| A SAUCY little bird,
so active and familiar, the Black-Capped Chickadee, is
also recognized as the Black Capped Titmouse, Eastern
Chickadee, and Northern Chickadee. He is found in the
southern half of the eastern United States, north to or
beyond forty degrees, west to eastern Texas, and Indian
Territory. The favorite resorts of the Chickadee are timbered districts, especially in the bottom lands, and where there are red bud. trees, in the soft wood of which it excavates with ease a hollow for its nest. It is often wise enough, however, to select a cavity already made, as the deserted hole of the Downy Woodpecker, a knot hole, or a hollow fence rail. In the winter season it is very familiar, and is seen about door yards and orchards, even in towns, gleaning its food from the kitchen remnants, where the table cloth is shaken, and wherever it may chance to find a kindly hospitality. In an article on "Birds as Protectors of Orchards," Mr. E. H. Forbush says of the Chickadee: "There is no bird that compares with it in destroying the female canker-worm moths and their eggs." He calculated that one Chickadee in one day would destroy 5,550 eggs, and in the twenty-five days in which the canker-worm moths run or crawl up the trees 138,750 eggs. |
Mr. Forbush attracted Chickadees to
one orchard by feeding them in winter, and he says that
in the following summer it was noticed that while trees
in neighboring orchards were seriously damaged by
canker-worms, and to a less degree by tent caterpillars,
those in the orchard which had been frequented by the
Chickadee during the winter and spring were not seriously
infested, and that comparatively few of the worms and
caterpillars were to be found there. His conclusion is
that birds that eat eggs of insects are of the greatest
value to the farmer, as they feed almost entirely on
injurious insects and their eggs, and are present all
winter, where other birds are absent. The tiny nest of the Chickadee is made of all sorts of soft materials, such as wool, fur, feathers, and hair placed in holes in stumps of trees. Six to eight eggs are laid, which are white, thickly sprinkled with warm brown. Mrs. Osgood Wright tells a pretty incident of the Chickadees, thus: "In the winter of 1891-2, when the cold was severe, the snow deep, and the tree trunks often covered with ice, the Chickadees repaired in flocks daily to the kennel of our old dog Colin and fed from his dish, hopping over his back and calling Chickadee, dee, dee, in his face, a proceeding that he never in the least resented, but seemed rather to enjoy it." |