THE BIRDS
AMERICAN DIPPER. Cinclus mexicanus unicolor Bonaparte
Field characters.Body
size nearly that of Robin, but tail very short, about one-half length of
body. Whole plumage appearing dark slate gray; young paler toned
beneath, with whitish throat. No contrasted markings anywhere in adults
save for small white spot on upper eyelid; when perched on rock or bank,
bird bobs body down and up at short intervals. (See pl. 52.)
Voice: Male has an elaborate and varying song; call note a short
zit or bzeet, given singly or in rapid series.
Occurrence.Common in
Transition, Canadian, and Hudsonian zones on both slopes of Sierra
Nevada; resident at least up to Canadian. Recorded in summer from near
Bower Cave and El Portal eastward to vicinity of Williams Butte. In
winter appears down Merced River as far as Goff. Lives along
swift-flowing streams. Solitary.
The Yosemite visitor who has read John Muir's
splendid description of the Water Ouzel in The Mountains of California
will be keen for a first-hand acquaintance with this most interesting
and singular inhabitant of the Sierran creeks and rivers. But even
without an introduction the American Dipper merits more than ordinary
attention. It is the only one of our local species of 'song-birds' of
land dwelling ancestry which has taken to, and has become specially
adapted for, gaining a livelihood in and under the water.
The American Dipper lives along swift-flowing streams
in the Transition, Canadian, and Hudsonian zones at altitudes of from
2000 to 10,000 feet, and it is continuously resident, even under the
rigors of the Sierran winter, up as high as any water remains open.
Streams which afford conditions suitable for trout are likely to be
tenanted by the dipper, especially where there are cascades and where
scattered rocks in mid-stream give appropriate resting places. Smooth
water is less frequented by the bird. The dashing waters surrounding
Happy Isles in the upper part of Yosemite Valley afford optimum
conditions for the species.
Examination of a specimen of the dipper in hand shows
several notable adaptations to an aquatic mode of life. The covering of
feathers on the body is thicker and denser than in either the thrushes
or wrens, to which the dipper is closely related. Also, the ends of the
feathers are somewhat more loosely formed, as in many of the true water
birds, and this seems to help in keeping the plumage from soaking up
water. Each nostril is covered by a movable scale, obviously to exclude
water when need be. The oil gland at the upper base of the tail is about
ten times as large in the dipper as in related land-dwelling birds of
equivalent size, and the bird makes frequent use of the product of the
gland to dress its feathers. The stout but tapered form of the body, the
short tail, the short rounded wings, and the stout legs and feet all
would seem to be of advantage to a bird living along and in swiftly
moving waters. The nictitating membrane or third eyelid is whitish in
the Dipper, and, when drawn backward across the eye, as it is frequently
when the bird is above the water, can be seen at a considerable
distance. This membrane probably is drawn over the eyeball when the bird
is working beneath the surface of the water.
A notable feature in the behavior of the dipper is
the frequent bobbing or squatting movement of its body, down and up;
hence the name. Such a movement is often the first feature of a bird to
catch the observer's eye and it always forms a ready aid in identifying
the species. The rock and cañon wrens have a similar movement;
but the purpose of this dipping in any of these birds is not known. One
dipper seen standing on the margin of the ice in the river in Yosemite
Valley, December 22 (1914), was bobbing upon one leg; the other leg was
presumably drawn up into its plumage.
The dipper forages along the shore, on rocks in the
stream (pl. 52), and on the bottom of the stream beneath the running
water. When hunting along the shore the bird moves by short hops,
turning to one side and the other, and bobbing its hinder parts almost
incessantly. If the shore line be interrupted by a small embayment of
quieter water the bird may swim across on the surface, or it may fly,
holding its feet stretched forward and downward in readiness to alight
when a suitable rock appears or the shore is again reached. When getting
food beneath the surface, the dipper dives directly into the stream,
usually against the current, and then seemingly walks along the bottom,
the wings assisting. As it walks along it searches the crevices between
rocks and the submerged surfaces of boulders where are to be found the
larvae of certain insects which it seizes and devours. Near El Portal,
one day in December, a dipper was seen to plunge head first into the
rushing Merced River, to reappear about twenty seconds later some
fifteen feet up the stream. Upon emerging, a shrug or two of the body
rid the plumage of most of the adhering water. In summer, after the
young leave the nest and before they are able to live independently,
they perch on rocks along the shore while the parents hunt and dive in
search of food for them.
The song of the American Dipper is given throughout
most of the year, perhaps more frequently during the winter time than in
summer. We have heard it many times in the fall and winter months at El
Portal and in Yosemite Valley. Certainly it comes more often to
attention in these seasons when most other birds are quiet and when the
rush of the rivers and booming of the Valley falls are stilled. On
December 22, 1914, several of the birds were playing about the river ice
in Yosemite Valley and giving voice to numerous calls; on March 1, 1916,
while snow was falling heavily in the Valley, a dipper was heard in full
song.
The utterance is not easily transcribed, being varied
as to both theme and rendering. Some passages suggest comparison with
notes of the California Thrasher, some with those of the mockingbird,
and others with certain wren notes; but there is a distinctive quality
to the dipper's song which makes direct comparison misleading. Perhaps
part of the impressiveness of the song comes from the surroundings amid
which it is heard, but certain of its pleasurable features are assuredly
intrinsic.
The call note is short and rather burred, uttered
singly when the dipper is 'jouncing' on a rock, or given in rapid series
when the bird takes to flight. One of our renderings of it is zit,
zit, zit, . . .; another bzeet, or extended to
bz-ze-ze-ze-ze-ze-et. It is quite different in character from the
song, and resembles in general character the call note of the
cañon wren.
The American Dipper nests amid the surroundings which
harbor it throughout the year, placing the structure on a rock close to
or over rushing water where the surface of the nest will be kept wet by
spray. Interiorly the nest is much like that of a cañon wren, but
its outer walls consist of moss which, being continually moistened,
remains green throughout the period of occupancy. The entrance is at
the side, so that the whole structure is oven-like. Occasionally the
nest is placed under a waterfall and only comes to view upon the
cessation of the flow in the autumn. In former years a pair of dippers
nested on the stone abutments to the old bridge near the Sentinel Hotel,
but replacement of the structure by a new one of modern type, with
smooth-finished surfaces, left no place for the birds; in 1919 no
dippers were to be found in that vicinity.
On May 10 (1916) a nest containing five birds about
five days old was seen on a beam under the bridge over Rush Creek,
southeast of Williams Butte. A two-thirds grown youngster was being fed
by an adult on May 26 (1911), in Yosemite Valley near the Sentinel
Hotel. A young dipper already able to live independently was seen on
Indian Cañon creek in Yosemite Valley on July 6 (1915). These
dates indicate a nesting season continuing at least from April until the
end of June.
In winter months dippers appear on the Merced River
below El Portal and then range westward at least to Goff. They are to be
seen readily from passing trains. Whether these are birds forced down
from the ice-bound streams of the high Sierras or are migrants from
farther north is not known.
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