern range.
Pine Siskins are members of the Fringillidae family, which is a widely distributed and diverse group that includes the American Goldfinch, the Hawaiian honeycreepers, and the Neotropical euphonias, and more. Most members of this family are exclusively seed, fruit, and vegetable eaters. Pine Siskins are in the genus Spinus (20 species), which locally includes Lawrence's Goldfinch, the Lesser Goldfinch, and the American Goldfinch.
Like other members of their family, Pine Siskins are mostly vegetarian and feed on seeds of conifer and deciduous trees such as alder, birch, sweet gum (Liquidambar), and maple. They also eat fresh buds of various plants and wild sunflower seeds.
Interestingly, Pine Siskins consume salt from various sources, which suggests that their vegetative diet lacks minerals. Some are killed by road traffic in winter when they consume salt used to melt ice and snow.
Pine Siskins tolerate freezing cold winters provided they obtain sufficient food to maintain their metabolism. Unlike hummingbirds, which lower their metabolism as an adaptation to cold (torpor), Pine Siskins raise their metabolism—as much as five times over baseline—to tolerate temperatures as low as -70 degrees Fahrenheit. This requires a lot of food. Compared with their close relatives, Pine Siskins can store more body fat, which helps them withstand the cold. They also store up to 10% of their body weight in food in their crop, a specialized throat pouch. This storage provides 4-5 hours of additional energy to help them through cold nights. Observations suggest that Pine Siskins feed at night when there is bright moonlight which could help them make it through the cold until sunrise.
At feeders, they attack birds larger than themselves including Purple Finch and House Finch. I have even seen them attack and chase away much larger Evening Grosbeaks in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Their sharply pointed beaks make effective, and I am sure painful, prods to incentivize other birds to get out of the way. If they are unable to open seeds, they will not chase away birds that can crack the shells, expose the seed and provide them with scraps.
Pine Siskins demonstrate strong flocking characteristics throughout the year, even when foraging during the breeding season. When we were in rural Colorado, a large flock descended on a stand of waist-high composite plants and in every imaginable position, much like chickadees.
Pine Siskins can carry and spread salmonella at feeders. It’s important to always sanitize feeders regularly, but when a salmonellosis outbreak occurs, removing feeders to disperse birds is important to reduce the spread of this lethal disease. Read more about salmonellosis outbreaks and on cleaning feeders here: https://scvas.org/backyard-bird-blog/salmonellosis.
Attracting Pine Siskins to Backyards
Any feeder containing seeds, especially hulled seed chips, will work. Pine Siskins especially like nyjer and black sunflower seeds. Composites such as dandelions, and sunflowers will also draw Pine Siskins to your backyard.
Description
The Pine Siskin is a small and streaky finch with a thin, sharply pointed bill and a notched tail. It has two dusky wing bars that fade to white over time. Flight feathers have yellow bases, which are obvious in flight but otherwise mostly concealed. These yellow bases often show up as inconspicuous, thin yellow lines on the wing when they are at rest.
Distribution
The Pine Siskin is a challenging research subject because of its unpredictable migration patterns and the apparent low fidelity to specific breeding areas. Lack of food in the northern part of their range likely triggers irruptions elsewhere. Pine Siskins occur over most of the United States and north into Canada and south into northern Mexico.
Similar Species
Compared with other members of the genus Spinus in Santa Clara County, the Pine Siskin is the only member with conspicuous streaking on its underparts. Its tiny size, very sharp, pointed bill and the yellow base of its flight feathers make it easy to identify. The yellow is conspicuous in flight and sometimes apparent on the wing as thin yellow lines when the bird is at rest. The female House Finch, which can appear similar to the Pine Siskin, has heavy streaking on her underparts but will never have yellow on the wings. The bill of the female House Finch is conical instead of long, narrow and pointed like that of the Pine Siskin.
