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Difference between revisions of "Orchard Oriole" - BirdForum Opus

(add photo of female, id)
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[[Image:Orchard_Oriole.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by steve messick]]
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[[Image:Orchard_Oriole.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by {{user|steve+messick|steve messick}}]]
 
;[[:Category:Icterus|Icterus]] spurius
 
;[[:Category:Icterus|Icterus]] spurius
 
'''Includes: Ochre Oriole'''
 
'''Includes: Ochre Oriole'''
 
==Identification==
 
==Identification==
 
9-10 in.  Chestnut underneath, black head, back, tail, and wings,  thin straight bill.  Females and immatures are olive-green above with two white wing-bars and yellowish underparts; immature males have a dark throat.   
 
9-10 in.  Chestnut underneath, black head, back, tail, and wings,  thin straight bill.  Females and immatures are olive-green above with two white wing-bars and yellowish underparts; immature males have a dark throat.   
 
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====Similar Species====
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[[Image:Female_Orchard_Oriole_by_bobsofpa.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Female. Photo by {{user|bobsofpa|bobsofpa}}<br />Fort DeSoto Park, [[Florida]], [[USA]], April 2008]]
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Female/young [[Hooded Oriole]]s can be quite similar, but notice they have a slimmer, longer, more [[Topography#Beaks|decurved]] bill and a graduated tail.
 
==Distribution==
 
==Distribution==
 
Eastern [[United States]] from eastern [[Montana]] and eastern [[New Mexico]] east and north to southern [[Michigan]], central [[New York]], and [[Massachusetts]] south into central [[Mexico]]; absent from southern [[Florida]]. Recent results suggest that at least part of the US population after having bred in early parts of summer migrates to north-western Mexico where a second round of breeding takes place.  
 
Eastern [[United States]] from eastern [[Montana]] and eastern [[New Mexico]] east and north to southern [[Michigan]], central [[New York]], and [[Massachusetts]] south into central [[Mexico]]; absent from southern [[Florida]]. Recent results suggest that at least part of the US population after having bred in early parts of summer migrates to north-western Mexico where a second round of breeding takes place.  

Revision as of 18:27, 18 March 2012

Photo by steve messick
Icterus spurius

Includes: Ochre Oriole

Identification

9-10 in. Chestnut underneath, black head, back, tail, and wings, thin straight bill. Females and immatures are olive-green above with two white wing-bars and yellowish underparts; immature males have a dark throat.

Similar Species

Female. Photo by bobsofpa
Fort DeSoto Park, Florida, USA, April 2008

Female/young Hooded Orioles can be quite similar, but notice they have a slimmer, longer, more decurved bill and a graduated tail.

Distribution

Eastern United States from eastern Montana and eastern New Mexico east and north to southern Michigan, central New York, and Massachusetts south into central Mexico; absent from southern Florida. Recent results suggest that at least part of the US population after having bred in early parts of summer migrates to north-western Mexico where a second round of breeding takes place.

Winters in Central America south to Colombia and Venezuela. Rare to casual vagrant in western United States.

Taxonomy

Two subspecies accepted:

  • I. s. spurius breeds from southeast Canada to Mexico, winters to Colombia and Venezuela
  • I. s. fuertesi on the Caribbean coast of Mexico

fuertesi is sometimes split as full species, Ochre Oriole or Fuerte's Oriole.

Habitat

Trees along streams, rivers and lakes, and on farms and parklands.

Behaviour

The diet includes insects, berries and nectar; also flower parts.

They build a deep, hanging cup nest, although woven of grass fibres, hidden within dense foliage, often in a dense cluster of trees. The young leave the nest 11 to 14 days after hatching.

References

  1. Clements, James F. 2007. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to October 2007. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801445019
  2. Paper describing migration to second breeding area

Recommended Citation

External Links

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