Americas
best known brood parasite is the Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater).
This bird lays its eggs in the nests of many different bird species, leaving its
young to be raised by others. Originally,
cowbirds were called buffalo birds and were limited to short-grass plains. There they followed herds of buffalo (Bison bison), feeding on the insects stirred up by
the movement of the herds. The Brown-headed
Cowbird has since dispersed widely over other parts of North America as European
settlement opened forests and helped create the agricultural and suburban landscapes we
have today.
Probably no
other bird today elicits such loathing as the Brown-headed Cowbird. Many think the bird should be on the 10
most-wanted list at local post offices and courthouses. This is interesting, since cowbirds are just doing
what they have always done. Humans have
created the situations that allow cowbirds to prosper, and many more opportunities now
exist for cowbirds to easily lay in other birds nests. In short, people have created
cowbird heaven in many areas of the country.
Cowbirds were initially at home with the expansive herds of
buffaloes (and later even cattle) that once roamed the prairies and mostly treeless plains
of the American west. Following the herds
caused cowbirds to become a very nomadic species of open country. This made it tough for cowbirds to establish
territories, build a nest, lay or incubate eggs and feed young. What was a mom on the go to do? Simple, just get a nanny. Unfortunately the so-called nanny is a victim of
breaking and entering, but with a twist.
Basically, cowbirds evolved to become a nest parasite to be able to
successfully reproduce. Female cowbirds
watch for other birds building their nests or sitting on nests. They are very good at finding the nesting site of
other birds. Sometimes cowbirds actually
stalk other birds and follow them back to their nests. They also sit up high above the nesting activity
of most birds and wait and watch, as well as maneuver through different layers of
vegetation (or on the ground) looking for nests. To
summarize: cowbirds are good at finding bird nests! Much
better than people are at finding nests.
Once they locate another birds nest, the really interesting
stuff starts to happen. They wait and watch,
and when the other female bird leaves the nest to water, feed or defecate, the cowbird
springs to action. It enters the nest and can
do a couple of different things. The cowbird
can remove an egg from the nest and lay one of its own, just quickly lay one of its own
eggs, or just evict an egg from the nest. Cowbirds
have also been documented killing nestlings. This
behavior can continue for several days. The
goal of the cowbird is to get as many of its eggs in the nest as possible, and evict as
many of the other birds eggs as possible. Most
birds do not recognize that changes have occurred in their nest and continue to lay and/or
incubate as normal. Female cowbirds can lay
many more eggs per season than most birds. Many lay 40 or more eggs each season. Keep in mind that each female cowbird is laying
eggs in more than one nest at a time during the breeding season, often several each
summer.
Young cowbirds have several advantages. They hatch before the host birds young do, with an average incubation period of about 12 days. Cowbirds also hatch out larger than the small songbird hosts, and grows at a faster rate. This enables the young cowbirds to often hog all the food brought to the nest, as they can simply push their way into position to get fed more often. The host parents are often strained to try and feed the huge cowbird young and their own brood. Often the hosts young starve, or are even pushed out of the nest by the aggressive cowbird youngsters. Over 220 bird species have been reported as being parasitized (cowbird victims), and almost 150 species have actually raised (cowbird hosts) cowbird young.
QUICK COWBIRD FACTS
-Over 220 different bird species have been parasitized (cowbird
hosts) and about 150 different species have actually raised cowbird young (cowbird hosts)
-Cowbirds find nest in 3 main ways: perch and watch, walk on the
ground, and search and short flushing flights in vegetation
-Cowbirds lay up to 7 eggs in one day and can live up to 10-15
years (most dont)
-Estimates of cowbird numbers range up to 60 million birds
-Females may lay up to 40 eggs per season, and can lay almost daily
through the breeding season
-Song development by males likely in flocks at winter roosts
-Forage on the ground, rarely in vegetation
-Main foods taken are seeds and arthropods (about 75% seeds and 25%
arthropods) like beetles and grasshoppers
-In migration and winter cowbirds are often part of mixed-species
flocks containing Red-winged Blackbirds, Common Grackles, European Starlings and even
American Robins
Suggested Readings for More Information on Cowbirds
Airola, D.A. 1986. Brown-headed Cowbird Parasitism and Habitat
Disturbance in the Sierra Nevada. Journal of Wildlife Management. 50(4): 571-575.
