THE BIRDS
BREWER BLACKBIRD. Euphagus cyanocephalus
(Wagler)
Field
characters.Slightly smaller than Robin. Female about
one-fourth smaller than male. Male entirely black, the plumage with a
distinct sheen; iris white. Female dull brownish black; iris dark
brown. No contrasted color marks in either sex. Voice: 'Song' of
male a wheezy tseur or tshee; both sexes utter a harsh
tchick.
Occurrence.Common
resident of the lowlands and foothills (Lower and Upper Sonoran zones,
sparingly Transition) on the west slope and in the vicinity of Mono Lake
(Transition) east of the mountains. Nests from Snelling up at least to
the floor of Yosemite Valley (4000 feet altitude) and also in vicinity
of Mono Lake. In summer and fall months ranges upward in mountains
nearly to timber line. In winter abundant in San Joaquin Valley. Forages
largely on meadows and grasslands. Nests singly or in small scattered
colonies, but assembles in large flocks at other seasons of the
year.
The Brewer Blackbird is the most widely ranging
species of blackbird found in the Yosemite region. Although it remains
at the lower levels for nesting, after the young are reared it ranges
widely and is then apt to be found almost anywhere from the plains of
the San Joaquin Valley and flats near Mono Lake up to the highest of the
mountain meadows. The alert and active demeanor of the bird, its
generally fearless nature, and its marked preference for foraging on
open grasslands in plain view, all serve to bring it to notice wherever
it may happen to be present.
The male Brewer Blackbird is without any of the color
adornments which are borne by his red-winged and yellow-headed
relatives. His one distinctive mark is the yellowish white iris which
makes him a "white-eyed blackbird." The female is much duller colored
than her mate and lacks the white of the iris, her eye being dark brown.
The young birds in juvenal dress closely resemble the female parent. At
no stage in their existence do the birds of this species possess any
streaks or contrasted markings of any sort; therefore females and young
of the Brewer are easily distinguished from those of the other
blackbirds.
The voice of this blackbird is very simple. The
male's song is a single whistled note, tseur or tshee.
Adults and young of both sexes utter a call note, tchick,
analogous to the check of the Red-wing. This note is given when
the birds are in flight, as well as when they are walking about on the
ground or perched on logs or fences.
Nesting activities are instituted by the Brewer
Blackbird in April or early May, and in the latter month the young begin
to appear abroad. Near Lagrange, in 1919, broods of young were seen out
of the nest and foraging with their parents on May 8, and in Yosemite
Valley a nest with six small young was found on May 22 of the same year.
In 1915 the season seemed to be slightly later. Our earliest record of
young out of the nest in that year was for May 26, when a fully fledged
young bird was observed at Mount Bullion. On May 24 at Pleasant Valley
and on May 26 at Snelling adult birds were still concerned with young in
the nest. Young birds were seen on Sentinel Meadows in Yosemite Valley
on May 31. A set of 4 eggs was still being incubated in a nest on the
floor of the Valley on July 10. In 1916 at Mono Lake a nest with fresh
eggs was found on May 18. The majority of the broods are probably
brought off in the earlier part of the period here outlined.
Brewer Blackbirds show great diversity in the
location of their nests. At Snelling the birds were using planted hedges
of the osage orange as well as the native oak trees, and near Pleasant
Valley nests were placed in clumps of mistletoe in blue oaks. In
Yosemite Valley nests were seen in small yellow pines and in tangles of
the cultivated blackberry. In a meadow near Mono Lake a nest was found
at the base of a willow clump and only 4 inches above some standing
water. Elsewhere in its range this blackbird often nests at much greater
heights above the ground, even as much as 40 feet; but we found none in
the Yosemite region more than about 15 feet above the ground. The
species never nests in large colonies as do other blackbirds.
Occasionally a few pairs have their nests in rather close proximity, but
quite as often the structures are placed singly.
In Yosemite Valley, on June 18, 1915, a nest of this
species was discovered in a blackberry bush near the Valley
schoolhouse. It was situated in a tangle of blossoming branches and well
concealed among the leaves. Dried blackberry and weed stems comprised
the outer portion of the structure, while the interior was lined with
both black and white horse-hairs. The nest measured 7 inches vertically,
from base to rim, and the inside diameter and depth were each 3-1/2
inches. The base was 28 inches above the ground. Four eggs comprised the
set; and 4 to 6 eggs or young were found in the other nests examined by
us.
