Pine grosbeak male |
For starters, I have noticed larger numbers of the grosbeaks around the feeders this year. It's not exactly the attack of the Redpolls like a couple of years ago but where i might see one or two a couple of times a week, this year I have seen as many as a dozen several times, and there are always a few around the feeders. A friend in Seward said today she has had as many as 200 in her yard, but she has mountain ash with the berries a lot of these birds like.
Pine grosbeak female |
With that in mind a post showed up on the Birds of Alaska Facebook page with two pictures of grosbeaks, one an obvious female with the subdued orange and olive colors and another with those colors but right red on its head. The poster asked why the difference in colors. After no one posted an answer for more than four hours, I chimed in with this:
I have read that juvenile
male grosbeaks are colored like females well into the first winter and begin to
show the red as spring approaches. The one on the right is probably a male
going through puberty. lol
Almost immediately another person posted this:
Photo by Alysse Zimmerman
Immature male Pine grosbeak posted on Facebook. |
You are correct Tim! I
found a picture of a juvenile male on Google
With that issue settled, I thought I would share my thoughts about numbers and posted this:
I am curious. I have seen
more pine grosbeaks at my feeders this year than any time in the past 10 years.
I have also noticed a lot more pictures of them on this page and a lot more
people reporting larger groups of the birds. Anybody have an idea why there are
so many this year? Might it have something to do with the unusual winter?
Higher survival maybe?
Fairly quickly another responder wrote:
I seem to get a handful
each winter but this winter has been greater than normal. Have had large
numbers at our place a half dozen winters in the 35 years we have lived in this
house. My theory is that their natural foods are in short supply during the years
when they are fairly common. There also seems to be more crossbills around this
winter but I see that as the Spruce Trees have a bumper crop of cones. So its
feast or famine depending on the species we are talking about.
I added this:
This
from the Cornellab page: During most of the year, 99% of diet is vegetable
matter, especially buds, seeds, and fruits of spruce, pine, juniper, elm,
maple, mountain ash, apple, and crabapple. It feeds insects and spiders to its
young, though, often mixed with plant foods. It drinks water or eats snow
daily. I thought of the food
supply too, but with low snow cover it seems like there would be plenty for
them.
A bunch of "likes went back and forth after that and then it looks like everybody moved on.
So, I posted this:
The ( Cornell Lab) page mentions
irregular irruptions where flocks will show up pretty far south. Maybe this
year they think they are in British Columbia.
You have to wonder.