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Donkees

(32,437 posts)
3. Photo was posted by 'Manhattan Bird Alert' at Central Park ...
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 07:37 AM
Mar 2024

I have a pair of Northern Flickers visiting the hulled sunflower/peanut feeders, and I do see them during nesting season chasing after the large black ants on the ground near oak trees.

2naSalit

(93,331 posts)
5. Northern Flickers are an interesting bird.
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 08:13 AM
Mar 2024

We have them in Montana too but I noticed when I moved to the west that the Northern Flickers in the east have yellow coloring where the ones in the west have red colored plumage.

Donkees

(32,437 posts)
9. Yes, And in the EAST an invasive berry is turning birds' feathers red
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 08:52 AM
Mar 2024


The mystery of the color-changing woodpecker has been solved.

For years, scientists have been confused as to why up to one-third of yellow-shafted northern flickers (Colaptes auratus auratus), a type of relatively common woodpecker, are spotted sporting reddish and orange plumage. A prime theory was to blame it on western red-shafted flickers, which are similar except for their rouge coloration. Indeed, the two subspecies hybridize, or interbreed, where their ranges meet in the western Great Plains and eastern Rockies, creating a zone of intermediate-hued birds, ranging from orange-y to salmon pink. But these strangely colored flickers were found far from this area, in the Northeast and elsewhere along the eastern Seaboard where the western subspecies hadn't been thought to exist. What explains the colorful enigma?

Jocelyn Hudon, the curator of ornithology at the Royal Alberta Museum, hypothesized that the reddish hue was caused by a pigment found in the berries of two types of invasive shrubs, Tartarian and Morrow's honeysuckle, originally imported from central Asia and Japan. Work by Hudon and others including National Aviary ornithologist Robert Mulvihill and Alan Brush, emeritus professor at the University of Connecticut, showed that when birds known as cedar waxwings eat these berries, their feathers can take on an orange cast caused by pigments found therein. This has also been observed in yellow-breasted chats, a species which can turn a bit orange after feasting on honeysuckle, Mulvihill says.

In a study published October 12 in the journal The Auk, Hudon and colleagues discovered that the red coloration is indeed caused by a pigment known as rhodoxanthin, which is found in these exotic honeysuckle berries. This is a different chemical from the substances which are responsible for the prominent coloration in western red-shafted flickers, known as 4-keto-carotenoids. Rhodoxanthin is biochemically similar to chemicals that create yellow coloration, and it gets laid down in its place; and also seems to interfere with the production of the yellow pigments, Hudon says.

The situation is somewhat ironic, Hudon says, considering the honeysuckles were originally widely introduced in the 1960s to create better wildlife habitat. "A species introduced with good intentions is messing up the coloration of birds," Hudon says
https://www.newsweek.com/invasive-berry-turning-birds-feathers-red-509005







Jeffrey Kauffman

2naSalit

(93,331 posts)
10. That's interesting!
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 08:59 AM
Mar 2024

Didn't know that part or the part about the two subspecies blending where they meet/differentiate geographically.

Walleye

(36,371 posts)
13. That is interesting, the ones I've seen have been yellow-shafted, I'll be on the lookout for the pink-shafted variety
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 10:17 AM
Mar 2024

I don’t think I’ve ever seen berries on the honeysuckle vines around here. They seem native like they were always around, when I was growing up. I have seen birds eating the holly berries. And I saw cedar waxwings this week, I think for the first time ever.

3Hotdogs

(13,540 posts)
7. The Ramble is my favorite spot in the city. Side note --
Mon Mar 18, 2024, 08:38 AM
Mar 2024

all the water in the park is controlled by one faucet.

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