The following piece is about an interesting discovery from last summer. I couldn't resist sharing a little about these birds!
Have you ever had to remove a wasp from the house? While I normally hold nothing against the
industrious little predatory insects, it's frustrating to deal with them when they decide to leave their natural
environment and invade mine, instead.
Fortunately, this particular intruder—which had been flying
erratically around the dining and living rooms before finally retreating to the living room window blinds—turned out to be a relatively
easygoing, harmless mud dauber, not one of the more aggressive red paper wasps
building nests above the front porch.
Whew! Easier to capture and
release.
As I was catching the mud dauber, I happened to notice a
White-eyed Vireo perched in the thorny elaeagnus (also known as thorny olive) shrub
growing next to the window. Then I saw
the nest, a papery, woven pouch about four or five inches deep, suspended from
the crotch of a twig. This was the
closest I had ever been to an active vireo nest—close enough for me to
appreciate the tight construction of insect and spider silk, grasses, bark
strips, and other materials.
The nest, with a wary -- and hot -- White-eyed Vireo! |
2014 Bell's Vireo nest -- Arkansas |
Because the nest was such a deep pouch, I initially had
trouble seeing into it to determine whether eggs or young were present.
Once I began to observe the parents bringing various insects
to the nest site, it was obvious to me that there were nestlings. Caterpillars, small wasps, and beetles were
among the species that the vireos stuffed into the yellow maws of their
offspring. For the first two days, June
15 and 16, the parents made these feeding trips at intervals of approximately
10 to 20 minutes. Feeding seemed to slow down
a bit over the next few days. I
suspected that these nestlings were already a day or two old on the 15th,
and my later observations seem to bear that out. Interestingly, one egg had failed to hatch.
Vireo young and unhatched egg on June 21, 2016 |
The nestlings developed quickly, becoming noticeably larger, sleeker, and more alert each day. The photograph below was taken only a day after the previous one. The infertile egg was still there, too—just hidden under the young birds.
On June 22, the birds were ready to fledge. I missed watching the first one, which
apparently left the nest sometime in the late afternoon. The second bird stayed for a while longer,
but by the end of the day, it, too, had fledged.
June 22, 2016 |
Over the next couple of months, the vireos—both the adults
and the fledglings—chattered, foraged, and flew around the shrubs near the
house. Juvenile White-eyeds have dark
brown eyes during the summer, making it very easy to distinguish them from their
parents. They begin to live up to their
moniker in late fall or winter, when their irises permanently turn white. By that time, they and their parents have
most likely left for their wintering grounds in Central America, the Bahamas,
Bermuda, or, in some cases, the southeastern portions of North America. I'll be watching for them again this year.
Wow--so this was what you were watching last summer! And, by the way, I believe the birds are back: On the morning of February 18, I saw two coming going around the patio, headed to the side where that shrub is.
ReplyDeleteThey're usually not found around here quite this early, but I'll stay alert in case I see them.
ReplyDelete