Numerous and Varied Animals (continued)
A BIRD-WATCHERS' PARADISE
Because of its great variety of bird habitats ranging
from luxurious desert vegetation to deep mountain forests, Saguaro
National Monument provides favorable food and shelter for many species
of birds. Some of these reside the year around within a single life
zone, while others move upward in summer, returning to the desert when
the mountaintops are covered with snow. Other species pass through the
monument in the spring and autumn in their annual migrations from
Central America to summer nesting grounds in northern United States or
Canada. Space limitations permit a discussion of only a few of the
species you are most likely to see.
Common year-round desert residents are the THRASHERS
(Toxostoma sp.). Noticeable, noisy, and about as large as a
robin, these energetic inhabitants of the Cactus Forest nest in mesquite
clumps and cholla thickets, and feed on insects and succulent fruits
which make the birds comparatively independent of water. All of the
thrashers are delightful songsters. The CACTUS WREN (Heleodytes
brunneicapillus couesi) is likely to be confused with the thrashers,
although it is somewhat smaller and even more noisy. It also protects
its nest by building in cactus bushes. This wren lives largely on a diet
of insects but about 17 percent of its food is seeds and fruits. One of
the most attractive of the ground birds is the GAMBEL'S QUAIL
(Lophortyx gambeli). There are many coveys of them throughout the
desert within close range of water. In winter, Gambel's quail feed
mainly on seeds, berries, and plant shoots; in summer they augment this
diet with ants, grasshoppers, and other insects. The ROADRUNNER
(Geococcyx californianus), ungainly clown of the desert, is
frequently seen by visitors as it scuttles through the underbrush along
the margins of sandy washes. Not particular as to food, it is often seen
with the tail of a lizard protruding from its beak, and it is known to
eat insects and spiders, snakes, young rodents, small birds, seeds and
fruits. Quite capable of flight, the road runner prefers to trust to its
legs and the security of thickets of creosotebush and cholla, but will
take to its wings if pursued in the open.
Cactus wren nesting in a cholla.
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Two members of the woodpecker family which are
closely associated with the saguaro cactus are the GILA WOODPECKER
(Centurus uropygialis) and the GILDED FLICKER (Colaptes
chrysoides). Both species drill nest holes or pockets in the saguaro
stems, and both are of particular interest to visitors because of their
limited range and specialized habitat. Two other desert birds, both
quite rare and sufficiently similar to be easily confused, are the
crested CARDINAL (Richmondena cardinalis superbus) and the
gray-and-red PYRRHULOXIA (Pyrrhuloxia sinuata). Several species
of doves are found in the monument including the tiny GROUND DOVE
(Chamaepelis passerina pallescens), the slightly larger INCA DOVE
(Scardafella inca), the common MOURNING DOVE (Zenai
duramacroura marginella), and the WHITE-WINGED DOVE (Melopelia
asiatica mearnsi). In addition, the BAND-TAILED PIGEON (Columba
fasciata) is common in the oak-pinyon-pine-fir forests of the Tanque
Verde and Rincon Mountains. Whereas the ground dove and the Inca dove
are all-year desert dwellers, mourning doves are mainly winter
residents. The large white-wings drift in from Mexico in May remaining
long enough to raise families and join other animals in harvesting the
fruits of the saguaro.
Young white-winged doves in their fragile nest on the tip of a
saguaro arm.
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Although seen in the desert the year around, the
canary-voiced HOUSE FINCH (Carpodacus mexicanus frontalis)
apparently is not a permanent resident. Individual birds that winter in
the cactus country move farther north to nest, while those that raise
families among the cholla and mesquite thickets have come north from
their winter homes in Mexico. The tinkling song of the ROCK WREN
(Salpinctes obsoletus) is a familiar sound in the desert in
winter. These gray ground dwellers go farther north or to higher
elevations to nest. Whether those found in the rocky brushlands in the
Tanque Verdes and lower canyons of the Rincons in summer are the same
individuals that inhabit the Cactus Forest in winter is not known.
The PHAINOPEPLA (Phainopepla nitens) is one of
the most noticeable of the desert birds because of its silky crest,
glossy black plumage, and habit of perching on the topmost branch of a
mesquite or palo verde while indulging in flute-like song. Subsisting on
mistletoe berries and other vegetable matter in winter, this permanent
resident changes to a diet of insects, principally ants, during the rest
of the year. Flycatchers are especially abundant and conspicuous during
the spring and early summer when the blossoms of trees, shrubs, and the
larger cactuses attract swarms of insects. Among these birds are the
SAY'S PHOEBE (Sayornis saya), the VERMILION FLYCATCHER
(Pyrocephalus rubinus mexicanus), and the ASH-THROATED FLYCATCHER
(Myiarchus cinerascens). The TEXAS NIGHTHAWK (Chordeiles
acutipennis texensis) lives on a diet of insects which it catches
while on the wing. It is especially noticeable from May to October as it
skims the tops of the tallest saguaros in the dusk of evening. The Texas
nighthawk ranges into the grasslands and chaparral belt of the Tanque
Verdes.
