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Black-capped chickadee

The black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) is a small, nonmigratory, North American songbird that lives in deciduous and mixed forests. It is a passerine bird in the tit family, the Paridae. It is the state bird of Massachusetts and Maine in the United States, and the provincial bird of New Brunswick in Canada. It is well known for its ability to lower its body temperature during cold winter nights, its good spatial memory to relocate the caches where it stores food, and its boldness near humans (sometimes feeding from the hand).

Black-capped chickadee
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Paridae
Genus: Poecile
Species:
P. atricapillus
Binomial name
Poecile atricapillus
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Range of Poecile atricapillus
Synonyms

Parus atricapillus Linnaeus, 1766

The black-capped chickadee is widely distributed throughout North America, ranging from the northern United States to southern Canada and all the way up to Alaska and Yukon. It has a distinct appearance characterized by its black cap and "bib" with white sides. The black-capped chickadee is a social bird and forms flocks in the winter that include other bird species. The bird is well known for its vocalizations, including its fee-bee call and its chick-a-dee-dee-dee call, from which it derives its name.

Taxonomy edit

In 1760, French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson included a description of the black-capped chickadee in his Ornithologie based on a specimen collected in Canada. He used the French name La mésange a tête noire de Canada and the Latin Parus Canadensis Atricapillus.[2] Although Brisson coined Latin names, these do not conform to the binomial system and are not recognised by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature.[3] When in 1766, Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the 12th edition, he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson.[3] One of these was the black-capped chickadee. Linnaeus included a brief description, coined the binomial name Parus atricapillus and cited Brisson's work.[4] The type location was subsequently restricted to the site of Quebec in Canada.[5] The specific epithet atricapillus is Latin for "black-haired" from ater "black" and capillus "hair of the head".[6]

Though originally placed in the genus Parus with most other tits, mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data and morphology suggest that separating Poecile more adequately expresses these birds' relationships.[7] The genus Poecile had been introduced by German naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup in 1829.[8] Molecular phylogenetic studies have shown that the black-capped chickadee is sister to the mountain chickadee (Poecile gambeli).[9][10]

At one time, the black-capped chickadee was considered by some to be conspecific with the willow tit of Eurasia, due to their very similar appearance. This is reflected in an older version of the Peterson Field Guide for the Birds of Britain and Europe, which states "N Am. Black-Capped Chickadee" as an alternate name for the willow tit. In fact, the willow tit, black-capped chickadee, marsh tit, and Carolina chickadee are all very similar to one another in appearance.[citation needed] Nine subspecies are recognised.[11]

Description edit

 
Black-capped chickadee clinging to a wire

The black-capped chickadee has a black cap and "bib" with white sides to the face. Its underparts are white with rusty brown on the flanks. Its back is gray and the tail is normally slate gray. This bird has a short dark beak of 8–9.5 mm (0.31–0.37 in), short, rounded wings 63.5–67.5 mm (2.50–2.66 in), a tarsus of 16–17 mm (0.63–0.67 in), and a long tail at 58–63 mm (2.3–2.5 in).[12] Its total body length is 12–15 cm (4.7–5.9 in), wingspan is 16–21 cm (6.3–8.3 in), and body mass is 9–14 g (0.32–0.49 oz).[13] Sexes look alike, but males are slightly larger and longer than females.

Although range can generally be used to separate them, the black-capped chickadee is very similar in appearance to the Carolina chickadee. The black-capped is larger on average, but this cannot be used reliably for identification. The most obvious difference between the two is in the wing feathers. In the black-capped chickadee, the wing feathers have white edges that are larger and more conspicuous than those of the Carolina chickadee. The latter is often mistaken for black-capped chickadees with feather dystrophy, which sometimes affects the appearance of the primary feathers making them look slimmer, a phenomenon caused by illnesses such as fatty liver disease in malnourished birds.

Overall, the Carolina appears slightly paler in color, whereas the flanks of the black-capped can appear to have a trace of off-yellow or rusty coloration. Also, the black-capped generally has a more "ragged" looking black bib, whereas the bib of the Carolina has a more smooth edge. These subtle features are often even more vague in populations around where the black-capped and Carolina overlap in range (possibly the result of hybrids) and the two cannot always be distinguished as two species. The two species were formerly thought to be easily distinguished by call, but they often learn each other's vocalizations where their ranges overlap (their point of overlap is a narrow band that runs along the east-central United States, with the black-capped chickadee to the north). A bird located near the zone of overlap that sings both songs, or sings "odd-sounding" songs, cannot be positively identified solely by voice in the field.[14]

Vocalization edit

 
Black-capped chickadee, Iona Beach Regional Park

The vocalizations of the black-capped chickadee are highly complex.[15] Thirteen distinct types of vocalizations have been classified, many of which are complex and can communicate different types of information. Chickadees' complex vocalizations are likely an evolutionary adaptation to their habitat: they live and feed in dense vegetation, and even when the flock is close together, individual birds tend to be out of each other's visual range.

