THE BIRDS
WESTERN GOLDEN-CROWNED KINGLET. Regulus satrapa olivaceus
Baird
Field characters.Size
very small, about one-third that of Junco; tail shorter than body. Crown
of head orange and yellow (male) or golden yellow (female) bordered on
either side by black; a white stripe over eye; upper surface of body
chiefly green; under surface whitish; one or two light bars on wings.
(See pl. 10b). Movements quick, wings fluttered often.
Voice: Song, a series of fine and wiry notestse; tse,
tse, tse-tse-tse-tse, tse, tse; call notes similar but in shorter
series.
Occurrence.Moderately
common, at least during summer season, in Canadian Zone (sparingly in
Transition) on west slope of Sierra Nevada. Recorded from Hazel Green
and Chinquapin eastward to slopes of Mount Hoffmann (at 8700 feet
altitude) and to Merced Lake. Usually in Yosemite Valley throughout the
year. Recorded on east side of mountains once, at Walker Lake, September
11, 1915. Inhabits terminal foliage of forest trees, chiefly conifers;
in flocks of 4 to 15, usually about 5, except at nesting season when in
pairs.
The Western Golden-crowned Kinglet gains its name
from the patch of bright color on its head. In the male this is orange
red at the center and yellow on the margins, while in the female it is
only yellow; distinguishment of the sexes is thus possible in the field.
With both sexes the crown is bounded by black on the forehead and
sides, and beneath this on each side is a white stripe running from the
bill over the eye. The bright and handsome head marking in this species
is exposed to view at all times, whereas the 'ruby' crown of its
relative is exhibited only when that bird is excited. There are no
conspicuous differences as to the body plumage in the two kinglets. (See
pl. 10a, b).
The range of the Western Golden-crowned Kinglet lies
chiefly in the Canadian Zone, though some of the birds are usually to be
found in the Transition Zone. In most years a few nest in Yosemite
Valley, although in 1920 the species seemed to be entirely lacking
there. In winter the range is much the same as in summer, there being
little if any retreat from the higher altitudes, in so far as the facts
at our disposal indicate. Numbers are to be found in Yosemite Valley in
December, February, and March, and in all probability the same is true
in the Canadian Zone fir belt above the Valley. The Golden-crowns do
not visit the foothills to any extent; our only record below the
Transition Zone is of one bird at 1700 feet altitude two miles below El
Portal on December 18, 1914. On February 29, 1916, Western
Golden-crowned Kinglets were the most common birds in Yosemite Valley,
25 being noted among the 51 birds all told recorded in a census which
lasted 1-1/2 hours.
Golden-crowned kinglets are to be found in small
flocks from the time the broods appear in early summer until the
beginning of the next nesting season. It seems not unlikely that some of
these may be family groups which have never broken up, as a majority of
the bands number about 5 individuals. Occasionally larger flocks are
encountered; 3 groups observed in Yosemite Valley in the winter of 1914
had 8, 12, and 15 birds, respectively. Sometimes the kinglets have
associated with them other small species such as the Mountain Chickadee
and Sierra Creeper, but more often they remain by themselves.
In the vicinity of Feliciana Mountain in the fall of
1915 Golden-crowned Kinglets were abundant, and on October 29 particular
attention was given to them. Six groups were heard and their numbers, on
the basis of notes alone, were estimated at 2, 2, 2, 1, 2, and 3. Four
more groups were sought out and their numbers ascertained by actual
count, the results being 5, 6, 5, and 5. On this basis, in the fall
months, we should expect to find about five Golden-crowned
Kinglets in each small flock recorded by ear.
These birds forage in both coniferous and
broad-leaved trees, but most of their time is spent in the former. Their
food is obtained on the smaller branches and amid the needles and leaves
and consists of small insects. At all times the birds are active,
hopping lightly this way or that as occasion requires, and often
fluttering the wings as a help, perhaps, in maintaining a certain
position or in holding their balance when stretching out for some titbit
otherwise beyond reach. The members of a flock keep in rather close
proximity though each forages irrespectively of his neighbor.
The voice of the Western Golden-crowned Kinglet is so
simple and weak as to be a decided disappointment to anyone who has
heard and enjoyed the song of the Ruby-crown. The Golden-crown utters
nothing but faint high-pitched lisping notes. The full song is a series
of these beginning slowly, then given more rapidly, with one or two
separated syllables at the end: tse; tse, tse, tse-tse-tse-tse, tse,
tse. This is to be heard in the spring season and at least until the
end of June. During the remainder of the year notes of similar character
are uttered, but in shorter series, or singly. So far as we know this is
the main difference between song and call in the Golden-crowned Kinglet.
It seems rather odd that this bird should be so limited in vocabulary
and weak of voice when its relative, the Ruby-crown, is such an elaborate
and impressive singer.
There is considerable similarity between the notes of
the Golden-crowned Kinglet and the Sierra Creeper. The kinglet's song is
longer and the notes in the middle of it are run together more rapidly
than are those in the creeper's song. In the winter months the
Golden-crown usually utters several notes at a time, whereas the creeper
gives at that season only a single or a two-part call. There are
differences in timbre, but these can be learned only by following up
individual birds of the two species under conditions which allow of
comparison.
Mid-May finds the Golden-crowned Kinglets busy with
nest building, and by June the parents are carrying food for the young.
The latter appear abroad by July if not earlier. At Hazel Green on May
14, 1919, an adult bird (sex not ascertained) was seen about some small
Douglas spruces carrying white downy material in the bill. The bird made
off through two small white firs and thence into a large sugar pine,
where, ascending to a height of 60 feet or more, it disappeared on an
outswaying branch into a dark mass which looked like mistletoe.
In Yosemite Valley on May 18, 1919, a pair of
Golden-crowned Kinglets was seen displaying considerable anxiety over
the presence in a certain yellow pine near Stoneman Bridge of a
Blue-fronted Jay. The kinglets were heard about the tree on several
subsequent days, and finally on May 23 it was seen that they were
actively engaged in nest construction. The site was about 25 feet above
the ground and in a thick bunch of needles near the end of an almost
horizontal branch about 8 feet long. The exact location was ascertained
by watching the female as she carried a tuft of white cottony material
directly to the site in a bee line through two adjacent trees. Several
installments were brought in quick succession. Once the bird had
procured a downy feather which she placed in the nest; but the wind took
it away, whereupon she launched into the air and retrieved the feather,
to replace it more securely in the nest. Only the female in this case
seemed to be carrying material. The nest was, on this date (May 23),
only well started, as the light of the sky could be seen through all
parts of it by the observer stationed on the ground.
On June 12, 1915, Mrs. Joseph Grinnell saw a
Golden-crowned Kinglet in a yellow pine near the old Presidio. The bird
had its bill filled with insects and was evidently engaged in feeding a
brood. Later in the same season, on July 24, one of our party found a
kinglet nest in the same neighborhood, presumably the one used by this
bird, 30 feet above the ground in a yellow pine. Upon being brought to
hand the nest was found to have been torn open by some bird or mammal.
In the substance of the nest the kinglets had included many cocoons of
spiders. When the nest was found, it was swarming with young spiders.
This nest contained some peculiarly marked feathers which proved to be
those of a Saw-whet Owl and these constituted our first and for a long
time our only local record for that species, as noted in another
chapter.
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