Explore
Salmonellosis outbreaks and cleaning feeders - Santa Clara Valley Audubon
Safe bird feeding - All About Birds
Cleaning your feeders - Feeder Watch
Songs and calls - All About Birds
Photo showing yellow on flight feathers, heavy streaking and sharp pointed bill.
Photo of flying Pine Siskin showing yellow bases of flight feathers on wings and tail
Distribution map - All About Birds
“Pine Siskins Have Taken Over the Country” - National Audubon
More Backyard Bird Information
View more common Santa Clara County Backyard Birds
Visit our Backyard Birding page
Tell us what you’re seeing in your yard! Send your notes, photos, and sound clips to backyardbirds@scvas.org. We’ll feature your submittals on our website.
Banner Photo: Pine Siskin by Brooke Miller
All Around Town
American Crow
American Crow
BY DAVE ZITTIN
The American Crow has to be the most difficult backyard bird to write about because there have been so many interesting studies on this species. The goal of this article is to introduce you to the American Crow and hopefully make you want to learn more on your own.
When I was a grad student, we spent summers in a small fishing village on the West Coast of Vancouver Island, where we frequently heard a metallic “bong” or “boing” sound similar to that of a rapidly released metal spring. The sound came from within a dense conifer forest, and we spent months looking for its source. Eventually, we found it: a Northwestern Crow. (Recent research has folded the Northwestern Crow into the American Crow, so the Northwestern Crow no longer exists as an independent species.) Crows can mimic sounds of other species including the human voice, so the boing sound we heard could have been a mimic of some unknown sound.
American Crows are highly-adaptable opportunistic feeders consuming seeds, marine, and terrestrial invertebrates, eggs, nestlings of other bird species, turtles, small rodents, fruit, road-kill, garbage, and more. Once, we had American Crows feast on bags of groceries we were transporting by boat. They quickly found our cheese packages, and during the seconds we were away from the boat carrying bags into the house, they excavated the cheese blocks remaining on the boat. This species is extremely intelligent and will sometimes cooperate when it comes to acquiring food. In one case, American Crows were observed taking a fish from a river otter. One pecked at its tail, causing the otter to drop the fish, while the other crow grabbed the fish and flew off to a perch where they both had a feast. American Crows are often mobbed by other bird species who are protecting their eggs and young from this predator. American Crows will eat carrion, but their beaks aren’t strong and sharp enough to pierce the skin of a dead animal, so they must wait for a better-equipped carrion feeder to break the skin. Crows will also carry turtles, nuts, clams, etc. into the air and drop them on hard surfaces to crack them open.
American Crows are social. Family groups of up to 15 individuals stay together, and sibs from previous hatches help raise younger brothers and sisters. Outside the breeding season, large numbers of American Crows come together to roost at night. These roosts can consist of tens of thousands of individuals and can be quite annoying to nearby people.
American Crows damage some crops. It is legal to hunt and kill this species in some areas of the United States. However, evidence suggests that American Crows may benefit corn crops by eating pest insects that overwinter in the corn stubble.
Crows have an uncanny ability to recognize human faces and will distinguish good people from bad (see behavior video in the explore section).
Attracting Crows to Backyards
I don’t go out of my way to attract them, but they do show up infrequently to eat the bird seed mix I spread on the ground.
Description
A large, black bird with a large black beak, black feet, and black legs. Their feathers have a slight iridescent sheen. The body feathers of molting individuals take on a brown coloring. The Latin species name of the American Crow is brachyrhynchos. Brachyrhynchos is Latin for “short-beaked.” This name is confusing to me because many other members of the same genus, Corvus, have beaks that are as short as the American Crow’s. Compared with the Common Raven (same genus), there is no question that the crow’s beak is shorter. Perhaps this is the reason.
Distribution
The American Crow is found throughout the year over much of the United States, along the west coast of North America, and west into the Aleutian Islands. They also occur across much of southern Canada in the breeding season. They will live almost anywhere there is a food source and some trees on which to nest and perch. They tend to avoid deserts.