One of the most recognizable sounds produced, particularly by the males, is the two-note fee-bee song. It is a simple, clear whistle of two notes, identical in rhythm, the first roughly a whole-step above the second.[16] The range of frequencies at which this song starts from varies; the complete frequency range spans roughly 1 kHz. Within this range, male chickadees can sing at various tones. The average starting frequency is around 4000 Hz. A decrease of roughly 200 Hz occurs when the first note (fee) is sung, and then another decrease around 400 Hz takes place between the end of fee and the beginning of bee. In spite of these multiple changes in frequency, though, anybody listening to the song only hears a pure, high-frequency tone.[17] This is distinguished from the Carolina chickadee's four-note call fee-bee fee-bay; the lower notes are nearly identical but the higher fee notes are omitted, making the black-capped song like bee bay. The males sing the song only in relative isolation from other chickadees (including their mates). In late summer, some young birds sing only a single note.[18]

A recent study found that female fee-bee songs have both similarities with and differences from male fee-bee songs.[19][20] Both sexes sometimes make a faint version of the song, and this appears to be used when feeding young.[18] When males are out in the wild, they sing this song to defend their territory or attract a mate.[19] There have also been a few accounts of females singing a version of the fee-bee song when out alone in the wild.[20] The black-capped chickadee is a monomorphic species, so distinguishing males and females based solely on their singing is difficult. A bioacoustic analysis performed on both male and female songs revealed that male fee-bee singing fluctuates more, and the absolute amplitude of both sexes is the same. The fee glissando varies far more in females, which makes identifying each sex easier. The purpose of the female fee-bee song is unknown.[20]

The most familiar call is the chick-a-dee-dee-dee, which gave this bird its name. This simple-sounding call is astonishingly complex.[18] Scientists have been studying it since the mid-1970s. It is produced by both males and females year-round.[17] It has been observed to consist of up to four distinct units which can be arranged in different patterns to communicate information about threats from predators and coordination of group movement: A, B, C, and D. These four notes only ever appear in this consecutive order[21][18] with each preceding note blending into the next.[17] Not all four notes may appear in the call, though.[21] Like other sounds the chickadee produces, it may be heard in multiple variations. The A and B notes are almost identical to one another in both frequency and duration. The black-capped chickadee possesses the ability to quickly notice the difference between these two notes. As for the C and D notes, no real similarity is seen between them.[17] The C note fluctuates from low to high then back to low, whereas the D note has a constant frequency. While not confirmed, one study found evidence of a function behind the C and D notes. To be able to recognize the difference between a member of the same species and a potential predator, the D note is required. The C note is needed to locate food.[21]

Neither individual notes nor groups of notes have an equal probability of appearing in the chick-a-dee-dee-dee song. Its syntax form may take on several different structures, but the two most commonly heard are [A][D] and [B][C][D]. (The brackets are placed around each note to show that it may be repeated more than once.) Any calls that contain the D note more frequently than others are more commonly heard.[17] A recent study of the call showed that the number of dees indicates the level of threat from nearby predators. In an analysis of over 5,000 alarm calls from chickadees, alarm calls triggered by small, dangerous raptors had a shorter interval between chick and dee and tended to have extra dees, typically four instead of two. In one case, a warning call about a pygmy owl – a prime threat to chickadees – contained 23 dees. The Carolina chickadee makes a similar call, which is faster and higher-pitched.[18]

These chickadees make a number of other calls and sounds, such as a gargle noise usually used by males to indicate a threat of attacking another male, often when feeding. This call is also used in sexual contexts.[19] Black-capped chickadees develop the gargle noise as a result of learning that starts soon after birth and continues through to adulthood.[17] This noise is among the most complex of the calls; in one population of chickadees, the gargle contained 2 to 9 of 14 distinct notes.[19] It only lasts for about half a second.

Social learning, in particular, is largely influential to the development of this sound. Beginning 30 to 35 days after birth, strings of low-amplitude precursor or sub-gargles are produced for about a minute. At this time, the young have several close interactions with their family; they learn to produce such sounds by listening to their parents and siblings. Three chickadee populations were observed at three different sites over 8 years, and all of them produced vocalizations that were very similar to one another. Strings of juvenile sub-gargles are almost perfectly continuous and both low and unstable in frequency, yet lacking multiple syllables. When their vocal abilities are fully developed, a stable frequency is produced and a variety of syllables is heard that vary in length.[17]

Chickadees in an environment with ambient noise at the same frequencies as their songs have developed an evolutionary adaptation that enables them to adjust the frequency of their songs much quicker to effectively communicate with the surrounding population. The fee-bee songs of several male black-capped chickadees were monitored to identify their particular frequency. In one particular study, a series of both masking and nonmasking tones was played to multiple male chickadees at various locations to observe how they responded to interfering and noninterfering signals. When interacting with conspecifics close by, the males matched their frequencies, but when the surrounding environment was noisy with other species, the males adapted by increasing the frequency of their songs. The males responded quickly to the masking tones by raising their song frequencies. Another study, though, showed that male chickadees sometimes intentionally match the tones of competing conspecifics as a way of showing aggression. Dominant males in a population often compete with lower-ranked males; one is not at a greater or lesser advantage than the other. Singing contests are a way male chickadees decide who in a population gets to mate. When a male loses a contest, particularly a higher-ranking male in the population, he will often have difficulty finding a mate.[19]

Behaviour and ecology edit

Diet and foraging edit

 
Chickadees will take seeds from feeders and trays over to a tree branch to hammer them open

Insects (especially caterpillars) form a large part of their diet in summer. The birds hop along tree branches searching for food, sometimes hanging upside down or hovering; they may make short flights to catch insects in the air. Seeds and berries become more important in winter, though insect eggs and pupae remain on the menu. Black oil sunflower seeds are readily taken from bird feeders. The birds take a seed in their beak and commonly fly from the feeder to a tree, where they proceed to hammer the seed on a branch to open it.

