Showing posts with label desert birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desert birds. Show all posts

Monday, April 2, 2012

Pyrrhuloxia

The Pyrrhuloxia (Cardinalis sinuatus)  is a relative of the more widely-known Northern Cardinal.  A couple of local names are Desert Cardinal and Silver Cardinal.  This is a bird of the scrub deserts of Mexico, western Texas, and the southern parts of Arizona and New Mexico.


The male Pyrrhuloxia look quite a lot like the female Northern Cardinal, but with more rosy red in the face and chest and different beak shape.  The Pyrrhuloxia beak is quite parrot-like.  These close relatives sound much alike, with the Pyrrhuloxia's song being a little higher pitched and clipped. 


These particular photos were taken at San Pedro House in mid-March.  This male is rather dull, not yet having his bright Spring/Summer breeding colours. 

Its name of Pyrrhuloxia - once part of its latin name - comes from Greek terms describing its coloration (πυρρος = pyrrhos = reddish or orange) and the shape of its bill (λοξος = loxos = oblique). (obviously from Wikipedia


These birds prefer scrub desert but also close to water.  The riparian habitat along the San Pedro is ideal.  They are pretty much non-migratory, however in Winter some may wander outside their usual range.  That usual range is also expanding northward, benefitting from agricultural and other human influences (now that's something one doesn't hear very often!).   Visit Wikipedia or All About Birds (links below) or check out your North American bird guide books for range and more about these birds.


The above bird was at San Pedro as well, but along the river.  I found Pyrrhuloxias everywhere I visited in SE Arizona.  They readily come to seed feeders.  Their wild diet is seeds, fruits and insects. 

For more info about this bird species, hear the bird song, etc, visit:

http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/pyrrhuloxia/id
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/pyrrhuloxia/lifehistory
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrrhuloxia

Friday, March 16, 2012

Greater Roadrunner

The Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) is a ground-cuckoo of the Mojave, Chichuahuan and southern Great Basin deserts in the Southwestern US  and Mexico.  In Spanish, it is called "El Correcaminos".   

This bird can reach running speeds of 30 km/hr (18.6 mi/hr).  When running at top speed, it holds its head and tail flat and parallel to the ground, using the long tail as a rudder to keep balance.   Beep Beep!


The Greater Roadrunner is the state bird of New Mexico.  Officially adopted March 16, 1949 under the name "Chaparral Bird".

John James Audubon did not know of its existence and it was not included in the 1840 edition of Birds of America.


I came across this particular bird near a one-lane bridge spanning the San Pedro
River. It was much more intent on searching for a meal than it was about my proximity. I don't think these birds are afraid of much.

The roadrunner diet includes venomous prey items, such as scorpions, spiders, and rattlesnakes. Two birds may cooperate to kill a large snake.  Generally, they eat anything smallish that moves.  Roadrunners will invade feeder areas and grab small birds.  One was observed to leap up from hiding in a dry riverbed and knock down a low-flying White-throated Swift.

Roadrunners are 10-12" high; about 20-24" long; weigh in from 8-24 oz and live 7-8 years.


To warm up after a cold desert night, a roadrunner will turn its back to the sun, fluff its back feathers, and expose skin along its back. This skin is black in order to absorb more solar energy.


The desert-dwelling roadrunner uses salt glands in front of its eyes to excrete excess salt from its blood. Such glands are common in ocean-going birds that can drink seawater. The roadrunner is able to get along without drinking water if it eats food with high enough water content, but it will drink readily if water is available.


Yes,  there is a Lesser Roadrunner - in Mexico.  Visit this site to see it and a photo of a roadrunner running.  http://www.backyardnature.net/mexnat/roadrunn.htm


Information about the Greater Roadrunner from:
http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Greater_Roadrunner/lifehistory/ac
http://www.50states.com/bird/roadrunn.htm
http://www.desertusa.com/road.html