Cedar Waxwing |
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Scientific Name: Bombycilla cedrorum
Family: Bombycillidae, Waxwings
Description: 6 1/2-8" (17-20 cm). Smaller than a robin. A sleek, crested, brown bird with black mask, yellow tips on tail feathers, and hard red wax-like tips on secondary wing feathers. Almost always seen in flocks.
Habitat: Open woodlands, orchards, and residential areas.
Nesting: 4-6 blue-gray eggs, spotted with dark brown and black, in a bulky cup of twigs and grass placed in a tree in the open.
Range: Breeds from southeastern Alaska east to Newfoundland and south to California, Illinois, and Virginia. Winters from British Columbia, Great Lakes region, and New England southward.
Voice: A thin lisp, tseee.
Discussion: Waxwings spend most of the year in flocks whose movements
may be quite erratic. Hundreds will suddenly appear in an area to exploit
a crop of berries, only to vanish when that crop is exhausted. Since the
young are fed to some extent on small fruits, waxwings tend to nest late
in the summer when there is a good supply of berries. Adults store food
for the young in the crop, a pouch located in the throat, and may regurgitate
as many as 30 choke cherries, one at a time, into the gaping mouths of
the nestlings. In summer insects are also taken, the birds hawking for
them like flycatchers. These social birds have the amusing habit of passing
berries or even apple blossoms from one bird to the next down a long row
sitting on a branch, until one bird eats the food.
Most Images and all information was taken from enature.com