Like many other species in the family Paridae, black-capped chickadees commonly cache food, mostly seeds, but sometimes insects, also.[22] Items are stored singly in various sites such as bark, dead leaves, clusters of conifer needles, or knothole. Memory for the location of caches can last up to 28 days.[23] Within the first 24 hours, the birds can even remember the relative quality of the stored items.[24]

Foraging behaviour in the winter tends to decrease due to the changing weather. Such behaviour is largely influenced by wind and temperature. When wind speeds are higher, black-capped chickadees avoid exposure to such conditions by flying lower where vegetation offers a degree of protection, and when the temperature decreases, they search for food less frequently.[25]

 
Chickadee at feeder

In parts of the black-capped chickadee's range with very cold winters, such as Minnesota, survival rates are affected by access to supplemental food. Chickadees with access to bird feeders are twice as likely to survive the winter than those without access to this supplemental food. This difference in survival rates occurs primarily during months with severe weather when the temperature drops below −18 °C (0 °F) for more than five days.[26] In Pennsylvania, with milder winters on the southern edge of their range, differences between populations with and without feeders suggest that feeders influence movements of chickadees rather than actual survival.[27]

At bird feeders, black-capped chickadees tolerate human approach to a much greater degree than other species do. In fact, during the winter, many individuals accustomed to human habitation readily accept seed from a person's hand.

 
Chickadee feeding from hand

Metabolism edit

On cold winter nights, these birds can reduce their body temperature by as much as 12 °C (from their normal temperature of about 42 °C) to conserve energy.[28][29] Such a capacity for torpor is not very common in birds. Other bird species capable of torpor include the common swift (Apus apus), the common poor-will (Phalaenoptilus nuttallii), the lesser nighthawk (Chordeiles acutipennis), and various species of hummingbirds.

Movements edit

These birds are permanent residents, but sometimes they move south within their range, and even outside of it, in the fall or winter.

During the winter, chickadees often flock together. Many other species of birds – including titmice, nuthatches, and warblers – can often be found foraging in these flocks. Mixed flocks stay together because the chickadees call out whenever they find a good source of food. This calling-out forms cohesion for the group, allowing the other birds to find food more efficiently. When flocking, black-capped chickadees soon establish a rigid social hierarchy. In such hierarchies, males usually rank over females, and older birds over juveniles.[30]

Black-capped chickadees sleep in thick vegetation or in cavities, usually singly, though they may occasionally roost clumped together.[31] Their sleeping posture is with the beak tucked under the scapular (shoulder) feathers.

Their flight is slightly undulating with rapid wing beats. Flight speed is about 20 km/h (12 mph).[32]

Molt edit

Chickadees molt once a year; no prenuptial molt occurs in the spring. The postjuvenal molt at the end of the first summer of life is partial, involving only the body feathers and wing coverts. Thereafter, the postnuptial molts at the end of each reproductive season are always complete, involving all feathers.

Breeding edit

 
A black-capped chickadee excavating a nest cavity in a dead tree

The black-capped chickadee nests in a hole in a tree, 1–7 m (3.3–23.0 ft) above ground. The pair either excavates the hole together, or uses a natural cavity, or sometimes an old woodpecker nest. This species will also nest in a nesting box. The nesting season is from late April through June. The nest is built by the female only. It consists of a base of coarse material such as moss or bark strips, and lining of finer material such as mammal hair. Eggs are white with fine dots of reddish brown concentrated at the larger end. On average, eggs are 1.52 cm × 1.22 cm (0.60 in × 0.48 in). Clutch size is six to eight eggs. Incubation lasts 11–14 days and is by the female only, which is fed by the male. If an unusual disturbance occurs at the nest entrance, the incubating female may utter an explosive hiss, like that of a snake, a probable adaptation to discourage nest predators.[33]

Hatchlings are altricial, naked with their eyes closed. Nestlings are fed by both sexes, but are brooded by the female only (when the male brings food to her, which she passes on to the young). Young leave the nest 12–16 days after hatching, in great part because the parents start presenting food only outside the nest hole. The young are still fed by the parents for several weeks, but are capable of catching food on their own within a week after leaving the nest.

Black-capped chickadees usually breed only once a year, but second broods are possible if the first one is lost. First breeding is at one year of age. Maximum recorded lifespan is 12 years, but most individuals live only half that long.[34]

Black-capped chickadees are socially monogamous, and males contribute greatly to reproduction. During the laying and incubation periods, males feed their partners extensively. When the nestlings hatch, males are the primary providers, but as the nestlings grow, females become the main caretakers. Females prefer dominant males, and greater reproductive success is closely related to the higher ranking of the male.[35]

Black-capped chickadees may interbreed with Carolina chickadees or mountain chickadees where their ranges overlap. Interbreeding with boreal chickadees has also been documented, though it is more rare.[36]

Dominance hierarchy edit

During the winter, the species forms flocks through which dominance hierarchies can be easily observed. Dominance hierarchies play an important role in determining the social behaviors among the birds in these flocks. Positive correlates to higher social rankings include territory size, body condition, singing rate, and reproductive success.[37] The hierarchies are linear and stable; once a relationship is established between two birds, it stays the same for many years. In general, older and more experienced birds are dominant over younger ones, and males are dominant over females.[35] Dominant and subordinate members differ in their foraging strategies and risk-taking behaviors. Dominant individuals control access to preferred resources and restrict subordinates to foraging in novel, riskier, or suboptimal environments. Subordinate individuals are often observed foraging in the outermost tree parts that are more prone to predators, while dominant individuals forage low and close to the tree trunk.

