THE BIRDS
TEXAS NIGHTHAWK. Chordeiles acutipennis texensis Lawrence
Field characters.Same as
those for Pacific Nighthawk (which see), but narrow white hand across
long flight feathers (primaries) scarcely more than its own length from
end of wing; in other words this white bar is well beyond middle of wing
rather than close to midway. Voice: A mellow, long-continued,
rolling trill.
Occurrence.Common summer
visitant to Lower Sonoran Zone. Seen in vicinity of Snelling and near
Lagrange. Active during evening and morning twilight and during the
night. Forages close over ground, rarely rising over 50 feet into the
air. Rests during the day on ground in shade of bush or in open gravelly
situation.
The Texas Nighthawk is a summer visitant to the
warmer parts of the southwestern United States and in the Yosemite
section it was observed only at our lowest stations, west of the
foothills. On the evening of May 25, 1915, 3 were noted in flight over
the river bottom near Snelling, the first at 7:15 P.M., well after
sundown. The next evening 2 were abroad at about the same hour,
'hawking' over the alfalfa fields and doubtless in search of the
night-flying insects to be found there.
When we established camp on a gravelly bench beside
the Tuolumne River below Lagrange on the evening of May 5, 1919, it was
evident at once that we had closely invaded the special domain of this
nighthawk, for two pairs were coursing about actively at 6:30 P.M.
(sun-time). The mellow trilling notes of the males were heard off and on
throughout the succeeding night, so the birds must have been active
during most of the hours of darkness. And on the following morning they
were flying around now and then until about 8 o'clock.
It was the height of the nesting season and the birds
were courting actively. A male, distinguished by the larger and whiter
bands on his wings and the more conspicuously white chin patch, was
pursuing a female. The male always followed, but at close range, rarely
more than two lengths behind the female. Occasionally a second male
joined in the pursuit, but evidently with only partial interest, for he
frequently circled off by himself. Less often the two male birds pursued
one another, weaving an irregular course up and down, in and out, but
never rising much if any over 50 feet above the ground. The progress
through the air was easy yet swift, a few strokes of the long wings
sufficing to carry the birds through a long glide. Often as they passed
close over the observer the barred pattern of the under surface was
clearly visible, as was also the broad subterminal band of white on the
lower side of the tail. While the males were on the wing their low
crooning trills were heard almost continually, swelling and diminishing
as the birds approached or departed. When they rested on the ground
between flights they gave the same notes prolonged but also with longer
intervals of quiet. One trill lasted 25 seconds and another fully a
minute. These notes remind one of the quavering call of the Screech Owl
save that they are longer continued, on one key, and uttered in almost
the same cadence throughout.
Each individual nighthawk seemed to have a favorite
resting place to which it returned regularly. This was on the gravel, at
the side of, and partially shaded by, a lupine or other bush. The male
bird of the pair mentioned was seen to return to the neighborhood of
such a spot time and time again, and upon flushing him directly and thus
ascertaining its exact location, the site was found to be marked by an
accumulation of droppings of characteristic formeach a small
spiralled mass composed chiefly of finely triturated insect remains.
Careful scrutiny of the ground within 100
feet of this male bird's 'roost' eventually led to the discovery of a
'nest' with two eggs which were being incubated by the female. The
latter flushed when the observer was about 50 feet away, and then made
off along the ground with a peculiar dragging flight, her wings
fluttering and held downwards from the body, almost touching the ground.
When she flew off, the male, who had been resting in his favorite spot,
set up his crooning trill and continued it with varying loudness for a
full minute, until the female alighted upon the gravel some distance
away. When she again took wing he joined and followed close in her wake
as she flew about. This was at 1:30 P.M., in the heat of the day.
The eggs lay 2 millimeters apart, and with their long
axes at about 30° to each other, evidently just as the body of the
female had fitted over them. They were situated on a little sandy area,
in a tract generally covered with gravel. When not shielded by the
female the eggs were fully exposed to the heat of the sun. The slender
branches of a dead weed, 300 millimeters away to the southwest, formed
the only semblance of a shelter. The bird could flush only to the
northeast although she could easily see all about her for a hundred feet
or more. The eggs were found (on May 6) to be about one-fourth incubated
and one had a slight "stone bruise" which was covered on the inside by
hardened albumen.
As is clearly seen in the illustration (pl.
45b) the coloration of the eggs is strikingly like that of many
of the water-rounded pebbles in the vicinity. In all stages, egg, chick,
and adult, the color scheme of the Texas Nighthawk is to the last degree
protective in charactera feature of evident usefulness to a
species which spends all of its life, except when foraging, on the open
ground.
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