THE BIRDS
LAZULI BUNTING. Passerina amoena (Say)
Field
characters.Decidedly smaller than Junco; tail shorter than
body. Sexes different. Male: Head, throat, back, and rump, clear light
blue; breast crossed by a bright tawny band; under parts otherwise
white; tail and wings blackish brown with a white bar (sometimes a
narrower one also) across each wing. Female and young: Dull dark brown
above, buffy and white on under surface, without contrasted markings of
any sort. Voice: Song of male a rather long, high-pitched hurried
utterance, of set character; both sexes give a rather weak call note,
tsip.
Occurrence.Common summer
visitant at lower altitudes on both sides of Sierra Nevada most abundant
in Upper Sonoran Zone on west slope. Recorded from Snelling east to
floor of Yosemite Valley, and to 6 miles east of Coulterville; also at
Mono Lake Post Office. In migration, noted east of Sierran crest at
Grant Lake, Walker Lake, and near Warren Fork of Leevining Creek. Lives
in low growths along ravine bottoms and near streams. Seen in pairs or
singly, the male more often than the female.
The Lazuli Bunting is a common summer species in the
low growths which line the water courses at the lower altitudes on the
west side of the Sierra Nevada. It is found in some numbers at Snelling
and on the floor of Yosemite Valley, and is abundant in the foothills of
the Upper Sonoran Zone. East of the mountains small numbers occur in the
vicinity of Mono Lake.
The male Lazuli Bunting wears a plumage the striking
feature of which is the lapis lazuli or sky blue of his head, throat,
back, and rump. The female and young are merely dull brown and white,
and hence are quite inconspicuous amid the sort of surroundings which
the species affects. The Lazuli Bunting is, in structure, obviously a
sparrow, but in coloration the male reminds one of the bluebirds. The
latter, however, are of larger size, with slender bill, and have no
white bar on the wing. They are, too, very different in voice and
mannerisms. The male blue grosbeak is a larger bird and of much darker
tone of blue than the bunting. It has no buff band across the breast or
white on the belly. The female bunting and grosbeak are to be
distinguished by the larger size and heavier bill in the latter.
This finch is but a summer visitant to the Yosemite
section and is one of the last of the lowland migrant species to arrive
on its nesting grounds. None was seen during visits to El Portal and
Yosemite Valley on April 29 and 30, 1916, so it had probably not yet
arrived in those localities. Our earliest record is for May 12, 1919,
when two individuals, male and female, were encountered separately west
of Coulterville. These were obviously migrants as the species does not
inhabit at nesting time the dry chaparral, such as that in which the two
birds in question were seen. In Yosemite Valley a male was seen on May
17, 1919. At Pleasant Valley, in 1915, the species was present on May
19, and was established in considerable numbers there by May 23. East of
the mountains, in 1916, the Lazuli Bunting was not encountered until May
23 when a single male was recorded.
The fall departure of this bird takes place in
September. One individual was noted at Walker Lake on September 14,
1915, and three at Grant Lake on the same date, while two, singly, were
seen near Warren Fork of Leevining Creek (at 9000 feet, the highest
station at which we saw it), on September 25, 1915. Mr. Joseph Mailliard
states (1918, p. 19) that in Yosemite Valley in 1917 the species became
scarce toward the end of September, and that his latest record was made
on September 28.
During the nesting season Lazuli Buntings live in low
thickets of various kinds, not on wet ground, yet within a hundred yards
or so of streams or cañon beds. The males perch at the tops of
the taller bushes or the smaller trees to sing, but the females remain
closely within the shelter of the vegetation and are far less often
seen. At Pleasant Valley, on May 23, 1915, adults to the number of 24
were recorded during a 4-hour census; singing males were spaced about
100 to 200 yards apart along the Merced River and tributary ravines. At
Snelling 10 were observed amid blackberries and nettles, during a 3-hour
census on May 26, 1915. Four males were noted at El Portal on the
morning of May 31, 1915. The song season in Yosemite lasts through July,
for a male was heard singing in the Valley on July 24 (1915).
The Lazuli Bunting is one of our most persistent
singers. It does not confine its utterances to the morning and early
evening hours, but is heard if anything less often at those times than
during the warmest part of the day. In our memory the song is associated
with the drowsy heat of early afternoon. The song is rather high
pitched, like that of the California Yellow Warbler, yet is not nearly
so shrill. It is rather set in character. Certain syllables may be added
or dropped, but the general theme remains the same, and is uttered over
and over again at intervals of about 12 seconds. One of our
transcriptions of the song is as follows: see-see-see, sweert,
sweert, sweert, zee, see, sweet, zeer, see-see. These notes follow
one another with rapidity; it is really with difficulty that any
syllabic rendering, such as the one just given, can be made.
The nests of the Lazuli Bunting are usually ensconced
in low growths along cañon bottoms in situations near which the
adult birds spend most of their time. A nest found in Yosemite Valley on
June 7, 1915, was at the edge of a meadow near Rocky Point. It was 18
inches above the ground in the crotch of a small chokecherry growing in
a rather sparse stand of the same sort of bush. The nest was rather
thick walled, not tightly woven, and its exterior was composed of dried
and weathered grass and plant stems of the previous season's growth. A
few leaves of the cherry growing on the small branches upon which the
nest had been built were incorporated into the surface of the structure.
The inner portion of this nest was made of fine rounded grass stems,
while the cup was lined with horsehair rather loosely placed. The
outside dimensions were, height 3 inches, diameter 4 inches; the cup was
about 2 inches across and nearly the same in depth. Within were four
pale blue eggs in which incubation had just commenced.
When this nest was approached and the observer was
yet about 25 feet away, the female parent left and flitted off through
the brush, but she soon reappeared and uttered her weak call note. The
male also came to the neighborhood but instead of evincing any concern
during the examination of the nest, uttered his song at regular
intervals from successive perches in the upper foliage of nearby black
oaks.
Another nest, seen at Smith Creek, near Coulterville,
on June 5, 1915, was 4 feet above the ground in a mountain lilac
(Ceanothus integerrimus). It, too, held four eggs.
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