Similar Species
The Common Raven and the American Crow are similar at first glance. Paying attention to a few differences can help determine which species you are viewing. In flight, Common Ravens exhibit long glides and can soar in thermals. American Crows exhibit short glides and flap their wings more than Common Ravens. They do not soar in thermals. You will often read that the Common Raven’s tail is wedge or diamond-shaped in flight and the American Crow’s tail lacks this diamond shape. Be careful with this difference because as crows land or fly in a slow, steep turn, they splay their tails, giving them a wedged-shaped appearance.
American Crows and Common Ravens make different sounds. Typically the adult Raven makes a guttural “gawk” sound, and the adult American Crow usually makes its trademark “caw” sound. A roosting American Crow bobs its head down then up as it vocalizes and sometimes slightly opens its wings. A vocalizing Common Raven is relatively still. The throat and head of the Common Raven are often fluffed or ruffled; those of the American Crow are usually smooth.
The Fish Crow of the south and eastern parts of the United States looks very much like the American Crow. They can be told apart by sight and sound.
Explore
To explore American Crows in more detail, I recommend the following videos:
Crow “boing” sound from the Urban Nature Enthusiast. Note the strong bobbing when they vocalize.
Excellent video on American Crow behavior from Lesley the Bird Nerd. Note bobbing while vocalizing at 3:11 and 8:53
Common Raven versus American Crow from the Raven Diaries
More Backyard Bird Information
View more common Santa Clara County Backyard Birds
Visit our Backyard Birding page
Tell us what you’re seeing in your yard! Send your notes, photos, and sound clips to backyardbirds@scvas.org. We’ll feature your submittals on our website.
Banner Photo: Vivek Khanzodé
All Around Town
All Around Town
All Around Town
Brown-headed Cowbird
Brown-headed Cowbird
BY DAVE ZITTIN
GeneralIy I find it unsettling to watch a tiny Dark-eyed Junco feeding a much larger immature Brown-headed Cowbird. The junco in our backyard worked overtime feeding the voracious, constantly begging juvenile cowbird.
Brown-headed Cowbirds are brood parasites. Brood parasites lay their eggs in the nests of other birds of the same or a different species. Brown-headed Cowbirds do not build their own nests, so their eggs are always laid in nests of a different species. Bird biologists call this obligate nest parasitism. The bird receiving the nest parasite’s eggs is called a host.
The Brown-headed Cowbird is a member of the genus Molothrus which combines two ancient Greek words: “to struggle” and “to sire”. The Brown-head Cowbird is a member of the family Icteridae which includes, among others, blackbirds, orioles, and meadowlarks.
Female Brown-headed Cowbirds are stealthy and spy on the nests of host species. When the time is right, they sneak into the nest and lay their eggs. They sometimes destroy the host’s eggs. The cowbird eggshell is strong, and their eggs have an incubation period that is usually shorter than that of the host eggs. The young cowbird grows faster than the young of the host bird. Young cowbirds often push eggs and the young of the host species out of the nest to reduce competition for food.
Before Europeans arrived in the Americas, Brown-headed Cowbirds were limited to the grasslands of central North America where they followed buffalo herds that stirred up insects. The diet of Brown-headed Cowbirds is about 70% grain and 30% insects. They parasitize nests on the edges of forests. Early settlers cleared trees which led to forest fragmentation that allowed them to expand their range by providing more open areas, more forest edges, and more potential host species. By the 1980s, the Brown-headed Cowbird had spread over the entire United States, northern Mexico, and southern Canada. They took advantage of new host species that had no experience with their aggressive nest parasitism, and today they are nest parasites of over 240 bird species.