In experiments, subordinate individuals display less neophobia when approaching novel foods and objects, compared to their dominant counterparts. Subordinate individuals are also more likely to enter novel environments than their dominant counterparts. This is similar to subordinate primates, which feed on novel food more readily than the dominant individuals because they are more used to eating suboptimal and unfamiliar food. No difference is observed in ability to learn novel foraging tasks between dominant and subordinate individuals.[37]

State and provincial bird edit

The black-capped chickadee is the state bird of Maine and Massachusetts and the provincial bird of New Brunswick. In 2014, the black-capped chickadee was named the official bird of Vancouver for 2015. In 2022 the black-capped chickadee was named the official bird of Calgary, Alberta. The bird is prominently featured on the standard Maine license plate, as well as welcome signs on major roadways in Massachusetts.

Conservation edit

The IUCN classifies the black-capped chickadee as least concern due to its wide distribution and large populations.[1] In Alaska and Washington, and parts of western Canada, black-capped chickadees are among a number of bird species affected by an unknown agent that is causing beak deformities, which may cause stress for affected species by inhibiting feeding ability, mating, and grooming. Black-capped chickadees were the first affected bird species, with reports of the deformity beginning in Alaska in the late 1990s, but more recently the deformity has been observed in close to 30 bird species in the affected areas.[38]

References edit

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  37. ^ a b An, Yong Seok; Kriengwatana, Buddhamas; Newman, Amy E.; Macdougall-Shackleton, Elizabeth A.; Macdougall-Shackleton, Scott A. (2011). "Social Rank, Neophobia and Observational Learning in Black-capped Chickadees". Behaviour. 148 (1): 55–69. doi:10.1163/000579510x545829.
  38. ^ Beak Deformities 2 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine. Alaska Science Center of the United States Geological Survey. Alaska.usgs.gov (15 February 2013). Retrieved on 2013-03-23.

Further reading edit

  • Smith, S.M. (1991). The black-capped Chickadee: Behavioural Ecology and Natural History. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-2382-1 (1991 reprint).
  • Smith, S.M. (1993). Black-capped Chickadee. In The Birds of North America, no. 39. (A. Poole, P. Stettenheim and F. Gill, eds.) Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences.
  • Otter, K.A. (ed) (2007). "Ecology and behavior of chickadees and titmice: an integrated approach". Oxford University Press, Oxford. 310 pp

External links edit

  • Black-capped Chickadees Building a Nest on YouTube
  • Alaska Science Center: Beak Deformities 2 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Black-capped chickadee media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Black-capped chickadee – Poecile atricapilla – USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
  • Black-capped chickadee species account – Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  • Black-capped chickadee photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)