The Brewer Blackbird is an ardent defender of its
home during nesting time, and the members of a pair, often assisted by
neighboring pairs, will protest vigorously whenever an animal or person,
either intentionally or innocently, approaches a nest containing eggs or
young. This was well illustrated by an incident which came to our
attention in Yosemite Valley. In a meadow near the Valley schoolhouse,
where blackbirds of this species had been found more or less regularly,
an unusual commotion was noticed at noon of June 18, 1915. Following up
the disturbance it was found that four Brewer Blackbirds were pursuing a
California Gray Squirrel. The birds were hovering over the animal,
snapping their bills a few inches above its head, and scolding in an
angry tone. The squirrel when first seen had been near a clump of
blackberry bushes. From there it went dodging about in the grass of the
open meadow and soon gained the top of a fence post where it perched
with its tail up over its back. The long side hairs on the tail moved
back and forth, either as blown by the wind or moved intentionally by
the animal, and seemingly formed a shield protecting the owner from the
irate birds who were continuing their demonstration. While perched on
the fence the squirrel was seen to be nibbling at some small object, the
nature of which could not be determined by the observer. Soon the animal
leaped down, jumped across a ditch, and scrambled up a tall tree. It is
entirely possible that the squirrel had not molested the blackbirds in
any way but was merely eating some bit of vegetable material picked up
on the ground near the nest. But the gray squirrel has been known to
raid birds' nests at other times and so the concern exhibited by the
adult birds may not have been entirely unwarranted. The day previous a
gray squirrel had been seen pursuing a young blackbird in the same
vicinity. The fledgling had escaped its pursuer only by fluttering
across a pond of water and hiding in some bushes on the opposite side of
the pool.
It is a well-known trait of the Brewer Blackbird to
badger large birds such as hawks and crows. At Pleasant Valley, on May
24, 1915, a Cooper Hawk flying overhead was mobbed by some of these
blackbirds, assisted by several Western Kingbirds. The attack was
similar to that upon the Gray Squirrel as described above.
The male Brewer Blackbird during the nesting season
seems to be as industrious as his mate, at least as regards attending
the young, and in this he differs strikingly from the male Red-wing. As
soon as the young are hatched the two parents share alike in the work of
gathering food for their offspring. It is a common thing to see the
members of a pair walking abreast, with the characteristic swinging
gait, through the grass of a meadow, intently searching for insects or
larvae. And they are remarkably keen in these searches, for rarely does
one of them go far before putting its bill down and pulling something
from the grass. As soon as one bird gains a mouth-load of food material
it makes off to the nest site, to be followed by the mate when it too
has gathered a quota. The birds usually go directly to their nests and
thereby readily reveal the location of the latter.
As soon as the young are fully fledged, which in a
majority of broods means about the first of July, many of the old and
young begin to move up the mountains. The first Brewer Blackbird seen at
Tuolumne Meadows in 1915 was observed on July 10. Four were seen in
Lyell Cañon on July 14, and thereafter they were observed at many
places at high altitudes; for example, in Tioga Pass (9800 feet),
September 28, 1915. Their occupancy of the higher level continues until
fall, as on October 9 (1915) several were seen at Ten Lakes. In 1920 the
species remained in Yosemite Valley at least until October 9 (C. W.
Michael, MS). Meanwhile those of the species which have remained at the
lower levels gradually assemble in flocks. The approach of winter drives
down those individuals which have invaded the mountains and they join
the bands in the lower valleys. By December or January the flocks often
number hundreds and not infrequently thousands of individuals. At
Snelling about one thousand of these birds were seen on the afternoon of
January 2, 1915. They were perching on the telephone wires and in the
cottonwoods near, the river. On January 7, 1915, 1200 were recorded in a
three and a half hour census. "Great clouds" were the words used to
describe their numbers and the notebook entry states that in addition
small flocks were continually passing overhead. Below Lagrange a flock
of fully 500 was seen on December 22, 1915.
East of the Sierras gatherings of the same sort are
to be seen, although they do not involve such large numbers. On
September 13, 1915, fully 200 birds were seen in the vicinity of Silver
Lake and in the adjacent sagebrush. At nightfall the birds flew in and
roosted in the trees near the lake, and in the morning, between 6 and 7
o'clock, they left in small bands, flying down the cañon of Rush
Creek to start anew the daily hunt for food.
During the summer months insects form the principal
item of food for the Brewer Blackbird. The young birds seem to be fed
largely if not exclusively on this sort of diet. The up-mountain
movement of the birds in summer is probably induced by the abundance of
insect food then to be obtained in the alpine meadows. At Silver Lake
many of the blackbirds were catching grasshoppers among the sagebushes.
At Mono Lake, on June 30, 1916, about 50 Brewer Blackbirds were seen
feeding on the "Mono Lake fly," myriads of which were hatching out on
that date. The birds seemed to be seeking certain individual adult
insects, or perhaps the larvae, among the great mass of debris, chiefly
pupa cases, which lay along the lake shore. Below Lagrange on December
22, 1915, a large flock of these birds was seen following a gang plow
and feeding on worms and insects turned up from beneath the surface of
the ground.
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