Some host species eject the eggs of nest parasites, bury them by constructing a new nest floor or damage the eggs by breaking their shells. However, some species accept the Brown-headed Cowbird eggs. For some hosts, the situation is dire. A well-studied case is that of the endangered Kirtland's Warbler. Before 1900, Brown-headed Cowbirds had not occurred in the breeding areas of this warbler in Northern Michigan. In 1971, only 200 male Kirtland’s Warblers were known to exist and about 70% of the nests of this warbler were parasitized by cowbirds. Cowbird traps were employed and trapped cowbirds were killed. In 2018, the program was deemed successful, and the traps were removed. There are now estimated to be 2300 breeding Kirtland’s Warbler males and less than 1% of nests are estimated to be parasitized. Today the Cowbird population is greatly reduced in areas where this warbler nests. This is not so much because of trapping, but because forests have been managed to regrow, increasing the ratio of forest area to forest edge. It’s hard to fault the cowbird. It did what it does best and human activities opened the way for it to expand its range. Today it’s recognized that trapping cowbirds and habit restoration have to go hand in hand to rescue an endangered species impacted by nest parasitism from the Brown-headed Cowbird.
Attracting Brown-headed Cowbirds to Backyards
If there are nesting birds in and around your backyard, Brown-headed Cowbirds will likely appear during the breeding season, especially if you have grain feeders. In our backyard, the Brown-headed Cowbird seems to appear a few days per year during the onset of nesting.
Description
Brown-headed Cowbirds are stout blackbirds with a thick, conical bill. Adult males have brown heads and black bodies. Under poor light conditions, the head appears black. Females are light brown with a slightly lighter-colored head, a white throat, and fine streaking on the belly. Juveniles have heavy streaking on their underparts and their backs appear scaly.
Distribution
Brown-headed Cowbirds occur over most of Mexico, the United States, and southern Canada. They are in Santa Clara County throughout the year.
Similar Species
The female Brewer’s Blackbird resembles a female Brown-headed Cowbird. The cowbird has a lighter-colored throat and a shorter, thicker conical bill compared to the longer, thinner bill of the female Brewer’s Blackbird. In general, the thick, conical bill separates the Brown-headed Cowbird from other similarly colored local icterid species. The eye color of the Brown-headed Cowbird is dark, never red or yellow.
Explore
Biology, ecology, and evolution of nest parasitism
Brown-headed Cowbirds
More Backyard Bird Information
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Banner Photo: Brown-headed Cowbird by Teresa Cheng
All Around Town
Bushtit
Bushtit
BY DAVE ZITTIN
Bushtits rarely show up in our backyard, but we have seen them a few times over the years. Bushtits are social. They live in flocks of 10 to 40 individuals. When it’s cold, they huddle at night to keep warm. They feed as a flock, gleaning insects and spiders from trees. When one decides to move to another tree, the others follow in an irregular single file line. They take on every imaginable position when feeding, frequently hanging upside down, much like Chestnut-backed Chickadees.
Bushtits make a lot of noise, but it can be difficult to hear their ethereal calls on windy days. Their incessant calling keeps the group in touch with each other. The calls are low in volume and are high-pitched squeaky “tsips” and “pits”. To my ears, they sometimes sound like small crystals making a faint tinkling sound as if they are a living wind chime.
Bushtits are the only members of the family Aegithalidae, the long-tailed tits, in North America. The family has 4 genera and 11 species and most occur in Eurasia.
Bushtits have an unusual, well-camouflaged nest. It resembles a tube sock, about 1 foot in length, and hangs from live or dead branches. There is a hole near the top that allows entry into a narrow tube that widens near the base of the sock-like nest. The nest construction is constructed from vegetative matter, animal hair, and spider webs which give a nest a stretchy quality. It is well insulated and allows the parents to leave the young alone for longer periods than if the nest were open to the elements.
Bushtits are one of the first birds to be described as having nest helpers. Helpers are not the biological parents but will help the parents build a nest and later help feed the young. Evolutionists study species with helpers to promote understanding of the selective advantages that come to a non-parent in helping a mating pair to raise young. Observation shows that most Bushtit helpers are unmated males or males that have lost a nest. Helpers are not common among west coast Bushtit, but field research has shown almost 40% of active nests in the Chiricahua Mountains of Southeast Arizona have helpers.