black, capped, chickadee, black, capped, chickadee, poecile, atricapillus, small, nonmigratory, north, american, songbird, that, lives, deciduous, mixed, forests, passerine, bird, family, paridae, state, bird, massachusetts, maine, united, states, provincial, . The black capped chickadee Poecile atricapillus is a small nonmigratory North American songbird that lives in deciduous and mixed forests It is a passerine bird in the tit family the Paridae It is the state bird of Massachusetts and Maine in the United States and the provincial bird of New Brunswick in Canada It is well known for its ability to lower its body temperature during cold winter nights its good spatial memory to relocate the caches where it stores food and its boldness near humans sometimes feeding from the hand Black capped chickadeeConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily ParidaeGenus PoecileSpecies P atricapillusBinomial namePoecile atricapillus Linnaeus 1766 Range of Poecile atricapillusSynonymsParus atricapillus Linnaeus 1766The black capped chickadee is widely distributed throughout North America ranging from the northern United States to southern Canada and all the way up to Alaska and Yukon It has a distinct appearance characterized by its black cap and bib with white sides The black capped chickadee is a social bird and forms flocks in the winter that include other bird species The bird is well known for its vocalizations including its fee bee call and its chick a dee dee dee call from which it derives its name Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 2 1 Vocalization 3 Behaviour and ecology 3 1 Diet and foraging 3 2 Metabolism 3 3 Movements 3 4 Molt 3 5 Breeding 3 6 Dominance hierarchy 4 State and provincial bird 5 Conservation 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksTaxonomy editIn 1760 French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson included a description of the black capped chickadee in his Ornithologie based on a specimen collected in Canada He used the French name La mesange a tete noire de Canada and the Latin Parus Canadensis Atricapillus 2 Although Brisson coined Latin names these do not conform to the binomial system and are not recognised by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 3 When in 1766 Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus updated his Systema Naturae for the 12th edition he added 240 species that had been previously described by Brisson 3 One of these was the black capped chickadee Linnaeus included a brief description coined the binomial name Parus atricapillus and cited Brisson s work 4 The type location was subsequently restricted to the site of Quebec in Canada 5 The specific epithet atricapillus is Latin for black haired from ater black and capillus hair of the head 6 Though originally placed in the genus Parus with most other tits mtDNA cytochrome b sequence data and morphology suggest that separating Poecile more adequately expresses these birds relationships 7 The genus Poecile had been introduced by German naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup in 1829 8 Molecular phylogenetic studies have shown that the black capped chickadee is sister to the mountain chickadee Poecile gambeli 9 10 At one time the black capped chickadee was considered by some to be conspecific with the willow tit of Eurasia due to their very similar appearance This is reflected in an older version of the Peterson Field Guide for the Birds of Britain and Europe which states N Am Black Capped Chickadee as an alternate name for the willow tit In fact the willow tit black capped chickadee marsh tit and Carolina chickadee are all very similar to one another in appearance citation needed Nine subspecies are recognised 11 Description edit nbsp Black capped chickadee clinging to a wireThe black capped chickadee has a black cap and bib with white sides to the face Its underparts are white with rusty brown on the flanks Its back is gray and the tail is normally slate gray This bird has a short dark beak of 8 9 5 mm 0 31 0 37 in short rounded wings 63 5 67 5 mm 2 50 2 66 in a tarsus of 16 17 mm 0 63 0 67 in and a long tail at 58 63 mm 2 3 2 5 in 12 Its total body length is 12 15 cm 4 7 5 9 in wingspan is 16 21 cm 6 3 8 3 in and body mass is 9 14 g 0 32 0 49 oz 13 Sexes look alike but males are slightly larger and longer than females Although range can generally be used to separate them the black capped chickadee is very similar in appearance to the Carolina chickadee The black capped is larger on average but this cannot be used reliably for identification The most obvious difference between the two is in the wing feathers In the black capped chickadee the wing feathers have white edges that are larger and more conspicuous than those of the Carolina chickadee The latter is often mistaken for black capped chickadees with feather dystrophy which sometimes affects the appearance of the primary feathers making them look slimmer a phenomenon caused by illnesses such as fatty liver disease in malnourished birds Overall the Carolina appears slightly paler in color whereas the flanks of the black capped can appear to have a trace of off yellow or rusty coloration Also the black capped generally has a more ragged looking black bib whereas the bib of the Carolina has a more smooth edge These subtle features are often even more vague in populations around where the black capped and Carolina overlap in range possibly the result of hybrids and the two cannot always be distinguished as two species The two species were formerly thought to be easily distinguished by call but they often learn each other s vocalizations where their ranges overlap their point of overlap is a narrow band that runs along the east central United States with the black capped chickadee to the north A bird located near the zone of overlap that sings both songs or sings odd sounding songs cannot be positively identified solely by voice in the field 14 Vocalization edit nbsp Black capped chickadee Iona Beach Regional ParkThe vocalizations of the black capped chickadee are highly complex 15 Thirteen distinct types of vocalizations have been classified many of which are complex and can communicate different types of information Chickadees complex vocalizations are likely an evolutionary adaptation to their habitat they live and feed in dense vegetation and even when the flock is close together individual birds tend to be out of each other s visual range One of the most recognizable sounds produced particularly by the males is the two note fee bee song It is a simple clear whistle of two notes identical in rhythm the first roughly a whole step above the second 16 The range of frequencies at which this song starts from varies the complete frequency range spans roughly 1 kHz Within this range male chickadees can sing at various tones The average starting frequency is around 4000 Hz A decrease of roughly 200 Hz occurs when the first note fee is sung and then another decrease around 400 Hz takes place between the end of fee and the beginning of bee In spite of these multiple changes in frequency though anybody listening to the song only hears a pure high frequency tone 17 This is distinguished from the Carolina chickadee s four note call fee bee fee bay the lower notes are nearly identical but the higher fee notes are omitted making the black capped song like bee bay The males sing the song only in relative isolation from other chickadees including their mates In late summer some young birds sing only a single note 18 nbsp Black capped chickadee fee bee call source source Some fee bee calls of chickadees at various distances NOTE The chick a dee dee song in the background at 0 05 Problems playing this file See media help A recent study found that female fee