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Mon, 16 Jul 2007 08:49:41 -0400 |
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For the last few years, pileated woodpeckers would bring their young to our
suet feeders for a quick snack. We have noticed that the male pileated has
always been feeding a young male, and likewise, the adult female feeds the
young female. Several questions arise: is this characteristic of the
species or just the pair that claim my yard as territory? Also, do
pileated just have two young all the time? And how did they manage to get
one male and one female offspring for several years running, since we have
not seen two young following an adult? This is assuming the adults are a
pair: the males and females do NOT come in at the same time.
We put in a waterfall with stones in the reservoir to make the water
shallow and were rewarded with a female scarlet tanager sharing a bath with
a robin. We have had scarlet tanagers on migration, but this was the first
year they have spent the summer.
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