[Tweeters] Cowbird Flock just passing through?
Steve Hampton
stevechampton at gmail.com
Tue Apr 25 12:42:50 PDT 2023
The cowbird army has arrived. And to think they were fairly rare in western
Washington until the 1950s. They came with habitat fragmentation,
clear-cutting, feedlots, etc. As soon as my last Golden-crowned Sparrows
leave, I stop feeding birds in the summer, not wanting to subsidize
cowbirds, starlings, corvids, and house sparrows.
I think they'll disperse some. With cowbirds, it's the females that
establish territories -- the males just rove around.
On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 8:49 AM Sego Jackson <pond at whidbey.com> wrote:
> Last evening on our tray feeder and below it, on Whidbey Island, we had a
> minimum of 30 cowbirds show up to feed. Previously had only seen a couple
> at a time. Mixed male and females but probably 75% males. My first thought
> was “none of our songbirds have a chance for just their own eggs.” Do any
> of you have thoughts on if a flock like this is just passing through, or if
> it disperses locally, or do they stay in a flock like this locally? Thanks.
>
>
>
> Sego Jackson
>
>
>
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--
Steve Hampton
Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)
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