bee songs have both similarities with and differences from male fee bee songs 19 20 Both sexes sometimes make a faint version of the song and this appears to be used when feeding young 18 When males are out in the wild they sing this song to defend their territory or attract a mate 19 There have also been a few accounts of females singing a version of the fee bee song when out alone in the wild 20 The black capped chickadee is a monomorphic species so distinguishing males and females based solely on their singing is difficult A bioacoustic analysis performed on both male and female songs revealed that male fee bee singing fluctuates more and the absolute amplitude of both sexes is the same The fee glissando varies far more in females which makes identifying each sex easier The purpose of the female fee bee song is unknown 20 The most familiar call is the chick a dee dee dee which gave this bird its name This simple sounding call is astonishingly complex 18 Scientists have been studying it since the mid 1970s It is produced by both males and females year round 17 It has been observed to consist of up to four distinct units which can be arranged in different patterns to communicate information about threats from predators and coordination of group movement A B C and D These four notes only ever appear in this consecutive order 21 18 with each preceding note blending into the next 17 Not all four notes may appear in the call though 21 Like other sounds the chickadee produces it may be heard in multiple variations The A and B notes are almost identical to one another in both frequency and duration The black capped chickadee possesses the ability to quickly notice the difference between these two notes As for the C and D notes no real similarity is seen between them 17 The C note fluctuates from low to high then back to low whereas the D note has a constant frequency While not confirmed one study found evidence of a function behind the C and D notes To be able to recognize the difference between a member of the same species and a potential predator the D note is required The C note is needed to locate food 21 Neither individual notes nor groups of notes have an equal probability of appearing in the chick a dee dee dee song Its syntax form may take on several different structures but the two most commonly heard are A D and B C D The brackets are placed around each note to show that it may be repeated more than once Any calls that contain the D note more frequently than others are more commonly heard 17 A recent study of the call showed that the number of dees indicates the level of threat from nearby predators In an analysis of over 5 000 alarm calls from chickadees alarm calls triggered by small dangerous raptors had a shorter interval between chick and dee and tended to have extra dees typically four instead of two In one case a warning call about a pygmy owl a prime threat to chickadees contained 23 dees The Carolina chickadee makes a similar call which is faster and higher pitched 18 nbsp Black capped chickadee source source Some gargles then a minute of singingNOTE American robin singing in background Problems playing this file See media help These chickadees make a number of other calls and sounds such as a gargle noise usually used by males to indicate a threat of attacking another male often when feeding This call is also used in sexual contexts 19 Black capped chickadees develop the gargle noise as a result of learning that starts soon after birth and continues through to adulthood 17 This noise is among the most complex of the calls in one population of chickadees the gargle contained 2 to 9 of 14 distinct notes 19 It only lasts for about half a second Social learning in particular is largely influential to the development of this sound Beginning 30 to 35 days after birth strings of low amplitude precursor or sub gargles are produced for about a minute At this time the young have several close interactions with their family they learn to produce such sounds by listening to their parents and siblings Three chickadee populations were observed at three different sites over 8 years and all of them produced vocalizations that were very similar to one another Strings of juvenile sub gargles are almost perfectly continuous and both low and unstable in frequency yet lacking multiple syllables When their vocal abilities are fully developed a stable frequency is produced and a variety of syllables is heard that vary in length 17 Chickadees in an environment with ambient noise at the same frequencies as their songs have developed an evolutionary adaptation that enables them to adjust the frequency of their songs much quicker to effectively communicate with the surrounding population The fee bee songs of several male black capped chickadees were monitored to identify their particular frequency In one particular study a series of both masking and nonmasking tones was played to multiple male chickadees at various locations to observe how they responded to interfering and noninterfering signals When interacting with conspecifics close by the males matched their frequencies but when the surrounding environment was noisy with other species the males adapted by increasing the frequency of their songs The males responded quickly to the masking tones by raising their song frequencies Another study though showed that male chickadees sometimes intentionally match the tones of competing conspecifics as a way of showing aggression Dominant males in a population often compete with lower ranked males one is not at a greater or lesser advantage than the other Singing contests are a way male chickadees decide who in a population gets to mate When a male loses a contest particularly a higher ranking male in the population he will often have difficulty finding a mate 19 Behaviour and ecology editDiet and foraging edit nbsp Chickadees will take seeds from feeders and trays over to a tree branch to hammer them openInsects especially caterpillars form a large part of their diet in summer The birds hop along tree branches searching for food sometimes hanging upside down or hovering they may make short flights to catch insects in the air Seeds and berries become more important in winter though insect eggs and pupae remain on the menu Black oil sunflower seeds are readily taken from bird feeders The birds take a seed in their beak and commonly fly from the feeder to a tree where they proceed to hammer the seed on a branch to open it Like many other species in the family Paridae black capped chickadees commonly cache food mostly seeds but sometimes insects also 22 Items are stored singly in various sites such as bark dead leaves clusters of conifer needles or knothole Memory for the location of caches can last up to 28 days 23 Within the first 24 hours the birds can even remember the relative quality of the stored items 24 Foraging behaviour in the winter tends to decrease due to the changing weather Such behaviour is largely influenced by wind and temperature When wind speeds are higher black capped chickadees avoid exposure to such conditions by flying lower where vegetation offers a degree of protection and when the temperature decreases they search for food less frequently 25 nbsp Chickadee at feederIn parts of the black capped chickadee s range with very cold winters such as Minnesota survival rates are affected by access to supplemental food Chickadees with access to bird feeders are twice as likely to survive the winter than those without access to this supplemental food This difference in survival rates occurs primarily during months with severe weather when the temperature drops below 18 C 0 F for more than five days 26 In Pennsylvania with milder winters on the southern edge of their range differences