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Minnesota Birds
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Minnesota Bird info. 800 species of birds found in North America. (9000 species in the world) 400 of these have been seen in Minnesota. 300 are considered Minnesota ‘regulars.’
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A Few Facts Temperature of a bird is around 105 degrees Fahrenheit
Altricial – born helpless (robins, blue jays, cardinals, eagles) Precocious – born feathered and can walk (ducks, geese, killdeer)
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Mallard Male Female ***Migrates to southern states.
***Males do not help raise ducklings.
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Wood Duck Male Female Young jump from nest box from up to 30 ft.
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Hooded Merganser Male Female
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Canada Goose
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Snow Goose
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Swan
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Common Loon ***State Bird – migrates to Gulf Coast/Mexico.
***Great swimmer, but very poor walking ability on land.
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Ring-necked Pheasant Male Female
***Introduced from China in late 1800s. ***Game bird, numbers vary from year to year.
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Grouse Male Female Has what are referred to as “snowshoes.”
Does an action called drumming.
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Killdeer ***Uses broken-wing impression to draw predators away from nest (on the ground). ***Often found in vacant fields or along railroads.
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Baltimore Oriole Male Female
***Easily attracted to feeders with grape jelly or orange halves. ***One of last species to arrive in summer and first to leave during the fall.
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Mourning Dove ***Tends to mate for life (7-10 years).
***Name comes from ‘mourning’ cooing sound.
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Barn Swallow Male Female
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Hummingbird Male Female
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Great Horned Owl
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Screech Owl 9 inches in size.
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Bald Eagle ***Uses same nest every year by adding sticks, next can be up to 1,000 pounds. ***National symbol/bird.
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Sparrow Hawk (Kestrel)
Male Female
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Red-tailed Hawk ***Female same as male, often larger.
***Often seen on telephone poles looking for prey.
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American Goldfinch Male Female ***Small percentage are non-migrators.
***Roller coaster flight pattern. Known as ‘Wild Canary’.
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White-breasted Nuthatch
***Hops headfirst down tree trunks looking for insects moving up trunk.
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Downy Woodpecker Male Female
Almost identical to the Hairy Woodpecker, but smaller (6 inches in size). Also has a shorter bill in comparison to the Hairy Woodpecker.
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Hairy Woodpecker Male Female
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Pileated Woodpecker
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Black-capped Chickadee
***Often first species to find new bird feeders. ***Needs to feed every day, even during the worst winter storms.
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Blue Jay ***Screams like a hawk to scatter birds at bird feeders.
***Known as ‘alarm of the forest’ screams at intruders.
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Dark-eyed Junco Male Female
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Purple Finch Male Female
***Similar to House finch, very difficult to tell them apart. ***Long-term resident of MN, as opposed to recent arrival of House Finches.
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House Finch ***Visits feeders in small flocks.
***Relatively new bird to MN, introduced in New York in the 1940s.
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Northern Cardinal Male Female
***Non-migrator, very territorial during spring. ***During winter, will flock together in search of food.
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American Robin Male Female
***Small percentage are non-migrators, stay in low swampy areas looking for leftover insect eggs/berries.
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Red-Winged Blackbird Male Female
***Nest usually over shallow water (cattails). ***Males return first to gain/defend territory.
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Eastern Bluebird Male Female
***Nearly eliminated from MN (lack of nesting cavities). ***Often seen on edges of fields looking for insects.
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American Crow ***Collect and store bright/shiny objects.
***Rarely hit by cars, though they feed on roadkill.
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House Sparrow Male Female
***Introduced from Europe in Central Park in 1850, now found through North America.
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House Wren ***Sing from dawn till dusk during mating season.
***Small bird – 5 inches.
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Common Grackle ***Usually nests/flocks in colonies of up to 75 pairs.
***Females generally duller and smaller.
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Wild Turkey ***Once eliminated from MN, re-introduced in the 1960s and 1970s. ***Missed becoming the national bird by one vote.
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Rock Dove ***Also known as the domestic pigeon.
***Introduced from Europe by early settlers.
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Purple Martin Male Female
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