By Beth Sullivan
Birds are the most fascinating
creatures. I do not know anyone who has not wished, at some point,
that they could fly like a bird. The more one reads about birds -
their lives, challenges, habits and skills - the more you have to be
in awe of how such small, fragile creatures survive. Obviously
volumes have been written, and courses of studies established, to try
and understand the evolution and life histories of these marvelous
creatures. Flight, feathers, development, survival strategies are
all, to me, miraculous.
The Song Sparrow frequently nests on the ground, hiding under plant material. |
Time to look for nests
At this time of year we are given
the opportunity to look more closely into one aspect of their lives:
their nesting. Leaves are off the trees, hiding places revealed and
there is no issue of disturbing a feathered family.
Almost all birds make a nest. We
have to say almost, because there are species that never make their
own nests, but deposit their eggs into the nests of other birds.
Cuckoos and Cowbirds are the most notable of these.
The Chipping Sparrow lines its nest with soft material, and in my yard it is always dog fur. |
Some birds borrow the nests made by
other birds. Owls have been known to nest on an osprey platform with
material already in place from previous nesters. If the timing is
right, the owls, which start laying eggs in the dead of winter, will
have their young ready to fledge by the time the ospreys return to
claim their platform. Other birds barely scrape out depressions in
the sand of a beach, or lay their eggs on a rocky cliff edge neither
with much additional material.
Terns and Plovers barely scrape a depression in the sand, and the nest is often in harm's way. |
But no matter how or where the birds
create or use a nest, it is all about where to deposit their eggs.
The nests are not to store food; they do not “keep the babies warm”
as little children like to assume. Some nests are more protective
than others in relation to weather. Each species of bird makes nests
characteristic of their species, but always with flourishes of
individuality.
Cup nests are the most well known.
With a deeper center and higher edges, the eggs are somewhat
prevented from rolling out. The smallest bird we have is the Ruby
Throated Hummingbird. Their nests are made as if by a fairy: with
bits of Lichen, pieces of moss, the fuzzy material that comes from
fern fiddleheads as they unfurl in the spring, and it is all wound
together with spider-webs - amazing.
The Eastern Kingbird nest is built in a shrub over water. |
Another cup nest is made by our
American Robin. Every Connecticut school child knows it as our State
Bird and that their nests are created first out of mud, carried in
their beak and fashioned into a cup that hardens and becomes solid
and strong when reinforced by woven plant material. The nest
withstands winds and rains and a brood of restless hatchlings.
Sticky saliva glues a nest
The nest of the Baltimore Oriole is
a creative mystery - a hanging pouch suspended from the end of a
delicate branch often over water, or a road even. It has to be
strong. A close up of the woven structure is nothing short of
amazing, especially considering the birds have only their beaks and
feet to do the weaving, all the while hanging onto the site. Part of
the secret is in the birds’ saliva which acts as a ‘glue’ of
sorts, to reinforce and strengthen.
The weaving done by the Baltimore Oriole is just amazing. |
A Chimney Swift nest is the best
example of this. Using only its special saliva, a Swift brings one
stick at a time into a cavity, often a chimney. One by one he ‘glues’
the sticks to the wall of the chimney and adds them one by one into a
half cup that is firmly adhered and solid.
Chimney Swift nests are held together with their saliva glue. |
Woodpeckers as a group, excavate
holes in trees for their eggs and young. These nests are certainly
more protected from the weather and deter more predators than an open
cup nest. Other cavity nesting birds like Tree Swallows, Bluebirds,
Chickadees, Titmice, and others, cannot make their own holes, so each
year, when the Woodpecker makes a new hole, they leave behind a
perfect cavity for another species.
This is a great time to go out and
look for nests. While birds generally use their nests only once, it
is illegal to remove nests or have them in your possession. Lift
your child to look closer, peek inside the nests to look at soft
lining, often feathers or plant down. Think of how those little
hatchlings quickly turn into young birds eager to stretch their wings
and fly. And think of how the marvel of the nest provided that place
for them to get a safe start.
Photographs by Beth Sullivan.
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