between populations with and without feeders suggest that feeders influence movements of chickadees rather than actual survival 27 At bird feeders black capped chickadees tolerate human approach to a much greater degree than other species do In fact during the winter many individuals accustomed to human habitation readily accept seed from a person s hand nbsp Chickadee feeding from handMetabolism edit On cold winter nights these birds can reduce their body temperature by as much as 12 C from their normal temperature of about 42 C to conserve energy 28 29 Such a capacity for torpor is not very common in birds Other bird species capable of torpor include the common swift Apus apus the common poor will Phalaenoptilus nuttallii the lesser nighthawk Chordeiles acutipennis and various species of hummingbirds Movements edit These birds are permanent residents but sometimes they move south within their range and even outside of it in the fall or winter During the winter chickadees often flock together Many other species of birds including titmice nuthatches and warblers can often be found foraging in these flocks Mixed flocks stay together because the chickadees call out whenever they find a good source of food This calling out forms cohesion for the group allowing the other birds to find food more efficiently When flocking black capped chickadees soon establish a rigid social hierarchy In such hierarchies males usually rank over females and older birds over juveniles 30 Black capped chickadees sleep in thick vegetation or in cavities usually singly though they may occasionally roost clumped together 31 Their sleeping posture is with the beak tucked under the scapular shoulder feathers Their flight is slightly undulating with rapid wing beats Flight speed is about 20 km h 12 mph 32 Molt edit Chickadees molt once a year no prenuptial molt occurs in the spring The postjuvenal molt at the end of the first summer of life is partial involving only the body feathers and wing coverts Thereafter the postnuptial molts at the end of each reproductive season are always complete involving all feathers Breeding edit nbsp A black capped chickadee excavating a nest cavity in a dead treeThe black capped chickadee nests in a hole in a tree 1 7 m 3 3 23 0 ft above ground The pair either excavates the hole together or uses a natural cavity or sometimes an old woodpecker nest This species will also nest in a nesting box The nesting season is from late April through June The nest is built by the female only It consists of a base of coarse material such as moss or bark strips and lining of finer material such as mammal hair Eggs are white with fine dots of reddish brown concentrated at the larger end On average eggs are 1 52 cm 1 22 cm 0 60 in 0 48 in Clutch size is six to eight eggs Incubation lasts 11 14 days and is by the female only which is fed by the male If an unusual disturbance occurs at the nest entrance the incubating female may utter an explosive hiss like that of a snake a probable adaptation to discourage nest predators 33 Hatchlings are altricial naked with their eyes closed Nestlings are fed by both sexes but are brooded by the female only when the male brings food to her which she passes on to the young Young leave the nest 12 16 days after hatching in great part because the parents start presenting food only outside the nest hole The young are still fed by the parents for several weeks but are capable of catching food on their own within a week after leaving the nest Black capped chickadees usually breed only once a year but second broods are possible if the first one is lost First breeding is at one year of age Maximum recorded lifespan is 12 years but most individuals live only half that long 34 Black capped chickadees are socially monogamous and males contribute greatly to reproduction During the laying and incubation periods males feed their partners extensively When the nestlings hatch males are the primary providers but as the nestlings grow females become the main caretakers Females prefer dominant males and greater reproductive success is closely related to the higher ranking of the male 35 Black capped chickadees may interbreed with Carolina chickadees or mountain chickadees where their ranges overlap Interbreeding with boreal chickadees has also been documented though it is more rare 36 Dominance hierarchy edit During the winter the species forms flocks through which dominance hierarchies can be easily observed Dominance hierarchies play an important role in determining the social behaviors among the birds in these flocks Positive correlates to higher social rankings include territory size body condition singing rate and reproductive success 37 The hierarchies are linear and stable once a relationship is established between two birds it stays the same for many years In general older and more experienced birds are dominant over younger ones and males are dominant over females 35 Dominant and subordinate members differ in their foraging strategies and risk taking behaviors Dominant individuals control access to preferred resources and restrict subordinates to foraging in novel riskier or suboptimal environments Subordinate individuals are often observed foraging in the outermost tree parts that are more prone to predators while dominant individuals forage low and close to the tree trunk In experiments subordinate individuals display less neophobia when approaching novel foods and objects compared to their dominant counterparts Subordinate individuals are also more likely to enter novel environments than their dominant counterparts This is similar to subordinate primates which feed on novel food more readily than the dominant individuals because they are more used to eating suboptimal and unfamiliar food No difference is observed in ability to learn novel foraging tasks between dominant and subordinate individuals 37 State and provincial bird editThe black capped chickadee is the state bird of Maine and Massachusetts and the provincial bird of New Brunswick In 2014 the black capped chickadee was named the official bird of Vancouver for 2015 In 2022 the black capped chickadee was named the official bird of Calgary Alberta The bird is prominently featured on the standard Maine license plate as well as welcome signs on major roadways in Massachusetts Conservation editThe IUCN classifies the black capped chickadee as least concern due to its wide distribution and large populations 1 In Alaska and Washington and parts of western Canada black capped chickadees are among a number of bird species affected by an unknown agent that is causing beak deformities which may cause stress for affected species by inhibiting feeding ability mating and grooming Black capped chickadees were the first affected bird species with reports of the deformity beginning in Alaska in the late 1990s but more recently the deformity has been observed in close to 30 bird species in the affected areas 38 References edit a b BirdLife International 2017 Poecile atricapillus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T22711716A118687681 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T22711716A118687681 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Brisson Mathurin Jacques 1760 Ornithologie ou Methode contenant la division des oiseaux en ordres sections genres especes amp leurs varietes in French and Latin Vol 3 Paris Jean Baptiste Bauche pp 553 555 Plate 29 fig 1 The two stars at the start of the section indicates that Brisson based his description on the examination of a specimen a b Allen J A 1910 Collation of Brisson s genera of birds with those of Linnaeus Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 28 317 335 hdl 2246 678 Linnaeus Carl 1766 Systema naturae per regna tria natura secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 Part 1 12th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 341 Paynter Raymond A Jr ed 1986 Check list of Birds of the World Vol 12 Cambridge Massachusetts Museum of Comparative Zoology p 82 Jobling J A 2018 del Hoyo J Elliott A Sargatal J Christie D A de Juana E eds Key to Scientific Names in Ornithology Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive Lynx Edicions Retrieved 15 May 2018 Gill F B Slikas B Sheldon F H 2005 Phylogeny of titmice Paridae II Species relationships based on sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene PDF Auk 122 121 143 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2005 122 0121 POTPIS 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86067032 Kaup Johann Jakob 1829 Skizzirte Entwickelungs Geschichte und naturliches System der europaischen Thierwelt in German Darmstadt Carl Wilhelm Leske p 114 Johansson Ulf S Ekman Jan Bowie Rauri C K Halvarsson Peter Ohlson Jan I Price Trevor D Ericson Per G P 2013 A complete multilocus species phylogeny of the tits and chickadees Aves Paridae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 69 3 852 860 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2013 06 019 PMID 23831453 Tritsch Christian Martens Jochen Sun Yue Hua Heim Wieland Strutzenberger Patrick Packert Martin 2017 Improved sampling at the subspecies level solves a taxonomic dilemma A case study of two enigmatic Chinese tit species Aves Passeriformes Paridae Poecile Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 107 538 550 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2016 12 014 PMID 27965081 Gill Frank Donsker David eds 2018 Waxwings and allies tits penduline tits World Bird List Version 8 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 15 May 2018 Species Birds of North America Online Bna birds cornell edu Retrieved on 2013 03 23 Black capped Chickadee Life History All About Birds Cornell Lab of Ornithology Allaboutbirds org Retrieved on 2013 03 23 Tricky Bird IDs Black capped and Carolina chickadees Birds cornell edu Retrieved on 2013 03 23 Ficken M S Ficken R W Witkin S R 1978 Vocal repertoire of the Black capped Chickadee PDF Auk 95 1 34 48 doi 10 2307 4085493 JSTOR 4085493 Jackson Dave 24 March 2010 Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society Archived from the original on 15 April 2013 Retrieved 13 March 2012 a b c d e f g Otter Ken A 2007 Ecology and Behaviour of Chickadees and Titmice An Integrated Approach Oxford University Press pp 153 230 ISBN 978 0 19 856999 2 a b c d e Templeton C N Greene E Davis K 2005 Allometry of alarm calls black capped chickadees encode information about predator size Science 308 5730 1934 7 Bibcode 2005Sci 308 1934T doi 10 1126 science 1108841 PMID 15976305 S2CID 42276496 a b c d e Goodwin Sarah E Podos Jeffrey 9 January 2013 Shift of song frequencies in response to masking tones Animal Behaviour 85 2 435 440 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2012 12 003 S2CID 53269430 a b c Hahn Allison H Krysler Amanda Sturdy Christopher B 11 May 2013 Female song in black capped chickadees Poecile atricapillus Acoustic song features that contain individual identity information and sex differences Behavioural Processes 98 98 105 doi 10 1016 j beproc 2013 05 006 PMID 23694740 S2CID 205978731 a b c Dawson Michael R W Charrier Isabelle Sturdy Christopher B May 2006 Using an artificial neural network to classify black capped chickadee Poecile atricapillus call note types The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 119 5 3161 3172 Bibcode 2006ASAJ 119 3161D doi 10 1121 1 2189028 PMID 16708971 S2CID 33895874 Heinrich Bernd Collins Scott L June 1983 Caterpillar Leaf Damage and the Game of Hide and seek with Birds Ecology 64 3 592 602 doi 10 2307 1939978 JSTOR 1939978 Hitchcock C L Sherry D F 1990 Long term memory for cache sites in the Black capped Chickadee Animal Behaviour 40 4 701 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 05 80699 2 S2CID 54417376 Sherry D F 1984 Food storage by the Black capped Chickadee memory for the location and contents of caches Animal Behaviour 32 2 451 doi 10 1016 S0003 3472 84 80281 X S2CID 53151283 Otter Ken A 2007 Ecology and Behaviour of Chickadees and Titmice New York NY Oxford University Press p 268 ISBN 978 0 19 856999 2 Brittingham M C Temple S A 1988 Impacts of Supplemental Feeding on Survival Rates of Black capped Chickadees Ecology 69 3 581 doi 10 2307 1941007 JSTOR 1941007 Egan E S Brittingham M C 1994 Winter Survival Rates of a Southern Population of Black capped Chickadees Wilson Bulletin 106 3 514 Chaplin S B 1974 Daily energetics of the Black capped Chickadee Parus atricapillus in winter Journal of Comparative Physiology 89 4 321 330 doi 10 1007 BF00695350 S2CID 34190772 Chaplin S B 1976 The physiology of hypothermia in the Black capped Chickadee Parus atricapillus Journal of Comparative Physiology B 112 3 335 344 doi 10 1007 BF00692303 S2CID 31401778 Thompson Craig Spring 1983 The dominance hierarchy of the Black capped Chickadee and its relation to breeding territory and frequency of visitation to an artificial food source Field Station Bulletin 16 14 20 via UWM Digital Commons Loery G Nichols J D 1985 Dynamics of a Black capped Chickadee population 1958 1983 Ecology 66 4 1195 1203 doi 10 2307 1939172 JSTOR 1939172 Greenewalt C H 1955 The flight of the Black capped Chickadee and the White breated Nuthatch Auk 72 1 1 5 doi 10 2307 4081384 JSTOR 4081384 Forbush E H 1925 29 Birds of Massachusetts and other New England states Mass Dept of Agriculture Boston Lof R A 1967 Ten years of banding black capped chickadees EBBA News 30 195 198 a b Oort Harry Van Otter Kenneth A Fort Kevin T Mcdonell Zoe 2007 Habitat Dominance And The Phenotypic Quality of Male Black Capped Chickadees The Condor 109 1 88 doi 10 1650 0010 5422 2007 109 88 hdatpq 2 0 co 2 S2CID 85729695 Lait Linda Lauff R F Burg T M 2012 Genetic evidence supports Boreal Chickadee Poecile hudsonicus x Black capped Chickadee Poecile atricapillus hybridization in Atlantic Canada The Canadian Field Naturalist 126 143 doi 10 22621 cfn v126i2 1330 a b An Yong Seok Kriengwatana Buddhamas Newman Amy E Macdougall Shackleton Elizabeth A Macdougall Shackleton Scott A 2011 Social Rank Neophobia and Observational Learning in Black capped Chickadees Behaviour 148 1 55 69 doi 10 1163 000579510x545829 Beak Deformities Archived 2 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Alaska Science Center of the United States Geological Survey Alaska usgs gov 15 February 2013 Retrieved on 2013 03 23 Further reading editSmith S M 1991 The black capped Chickadee Behavioural Ecology and Natural History Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 2382 1 1991 reprint Smith S M 1993 Black capped Chickadee In The Birds of North America no 39 A Poole P Stettenheim and F Gill eds Philadelphia The Academy of Natural Sciences Otter K A ed 2007 Ecology and behavior of chickadees and titmice an integrated approach Oxford University Press Oxford 310 ppExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to black capped chickadee nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Poecile atricapillus Black capped Chickadees Building a Nest on YouTube Alaska Science Center Beak Deformities Archived 2 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine Black capped chickadee media Internet Bird Collection Black capped chickadee Poecile atricapilla USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter Black capped chickadee species account Cornell Lab of Ornithology Black capped chickadee photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black capped chickadee amp oldid 1185319409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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