Attracting Bushtits to Backyards
Bushtits are not attracted to feeders. They are foliage-gleaners and consume small arthropods found on leaves, petioles, and branches. A brushy or treed yard is the best way to attract Bushtits.
Description
Bushtits are small, mostly gray birds about the size of a Ruby-crowned Kinglet (3-4 inches in length). They have a large head, a rounded body, and a long tail. The beak is small and pointed. The sex of an adult is determined by the color of its iris. Females have irises which are a dull yellow to milky white color. Males have dark irises. Young Bushtits of both sexes have dark eyes. Bushtits in the Pacific region have upper parts that have a brownish wash; those in the interior have white upper parts.
Distribution
Bushtits are found in the western U.S. Their northern limit is in southern British Columbia, and they extend south into Central America. They are not known to migrate long distances, but are constantly in foraging mode, moving from tree to tree searching for food. They do come down from high-altitude areas to avoid the winter cold and during this time they may be found in brushy desert areas.
Similar Species
Nothing looks like a Bushtit in Santa Clara County. In the dry southwest, the young Verdin resembles a Bushtit, but their bills and other features are different. The uniform gray color of the Bushtit, its social nature, and chickadee-like behavior make for easy identification in Santa Clara County.
Explore
More Backyard Bird Information
View more common Santa Clara County Backyard Birds
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Tell us what you’re seeing in your yard! Send your notes, photos, and sound clips to backyardbirds@scvas.org. We’ll feature your submittals on our website.
Banner Photo: Bushtit by Vivek Khanzodé
All Around Town
American Robin
American Robin
by Dave Zittin
We used to see American Robins in our backyard when we had a green lawn. Due to drought conditions, there is no lawn and there are no American Robins.
Robins are members of the thrush family. This family occurs on every continent except Antarctica. Early colonists gave the American Robin its name because it vaguely looks like the unrelated European Robin. The American Robin is the largest thrush in North America. The Western Bluebird and the Hermit Thrush are two other common thrush relatives found in Santa Clara County.
Robins adapt well to humans. Their range has expanded due to human activities including parkland development, domestic planting of ornamentals, orchards, and other agricultural activities which tend to promote fruit or increased invertebrate activity at or near the ground.
Ornithologists once thought that American Robins used their auditory senses to find earthworms, but recent research indicates that they use visual cues. Robins stare at the ground with one eye for long periods to find earthworms emerging from the soil. Green lawns mean wet soil and wet soil means earthworms and other invertebrates.
Green lawns also often mean pesticides. Because the American Robin associates with humans, it has become an important indicator of toxic chemicals in the environment.
Locally, American Robins are probably the number one carrier of West Nile disease. News accounts give the impression that crows and jays are significant carriers, but research indicates that West Nile is more common in the American Robin. And while West Nile is almost always lethal to crows and jays, robins are able to carry the disease with fewer ill effects. A mosquito species spreads the disease to birds and humans. This mosquito takes blood meals from roosting American Robins and robins then serve as an amplification mechanism enabling more mosquitos to acquire the virus and eventually infect people. It’s not the robin’s fault: it’s the virus-mosquito combination that is the culprit.
American Robins have a high mortality rate; only 25% of fledged American Robins make it through November of the year they were hatched. Even though there are records of Robins older than 12 years, research shows that nearly 100% of a year cohort dies in 6 years.
Attracting American Robins to Backyards
Fruiting plants provide an important early source of nutrition for immature robins, which are less experienced at foraging for invertebrates.
Cornell claims that American Robins are attracted to feeders, but I have yet to see one on either our suet feeder or grain feeder.