Brittingham, M.C. and S.A. Temple. 1996. Vegetation around
Parasitized and Non-Parasitized Nests Within Deciduous Forest. J. of Field Ornithology,
67(3): 406-413.
Carrie, N.R. 1999. Brown-headed Cowbird Parasitism of Wood Thrush
Nests in Eastern Texas. J. of Field Ornithology, 70(2): 263-267.
Carter, M.D. 1986. The Parasitic Behavior of the Bronzed Cowbird in
South Texas. The Condor 88: 11-25.
Coker, D.R. and D.E. Capen. 1995. Landscape-level habitat use by
Brown-headed Cowbirds in Vermont. Journal of Wildlife Management 59: 631-637.
Condon, Marlene. 1996. Cowbirds Arent Evil. Living Bird.
Spring 1996. pp. 8-9.
Coon, D.W., and K.A. Arnold. 1977. Origins of Brown-headed Cowbird
populations wintering in central Texas. North American Bird Banding, (2): 7-11.
Cooper, S. 1990. North Carolinas first shiny cowbird (Molothrus bonarienses), Chat 54: 28-34.
Curson, D.R, C.B. Goguen and N.E. Mathews. 2000. Long distance
Commuting by Brown-headed Cowbirds in New Mexico, The Auk 117(3): 795-799.
Dolbeer, R.A. 1998. Population dynamics: the foundation of wildlife
damage management for the twenty-first century. In Proceeedings of the 18th
Vertebrate Pest Conference (R.O. Baker and A.C. Crabb. eds.) pp. 2-11. University of
California, Davis.
Elliott, P.F. 1999. Killing of Host Nestlings by the Brown-headed
Cowbird. J. of Field Ornithology, 70(1): 55-57.
Graham, F. 1998. Bad, Bad Birds. Audubon, Sept.-Oct. 1998. pp
104-108.
Harrison, Hal. 1991. Master Moocher. Birders World, Oct.
1991. pp 40-41.
Kattan, G.H. 1996. Growth and Provisioning of Shiny Cowbird and
House Wren Host Nestlings. J. of Field Ornithology, 67(3): 434-441.
Kenaga, E. 1997. Brood Parasitism among Birds. Birding, Oct. 1997.
pp. 393-401.
Lowther, P.E. 1984. Cowbird Nest Selection. The Wilson Bulletin.
96(1): 103-107.
Lowther, P.E. 1993 Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater). In the Birds of North America, No. 47 (A. Poole
and F. Gill, Eds.) Philadelphia: The Academy of natural Sciences; Washington, D.C.: The
American Ornithologists Union.
Mason, Paul. 1986. Brood Parasitism in a Host Generalist, the Shiny
Cowbird: Quality of Different Species as Hosts. The Auk 103(1): 52-60.
Ortega, C.P. 1998. Cowbirds
and Other Brood Parasites. University of Arizona Press.
Ortega, C.P. 2000. More on Cowbirds: Broad-scale Control Targets
the Wrong Birds Birding, August, 362-364.
Parker, T.H. 1999. Responses of Bells Vireos to Brood
Parasitism by the Brown-headed Cowbird in Kansas. The Wilson Bulletin, 111(4): 499-504.
Peer, B.D. and S.G. Sealy. 1999 Laying Time of the Bronzed Cowbird.
The Wilson Bulletin, 111(1): 137-139.
Post, W., A. Cruz and D.B. McNair. 1992. The North American
Invasion Pattern of the Shiny Cowbird. Journal of Field Ornithology, 61: 32-41.
Smith, J.N.M. 1994. Cowbirds: Conservation villains or convenient scapegoats? Birding 26:
257-259.
Stutchbury, B.J.M. 1997. Effects of Female Cowbird Removal on Reproductive Success of
Hooded Warblers. The Wilson Bulletin, 109(1): 74-81.
Teather, K.A. and R.J. Robertson. 1986. Pair Bonds and Factors Influencing the Diversity
of Mating Systems in Brown-Headed Cowbirds. The Condor 88: 63-69.
Thompson, F.R. III. 1994. Temporal and Spatial patterns of breeding Brown-headed Cowbirds
in the midwestern United States. The Auk 111: 979-990.
Zimmerman, J.L. 1983. Cowbird Parasitism of Dickcissels in Different Habitats and at
Different Nest Densities. The Wilson Bulletin, 95(1) 7-22.