Although many species of birds build their nests among the cactus
branches, some fall prey to the very spines whose protection they
seek.
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Predators are an integral part of the bird
population, one of the most active being the LOGGERHEAD SHRIKE
(WHITE-RUMPED) (Lanius ludovicianus excubitorides). This
medium-sized black-and-gray bird gorges itself on beetles and
grasshoppers when insects are abundant, turning to lizards, rodents, and
small birds at other times. Of the several hawks, the RED-TAILED
(Buteo borealis calurus) is probably the commonest of the large
soaring hawks that live mainly on rodents and reptiles. It builds its
large stick nest in the forks of saguaro arms. Like the shrike and the
SPARROW HAWK (Falco sparverius phalaena), the red-tailed hawk is
found in the grasslands, chaparral, and woodlands as well as in the
desert. Because of their nocturnal habits, owls are probably more
abundant in the monument than is generally believed. In addition to the
GREAT HORNED OWL (Bubo virginianus pallescens) which, like the
red-tailed hawk, feeds principally on rodents and builds cumbersome
nests in saguaro branch forks, the PIGMY OWL (Glaucidium gnoma)
and the tiny ELF OWL (Micropallas whitneyi) are numerous in the
Cactus Forest. Pygmy and elf owls make use of abandoned woodpecker nest
pockets in the saguaro arms, not so much for nests as for dark and
comfortable hiding places during daylight hours, emerging after sunset
to hunt insects and small rodents which are abroad at night. Best known
of the carrion eaters, the TURKEY VULTURE (Cathartes aura teter)
is rarely seen on the ground, but is a common sight, singly or in
groups, circling high in the sky.
One of the noisiest, most quarrelsome, and
mischievous birds is the ULTRAMARINE JAY (Aphelocoma ultramarina
arizonae). It is a permanent resident of the Upper Sonoran Life Zone
where it finds food and shelter among the oaks, pinyons, and junipers of
the chaparral and woodland. In summer it shares this habitat with the
night-flying POOR WILL (Phalaenoptilus nuttalli) which closely
resembles the nighthawk. Shy, secretive, and protectively colored, this
bird is rarely seen, but its plaintive call is a familiar twilight sound
at the middle elevations of the Tanque Verdes and Rincons. Here, too, is
found the rare HARLEQUIN QUAIL (Cyrtonyx montezumae mearnsi)
until recently believed to have died out in Saguaro National Monument.
The RUFUS-SIDED TOWHEE (Pipilo erythophthalmus) lives in the
brushy slopes and canyons of the chaparral. It trills its monotonous
song from the branch of a skunkbush or scratches noisily and
industriously among the fallen leaves beneath an oak.
This young shrike just swallowed a lizardall except the
tail.
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The pine, fir, and aspen forests of the higher
Rincons are rich in bird life in summer, but only a few species remain
the year around. Among the latter is the STELLER'S JAY (Cyanocitta
stelleri neacrolopha) which includes insects in its summer diet but
feeds mainly on acorns and other vegetable material in winter. The
MOUNTAIN CHICKADEE (Penthestes gambeli), and possibly the MEXICAN
CHICKADEE (P. sclaterieidas) are busy among the branches of the
large pines and firs even when snow lies deep on the ground. Nuthatches
also remain the year around. The most spectacular and largest bird known
to inhabit the Rincon Mountains is the native MERRIAM'S TURKEY
(Meleagris gallopavo merriami) which nests and raises its young
among the firs and aspens. It descends in winter, to the pinyon-juniper
woodlands where it feeds on pinyon nuts, acorns, and grass seeds.
During the summer, when insects are plentiful, the
mountain forests are alive with so many species of warblers there is not
space to discuss them here. The MEXICAN JUNCO (Junco phaeonotus
palliatus) that winters in the Upper Sonoran Life Zone, hides its
nest in grass clumps among the firs and aspens. Hummingbirds of several
species pause on vibrating wings to suck nectar from blossoms in the
mountain meadow at Manning Camp. Brightly colored summer visitors such
as the HEPATIC TANAGER (Piranga flava hepatica) and the PAINTED
REDSTART (Setophaga picta) search for insects among the pine
needles or reflect the sunlight as they flutter across open glades in
the forest. The mountaintops are by no means devoid of predators; the
COOPER'S HAWK (Accipiter cooperi), nesting in wooded canyons, is
large enough to lift a grouse or rabbit, but generally preys on small
birds and rodents.
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