Description
American Robins are easy to identify. The male has a black head, a yellow bill, a striped throat, a broken white eye ring, and a distinct rufous colored breast. The female looks similar but tends to have duller colors. Immature male American Robins resemble females. Juveniles are heavily spotted to a point of having a mottled appearance and are often confusing to beginning birders.
Distribution
With a few exceptions, American Robins occur everywhere in the U.S. and northern Mexico. They are in Santa Clara County all year. Based on eBird frequency charts, they are least abundant in the county in the summer and fall.
Migration is complicated. Some individuals don’t wander far from their breeding territories. This is especially the case where climates are mild and food is available in the winter. Important factors that influence migration are the availability of ground invertebrates in the spring and edible fruit in the fall and winter. That said, many do migrate from Mexico and the southern United States to the Canadian-U.S. border and north to the Arctic Ocean during summer breeding season.
During fall and winter, robins typically roost in large flocks and spend more time in trees where edible fruit occurs. A few years ago we were birding in Florida in the winter when we came across a large leafless tree in which there were more than 200 American Robins. To date, I have not seen anything like this in Santa Clara County.
Similar Species
Nothing in Santa Clara County looks like an American Robin. The Spotted Towhee has similar rufous coloration on its flanks, but its breast is white, not rufous, and this towhee lacks a white eye ring.
The American Robin’s song contains sounds that swing upward, often sounding like “cheer-up”. They have different calls, but a common one sounds like a high-pitched whinny. The Black-headed Grosbeak’s song is similar but has segments that go down sounding like a child’s sliding whistle, and usually contains distinct short-bursts of trills that the robin lacks.
Explore
The song of the Black-headed Grosbeak - note pitch slides and trills
More Backyard Bird Information
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Banner Photo: American Robin by Hita Bambhania-Modha
All Around Town
Lesser Goldfinch
Lesser Goldfinch
Dave Zittin
Lesser Goldfinches are regular visitors to our backyard. Most of the time this tiny finch is seen in mixed flocks, shoulder-to-shoulder at the seed feeder with Oak Titmouse, Chestnut-backed Chickadee, and their finch relatives, the Pine Siskin and House Finch.
Lesser Goldfinch live almost entirely on seeds. Sunflower and niger seeds are among their favorites. In nature, they feed on flowering plants, especially those in the composite family, and are often seen eating on the common fiddleneck (Amsinckia spp.). Lesser Goldfinches are one of the few species in North America that rear their young exclusively on seeds.
Lesser Goldfinches are acrobats and a lot of fun to watch when feeding in the wild. They are light enough to hang onto wispy flower stalks and can consume seeds upright, upside down, and in any other position you can imagine. When bullied by other birds at our seed feeder, it is not uncommon to see one go upside down on the feeder’s perch wires in order to yield to a more aggressive bird.
The Lesser Goldfinch, Spinus psaltria, is a member of the finch family, Fringillidae, which includes 49 genera and 229 species. In the genus Spinus there are 20 species, four of which occur in the United States: Lawrence’s Goldfinch, Pine Siskin, American Goldfinch, and Lesser Goldfinch. A few species are Eurasian and the rest occur in Latin America.
The Lesser Goldfinch shows different colors over its distribution. In our area, they have yellow-greenish backs. Individuals east of the Rockies and south into Latin America have darker upperparts, with backs becoming blacker the further south one goes into Mexico. In Costa Rica once, I was sure I had a lifer until a local bird expert assured me I was looking at a Lesser Goldfinch. Unlike the American Goldfinch, the colors of the Lesser Goldfinch do not vary much seasonally.
Attracting Lesser Goldfinch to Backyards
The Lesser Goldfinch prefers hanging feeders, but I have observed them feeding off of the ground. They devour sunflower and niger seeds. Provide them with these oily seeds, and they will come.
