THE BIRDS
WESTERN CROW. Corvus brachyrhynchos hesperis Ridgway
Field characters.Much
smaller than Red-tailed Hawk; plumage solidly black. Flight in direct
course, with steadily flapping wings. Voice: a loud
caw, uttered singly or repeated, and with different inflections
according to circumstances.
Occurrence.Resident in
the San Joaquin Valley; casual in the nearby foothills. Occasionally
seen in Yosemite Valley. Lives in open country, roosting and nesting
usually in oak trees.
The Western Crow is locally common in many parts of
the San Joaquin Valley, especially along the river bottoms. Small flocks
were seen frequenting hog pastures at Snelling during the winter of
1914-15. On May 26, 1915, two individuals were observed there in
flight overhead and they may have been nesting in the vicinity.
Mr. Donald D. McLean has told us that, in the fall, crows occasionally
visit the vicinity of Smith Creek, east of Coulterville; two were shot
there in 1914. A mounted specimen exhibited in the Park Superintendent's
office in 1919 had been shot in Yosemite Valley at some time within the
previous three years. Mr. C. W. Michael (MS) saw two crows feeding on
Sentinel Meadow on October 24, 1920.
|