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It’s In Your Nature: Check out our ornately feathered friends

Yes, I know, this writer is really into birds. So maybe I just want to share my passion.

I have seen hundreds of species of birds here in the Times News area in my lifetime. If I would include birds that I have observed to our south and to the west, that number would jump considerably. I’ve never birded anywhere in Central or South America (and I’m sure I won’t have that chance), where maybe really unique birds could be found. But don’t discount our region for having some rather ornately feathered species or some other oddities that might make you think they were tropical. I’ll share a few that I believe may be a bit unusual.

Waterfowl species have such a variety of plumage.

Some of them, like a black duck or gadwall, are rather dull. Female ducks, for the most part, are rather plain in colorations, mostly due in part to their need to remain hidden while nesting. Most male birds are more vividly colored than their mates.

In our common backyard birds, the male cardinal is striking in appearance compared to the female. He does keep that bright plumage all year, and who doesn’t appreciate seeing him perched in an evergreen in your yard with snow covered branches all around him.

The American goldfinch males are brightly colored in yellow feathers (not golden) but they transition to duller feathers in autumn.

The other common local birds, such as blue jays and robins, show very little difference in sexual dichromatism and can hardly be distinguished.

My favorite birding time is from the last week of April until the final week of May. For many of you who don’t hit the forest trails with binoculars in hand, you will miss the variety of colors displayed by the warblers. Blackburnian warblers, parula warblers, redstarts and yellow warblers are gaudy birds but are often overlooked because they are only about 5½ inches in size.

If you have “hit” some of the famous birding areas of Florida you may have seen the bright pink colored roseate spoonbills, which also have the “funky” spoon shaped bill. Or if you’ve ever seen the unusual unique-billed wood stork, you’d know why I would refer to them as “funky.”

I’ve observed many species, and I’ll conclude with the “lifer” I observed this past June in Wyoming, the dusky grouse. I included its photo in an earlier column where it displayed the bare skin area on its neck, and it made a unique sound while tying to entice an unseen female.

Take a look at some of the local birds that I put on my gaudy/funky list. Many of them are waterfowl. You don’t have to travel very far to see them, either. They can be found here in the Times News area, so get out there.

Test Your Outdoor Knowledge: Which of these owl species will be migrating into or through our region now? A. barn owl; B. great horned owl; C. Eastern screech owl; D. saw whet owl.

Last Week’s Trivia Answer: Most adult insects have 5 eyes; 2 large compound eyes and 3 simple eyes.

Email Barry Reed at breed71@gmail.com

Only a mother could love him. Well, actually, the male surf scoter does a good enough job with his funny head colorations and beak shape to win over a female or two. Believe it or not, though they are mostly an ocean bird, surf scoters do show up at Beltzville Lake on one of those days when conditions are right and they appear with rafts of other migrating ducks in spring. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
Another gaudy duck species is the northern shoveller. Shovellers have that distinctive beak, and male shovellers certainly can make my Top 10 list of gaudiness. Most common on the East Coast marshes, they do sometimes venture inland; I’ve seen them at Beltzville Lake and this one at the Phifer’s Ice Dam in Franklin Township. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
Maybe one of the prettiest ducks is the male wood duck, which borders on being considered beautiful. But is it going overboard trying to capture potential females’ attention by being too gaudy? BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
Our wild turkeys are feathered to help them blend in with their surroundings. But come springtime, the gobbler goes all out with his impressive strut and changing colored head and neck area. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
Not to be rivaled by so many other waterfowl species, hooded merganser males’ crests, when erect in breeding time, are gaudy advertisements for any interested females. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
The snowy egrets must think they are teenage fashion divas with their bright yellow feet. Unfortunately, they are seldom seen since they are usually wading in shallow water while looking for their prey. Every now and then a “snowy” shows up at Beltzville Lake. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
Doing its best Jimmy Durante imitations, the common snipe has a “funky” elongated bill used to probe soft mud and pond shores. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS
One bird you probably won’t see here but I needed to present to you, with its unusual “funky” beak, is the wood stork. Southern Florida is their normal habitat choice. BARRY REED/SPECIAL TO THE TIMES NEWS