Description
The Lesser Goldfinch is the smallest of the finches found in Santa Clara County. The male has a black crown that ranges from the upper beak and over the forehead and ends just above the nape (the back of the neck). Both sexes have a white patch at the base of their primaries. When perched, this white base regularly appears as a small white rectangle, but sometimes it is inconspicuous. The adult male also has a white patch at the base of its primaries. When perched, this white base often appears as a small white rectangle, but sometimes it is inconspicuous.
Distribution
Lesser Goldfinches are on the west coast of the U.S. all year. Their northern limit is southwest Washington. They occur in much of Mexico, Central America, and various areas in northern South America. During breeding season some migrate into Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico. The migrations of this species have not been well studied.
Similar Species
The two local species that look somewhat alike are the American Goldfinch and Lawrence’s Goldfinch. The Pine Siskin has a similar body and beak shape, but it has conspicuous streaking on its lower parts, something that the other three Spinus species lack.
The belly of Lawrence’s Goldfinch is gray. The belly of the male Lesser Goldfinch is yellow and pale yellow-green on females and juveniles. Lawrence's Goldfinch has yellow wing bars and the wing bars of the Lesser Goldfinch are white. Also, recall that Lesser Goldfinches have white outer primaries which usually form a visible, small white rectangle on the wing, a feature that the other Spinus species do not have.
The breeding American Goldfinch male has a bright yellow, not olive-yellow back and a black crown ends at the top of the head rather than extending over the head and down to the nape. The females of the Lesser Goldfinch and the American Goldfinch look similar, but the Lesser Goldfinch female has indistinct wing bars and the under-tail coverts are typically yellowish. The American Goldfinch female has darker colored wings with obvious wing bars and its under-tail coverts are white.
Explore
Photos of west coast Lesser Goldfinches:
Male Lesser Goldfinch showing black crown extending onto nape. Note white rectangle on the primaries.
Female Lesser Goldfinch. Note yellow under-tail coverts and white rectangle on the primaries.
Photos of American Goldfinch and Lawrence’s Goldfinch for comparison:
Female American Goldfinch. Note white under-tail coverts, prominent white wing bars and brownish back.
Female Lawrence’s Goldfinch. Note yellow-gray wing bars and yellow-edged primaries.
Male Lawrence’s Goldfinch. Note black face, yellow wing bars, and yellow-edged primaries.
Sounds:
The Lesser Goldfinch has various songs and calls, but here is one call I often hear in Santa Clara County. Note the plaintive whistle quality.
Allaboutbirds.org has additional Lesser Goldfinch sounds.
More Backyard Bird Information
View more common Santa Clara County Backyard Birds
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Read our Notes and Tips from a Backyard Birder series
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Banner Photo: Lesser Goldfinch by Hita Bambhania-Modha
THE GBBC IS HERE!
The Great Backyard Bird Count is happening now, February 18 through 21. Count birds in your yard, neighborhood, or favorite birding spot, and share your observations with scientists. Be part of a global event, join in the fun!
All Around Town
California Scrub-Jay
California Scrub-Jay
by Dave Zittin
California Scrub-Jays are noisy birds and their "weep" call is a common element of the local soundscape, especially in oak and scrub habitats.
California Scrub-Jays are bold and confident around humans. My first close encounter with the California Scrub-Jay occurred many years ago during lunch breaks when I worked in Palo Alto. When we ate outside, employees threw crumbs out to a “resident” California Scrub-Jay, and over time, I got the bird to come closer by reducing the toss distance. After a few weeks, I had the jay landing in my hand and feeding. The two of us saw eye-to-eye: he got food and I got really close looks. I later learned that hand-feeding can be detrimental to some species such as the friendly, but endangered Florida Scrub-Jay. Hand-feeding of this species can cause them to raise young too early in the season. Doing so can reduce the chances of supplying naturally available food during the growing period of the young.
