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Baltimore Oriole |
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Scientific Name: Icterus galbula
Family: Icteridae, Blackbirds and Orioles
Description: 7-8 1/2" (18-22 cm). Male has black head, back, wings, and tail; orange breast, rump, and shoulder patch. Female olive-brown, with dull yellow-orange underparts and 2 dull white wing bars.
Habitat: Deciduous woodlands and shade trees. Before the tree's decline, the American elm was a favorite nesting site for the eastern bird.
Nesting: 4-6 grayish eggs, spotted and scrawled with dark brown and black. Nest a well-woven pendant bag of plant fibers, bark, and string, suspended from the tip of a branch.
Range: Breeds from Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia south through Dakotas south to eastern Texas, Louisiana, and Virginia. Winters in Florida and southern Atlantic coast.
Voice: Clear and flute-like whistled single or double notes in short, distinct phrases with much individual variation.
Discussion: Recently the Baltimore Oriole was combined with the
western Bullock's Oriole as a single species, the Northern Oriole. When
trees were planted on the Great Plains, the two forms extended their ranges
and met. Despite the differences in their appearance, it was found that
they interbred, and that most birds in the central plains were hybrids,
so the birds were combined into a single species. Now, it seems that in
some places the birds are choosing mates of their own type, and they are
considered separate species again.
Most Images and all information was taken from enature.com