THE BIRDS
SIERRA GROUSE. Dendragapus obscurus sierrae Chapman
Field
characters.Fowl-like in appearance; size large (fully five
times bulk of Mountain Quail); general effect of coloration dark bluish
gray; tail almost square-ended, with a light band across tip (often
appearing almost white by contrast). Close view shows the plumage to
have a complex pattern of lighter markings. Flight direct, heavy, with
loudly whirring wings; when descending, often sails with wings set.
Voice: Of male in breeding season a deep, wooden, far-carrying
ventriloquial unt, wunt, wunt', wunt', tu-wunt', wunt, wunt; of
female with young, clucking notes; of both sexes, an alarm note, kuk,
kuk.
Occurrence.Fairly common
resident, chiefly in Canadian Zone and locally in upper Transition;
ranges upward into Hudsonian Zone during late summer. Westernmost
station of occurrence, Merced Grove; easternmost, Williams Butte. Noted
frequently around rim of Yosemite Valley, as at Glacier Point, Artist
Point, and in vicinity of Yosemite Point. Lives in or near the heavier
coniferous trees.
Acquaintance with the Sierra Grouse may begin in
several ways, but rarely does it come in the conventional manner through
which we learn to know most birds. Upon entering the Jeffrey pine and
red fir forests of the Canadian Zone in spring and early summer, one may
often hear a very un-bird-like, dull sodden series of booming notes that
have a ventriloquial quality. These are the courting notes of the male
grouse. Less often, whatever the time of year, the introduction may come
suddenly and much more impressively when, close at hand, a heavy-bodied
'blue grouse' rises quickly from the ground and makes off through the
forest on loudly whirring wings, and showing an expanse of square-ended
gray-banded tail. When a small flock of the birds get up, as they often
do, in rapid succession, or even simultaneously, the aggregate effect is
bewildering, to say the least.
The Sierra Grouse lives in the high country
throughout the year, never migrating to lower levels as does the
Mountain Quail. The thick heavy plumage and legs feathered clear down to
the toes enable the grouse to withstand the cold of the midwinter
months; while their ability to subsist on pine and fir needles assures
them at any season an abundance of food to be easily obtained without
seeking the ground.
During the spring and early summer, the males are in
the habit of taking solitary positions near the tops of pines or firs,
sixty or more feet above the ground, where they stand on horizontal
limbs close to the trunk. They hold such positions continuously for
hours, one day after another, and send forth at intervals their
reverberant booming. With different birds the series of notes comprising
this booming consists of from five to seven syllables, six on an
average. The quality of the sound can be likened to that produced by
beating on a water-logged tub, boont, boont, boont', boont', boont,
boont, crescendo at the first, diminuendo toward the end of the
series. As each note is uttered the tail of the bird is depressed an
inch or twoperhaps an index to the effort involved. The separate
series of notes in two instances were uttered at intervals of 40, 20,
25, 45, 12, 21, and 29 seconds, and again 10, 10, 20, 26, 14, 15, 17,
12, 11, 15, 13, 28, 17, and 11 seconds respectively. These two birds had
been heard booming for a long time before we began to pay special
attention to them; and they continued long after we finished this
record. The ventriloquial quality is discovered when one attempts to
locate the producer, a difficult feat as a rule. The observer may
succeed in locating the proper tree, but is likely to circle it many
times, peering upward with painfully aching neck, and still utterly
failing to locate the avian performer amid the foliage high overhead.
The notes are commonly supposed to be produced by the bird's inflating
and exhausting the glandular air sacs on the sides of the neck. These
sacs are covered by unfeathered yellow, skin, and we think it more
likely that they serve only as resonators, being kept continually
inflated, while the air actually producing the sound passes to and from
the lungs along the regular air passage. It rests with someone gifted
with patience for long continued observation to determine exactly how
the notes are produced.
By early July the new broods of grouse are to be
looked for in the brush-bordered glades of the forests. Two downy young
were noted on the trail to Nevada Falls so early as June 21, 1893 (W. O.
Emerson, 1893, p. 179). When the chicks have been partly reared the
males desert their mates, and, forming in flocks of 6 or 8, work higher
in the mountains. The females remain with, and continue to care for,
their offspring, these family units remaining separate for the time
being. Finally, as the summer wanes, they, too, work up into the
Hudsonian Zone. Thus, while the Mountail Quail go down-hill in
the fall, the grouse go up-hill.
A 'stag' flock of 8 Sierra Grouse was encountered by
the senior author on Warren Fork of Leevining Creek, September 26, 1915,
after a light fall of snow. The birds were in lodgepole pines on a level
bench at 10,500 feet altitude. They flushed one after another with a
startling succession of loud whirs, all taking off in the same general
direction and alighting about four hundred yards away. When followed up
5 were flushed again, 3 from the ground and 2 from the trees.
One of the above mentioned male birds was shot and
its crop was found to contain 1520 needle tips of the lodgepole pine.
The bitten-off ends of needles varied from one-fourth to one inch in
length. The crop also contained a few fragments of very young pistillate
cones. The bill of this bird was smeared with pitch. The crop of an
adult female grouse obtained at Walker Lake held eleven ripe rose hips,
and the gizzard was filled with the hard seeds of the rose, together
with grains of quartz which of course had served to grind the resistant
portions of the bird's food.
We have only one incident to record concerning the
enemies of the Sierra Grouse. While camped at Walker Lake on September
10, 1915, our packer noted a large hawk eating something in a pine tree.
At his approach the hawk flew away, leaving its meal unfinished, and the
packer found the remains of a Sierra Grouse. The victim was an old
female in worn plumage and had just begun to molt. The hawk had eaten
the flesh on one half of the grouse's breast. The identity of this
particular hawk must remain unknown; but we have reason to believe the
Western Goshawk to be an important enemy of the Sierra Grouse.
Tree-climbing carnivores such as the Sierra Pine Marten and Pacific
Fisher probably destroy some grouse each year.
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