California Scrub-Jays are members of the New World genus Aphelocoma, of which there are seven species. The name translates to “simple hair” which reflects their feather colors that have no stripes or banding. California Scrub-Jays are a member of the family Corvidae, which also includes crows, ravens, magpies, and Clark’s Nutcracker. Frequently, people call the scrub jay a “blue jay”. This is incorrect because scrub jays are in a different genus than the Blue Jay, which is in the genus Cyanocitta. There are two species in this New World genus; the east coast Blue Jay and the Steller's Jay.
California Scrub-Jays are fairly common in my backyard, but they do not show up every day. They eat grain spread on the ground and when there is no feed on the ground, they eat suet from our hanging feeder.
In nature, a primary food source for this species is acorns. California Scrub-Jays possess an outstanding ability to cache food and use spatial memory to find it later, much like their cousins, Clark’s Nutcracker. Of course, they don’t find it all, and there is some speculation that they are instrumental in facilitating the spread of various oak species. California Scrub-Jays also eats insects, reptiles, and small mammals. One time when driving near Loma Prieta Saddle we saw a California Scrub-Jay trying to kill a young rabbit in the middle of the road. Fortunately for the rabbit and to the detriment of the jay, I stopped, which kept the bird away until the bunny could make it across the road and into the brush while I got an earful from the jay.
California Scrub-Jays are aggressive and dangerous to smaller birds such as crowned sparrows, which keep a radius of a few yards when a jay is present.
Some jay species, for example, the Florida Scrub-Jay, are known for cooperative breeding, which is the rearing of young by individuals other than their parents. Western scrub jay species, including the California Scrub-Jay, do not demonstrate cooperative breeding.
The calls made by the California Scrub-Jay are varied, but a common call heard locally is a "weep" with an upswing in pitch.
California Scrub-Jays will vigorously mob bobcats, house cats, squirrels, owls, and anything else they think is a threat to them. The racket from this mobbing is noisy and can sometimes lead a birder to good views of a raptor such as an owl or a hawk.
California Scrub-Jays are excellent at recognizing and tossing the eggs of brood parasites (species that lay their eggs in the nests of non-related species) out of their nest. Researchers have experimentally added cowbird eggs to jay nests and observed they were tossed overboard in short order. This means that brood parasitism is virtually nonexistent for this species.
Attracting California Scrub-Jays to Backyards
Spreading seed on the ground and suet feeders may draw California Scrub-Jays to your backyard. Sometimes they will also perch on our cylindrical, hanging seed feeder, but this is awkward for them and I don’t see this often.
Description
A medium-sized, crestless and long-tailed bird. Adults can be easily recognized by a gray-brown back with otherwise dull blue upper parts. The under parts are dull-whitish. Other features include dusky-colored ear coverts, a prominent whitish supercilium (eyebrow), and two bands of dark-bluish streaks extending onto the sides of the upper breast, almost forming a necklace. The beak, legs, and feet are black. The blue plumage tends to be duller blue in the Pacific Northwest, becoming darker and more purple towards southwestern California. Adults show no pronounced plumage differences between sexes. Juveniles have a lot of sooty gray color and lack the blue on top of their heads.
Distribution
California Scrub-Jays are a common year-round resident of the western coastal states, extending from Northern Washington to the tip of Southern Baja California. They are not migratory but tend to wander from their breeding range in the winter.
Similar Species
Nothing in our area looks like a California Scrub-Jay. Learning to tell their call from the Steller’s Jay takes a little practice. The flatter pitched call of Steller’s Jay often confuses beginning birders, but with a little experience, they are easy to tell apart.
Explore
Juvenile California Scrub-Jay
Typical “weep call” of California Scrub-Jay with pitch upswing
Flatter, screechier call of Steller’s Jay for comparison
More Backyard Bird Information
View more common Santa Clara County Backyard Birds
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Tell us what you’re seeing in your yard! Send your notes, photos, and sound clips to backyardbirds@scvas.org. We’ll feature your submittals on our website.
Banner Photo: California Scrub-Jay by Brooke Miller
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