THE BIRDS
WESTERN KINGBIRD. Tyrannus verticalis Say
Field characters.Of
rather slender build; somewhat less in bulk than Robin (length 9
inches); head flat-appearing. Upper surface and breast light grayish,
throat paler; belly bright yellow; wings brown; tail black, with
easily-seen white margins; bill blackish. Voice: Loud, harsh,
bickering calls.
Occurrence.Summer
visitant to lowland districts on west side of Sierra Nevada; commonest
in Lower Sonoran Zone. Recorded at Snelling and from near Lagrange
eastward to three miles east of Coulterville and to El Portal; noted in
spring near Williams Butte. Casual in Yosemite Valley during early fall.
Lives in dry open situations, as along roadways and about isolated
trees. In pairs.
As the traveler takes his way over the level plains
of the San Joaquin Valley and into the Sierran foothill belt there is
constantly in evidence one of the conspicuous members of the lowland
avifaunathe Western Kingbird, or Bee Martin. This bird is normally
an inhabitant of open country, like that about Snelling, where it may be
seen commonly along roadsides. In one instance eight were counted along
a single mile of road over the rolling prairie. The bird also penetrates
locally far up into the foothill belt, as at El Portal and at the
McCarthy ranch on the Coulterville road near the head of Bean Creek
(3200 feet). Along the roads in Bear Valley and at Mt. Bullion it was
seen at an average frequency of about one pair every quarter of a mile.
It was observed also at Farrington's near Mono Lake, probably as a
migrant, April 26 and May 18, 1916. In Yosemite Valley one was seen on
the meadow near Rocky Point on August 18, 1920 (C. W. Michael, MS), and
another on El Capitan Meadows, September 2 and 3, 1917 (Mailliard, 1918,
p. 18.)
Kingbirds may often be seen perched on fences or
telephone wires, or in other commanding positions, where, with
constantly turning heads, they watch for passing insects. When one of
these insects ventures near, the waiting bird darts after it, engulfs
the hapless bug with an audible click of the bill, and returns to the
same or a similar perch. Kingbirds are to be seen frequently on the
ground, in grassy situations, preying upon grasshoppers. As might be
expected, a wide variety of insects is included in the bill of fare of
this species.
A notable feature of the kingbird's behavior is its
apparently quarrelsome nature. When a heron, hawk, owl, or crow appears
in the vicinity, this flycatcher deems it an especial duty to launch
forth and harry the larger bird. This it does by flying over the
intruder, uttering intimidating cries, and pecking at the big fellow's
head or back; the performance is usually so successful that the larger
bird shows discomfiture and makes off with increased speed. Near
Coulterville a California Jay was seen on the ground hunting food, and
while there a Western Kingbird came and flew several times in
pendulum-like course over the jay's head, but without seeming to bother
the latter in the least.
If a person happens near a nest of this species
during the breeding season he at once becomes the center of a noisy
demonstration. Both parent birds, and sometimes other pairs, hover over
him, with feet drawn up against the body, tail spread, and wings
beating, often poising for several seconds in one position. All the
while they pour forth a deafening torrent of protests. At such times the
bird's red crown-patch which, under ordinary circumstances, is wholly
concealed, is flashed vividly into view. Occasionally, however, one
comes upon a kingbird that is quiet. At El Portal one was seen to sit on
a telegraph wire for more than ten minutes without once moving or
uttering a note.
The nesting season of the Western Kingbird is chiefly
in May, soon after the birds have arrived from the south. An empty nest
seen at Bagby, May 27, was placed 12 feet above the ground near the top
of a small blue oak on the edge of a low bluff along the railroad track.
Another nest, seen near Snelling, was 20 feet above the ground, also in
a blue oak. The nests are constructed compactly of grasses and
weed-stems and measure 5 to 6 inches across the outside and 2 to 3
inches in depth.
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