| ONE of the difficulties of the
scientific ornithologist is to differentiate species.
This bird is often confounded with the Flycatchers, and
for a very good reason, its habits being similar to those
of that family. It is almost a counterpart of the
Kingbird, (See BIRDS, vol. ii, p. 157) possessing a
harsher voice, a stronger flight, and, if possible, a
more combative, pugnacious spirit. It is a summer
resident, is common in the western United States, and
occasionally a straggler far eastward, migrating
southward in winter to Guatemala. Col. Goss, in his history of the birds of Kansas, one of the most comprehensive and valuable books ever published on ornithology, says that the nesting places and eggs of this species are essentially the same as those of the Kingbird. They are brave and audacious in their attacks upon the birds of prey and others intruding upon their nesting grounds. Their combative spirit, however, does not continue beyond the breeding season. They arrive about the first of May, begin laying about the middle of that month, and return south in September. The female is smaller than the male and her plumage is much plainer. Mr. Keyser In Birdland tells an interesting story which illustrates one of the well known characteristics of the Kingbird. |
One
day in spring, he says, I was witness to a
curious incident. A Red-headed Woodpecker had been flying
several times in and out of a hole in a tree where he (or
she) had a nest. At length, when he remained within the
cavity for some minutes, I stepped to the tree and rapped
on the trunk with my cane. The bird bolted like a small
cannon ball from the orifice, wheeled around the tree
with a swiftness that the eye could scarcely follow, and
then dashed up the lane to an orchard a short distance
away. But he had only leaped out of the frying-pan into
the fire. In the orchard he had unconsciously got too
near a Kingbirds nest. The Kingbird swooped toward
him and alighted on his back. The next moment the two
birds, the Kingbird on the Woodpeckers back, went
racing across the meadow like a streak of zigzag
lightning, making a clatter that frightened every echo
from its hiding place. That gamy Flycatcher actually
clung to the Woodpeckers back until he reached the
other end of the meadow. I cannot be sure, but he seemed
to be holding to the Woodpeckers dorsal feathers
with his bill. Then, bantam fellow that he was, he dashed
back to the orchard with a loud chippering of exultation.
Ah, ha! he flung across to the blushing
Woodpecker, stay away the nest time, if you
dont fancy being converted into a beast of
burden? Eggs three to six, usually four, white to creamy white, thinly spotted with purple to dark reddish brown, varying greatly in size. |