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  2. How To Attract Cardinals To Your Backyard, According To ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/attract-cardinals-backyard-according...

    To protect cardinals and other birds from injury, minimize reflective surfaces, especially near feeders and nesting areas. “While the cardinal population is stable, the bird count in North ...

  3. Northern cardinal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_cardinal

    The northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis), known colloquially as the common cardinal, red cardinal, or just cardinal, is a bird in the genus Cardinalis.It can be found in southeastern Canada, through the eastern United States from Maine to Minnesota to Texas, New Mexico, southern Arizona, southern California and south through Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala.

  4. Scarlet tanager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarlet_tanager

    The young leave the nest by 9–12 days of age and fly capably by the time they are a few weeks old. If the nesting attempt is disturbed, scarlet tanagers apparently are unable to attempt a second brood, as several other passerines can. In a study of 16 nests in Michigan, 50% were successful in producing one or more fledglings. [16]

  5. Bird nest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_nest

    Deep cup nest of the great reed-warbler. A bird nest is the spot in which a bird lays and incubates its eggs and raises its young. Although the term popularly refers to a specific structure made by the bird itself—such as the grassy cup nest of the American robin or Eurasian blackbird, or the elaborately woven hanging nest of the Montezuma oropendola or the village weaver—that is too ...

  6. Brood parasitism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brood_parasitism

    A shiny cowbird chick (left) being fed by a rufous-collared sparrow Eastern phoebe nest with one brown-headed cowbird egg (at bottom left) Shiny cowbird parasiting masked water tyrant in Brazil Brood parasitism is a subclass of parasitism and phenomenon and behavioural pattern of animals that rely on others to raise their young.

  7. Western tanager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_tanager

    In Boulder County, nesting success varied from 11.3% to 75.3%, with an average of 51.8% over a 3-year period. [17] Daily nest survival rate on ungrazed sites in northeastern New Mexico was 0.955, which was not significantly (p<0.05) different from the 0.973 daily nest survival rate found on grazed sites.

  8. Cardinalidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinalidae

    Cardinalidae (sometimes referred to as the "cardinal-grosbeaks" or simply the "cardinals") is a family of New World-endemic passerine birds that consists of cardinals, grosbeaks, and buntings. It also includes several other genera such as the tanager-like Piranga and the warbler-like Granatellus .

  9. Katharine C. Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katharine_C._Day

    Katharine and her husband set up a bird banding station in Cohasset in 1922. From 1925 to 1932, she published 15 times under the name K. C. Harding, most of which were brief reports of recaptured banded birds in the Bulletin of the Northeastern Bird Banding Association (including its inaugural issue) and occasional notes on nesting behavior of various species.