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Birders
Related: About this forumCedar Waxwing Courtship, Passing the Berry Back and Forth
Gloria @Lucent 508
Central Park, NYC
''Shadbush right now are heavy with fruit & Cedar Waxwings are taking full advantage. This couple is engaging in courtship behavior of passing the berry back & forth at least half a dozen times''
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Cedar Waxwing Courtship, Passing the Berry Back and Forth (Original Post)
Donkees
Jun 2024
OP
"Conscious-being' embodied as birds being brilliant in their innate effulgence
sanatanadharma
Jun 2024
#4
Bayard
(24,145 posts)1. Fascinating
Never heard of this. "Play the berry game with me buster or you're getting nowhere."
Donkees
(32,395 posts)2. Sometimes passing a flower petal
During courtship, males and females hop towards each other, alternating back and forth and sometimes touching their bills together. Males often pass a small item like a fruit, insect, or flower petal, to the female. After taking the fruit, the female usually hops away and then returns giving back the item to the male. They repeat this a few times until, typically, the female eats the gift.
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/cedar_waxwing/lifehistory
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/cedar_waxwing/lifehistory
Bayard
(24,145 posts)5. So romantic!
Easterncedar
(3,511 posts)3. It's sweet! And relatable
Just like courting humans do
Ive watched them pass wild strawberries here in Maine
sanatanadharma
(4,074 posts)4. "Conscious-being' embodied as birds being brilliant in their innate effulgence
'Conscious-being' embodied as birds relating one to the other, two reflecting mirrors of innate knowledge.
"Shall we be 'one-conscious-being'?
The activities of living-beings are variations of eating, sleeping, mating, and defending desires (and in combinations).
"Conscious-being' embodied as birds being brilliant in the innate effulgence of bird-brains.
Donkees
(32,395 posts)6. Bird Embryos Vibrate to Warn One Another of Danger before They Hatch
The egg-bound developing animals are more attuned to the outside world than previously thought
BY JENNIFER LEMAN
Before they hatch, developing baby gulls seem to prepare for the worst when they hear the piercing predator-warning calls of nearby adultsand may also alert their less-developed nestmates.
Yellow-legged gull embryos exposed to the warnings of adults and neighboring embryos that had not been exposed to the sounds both displayed a series of behavioral and physiological changes when newly hatched, according to a study published Monday in Nature Ecology & Evolution. By vibrating, the embryos exposed to the call appeared to transfer knowledge of the threat to the others in their nestthe first time such a behavior has resulted in observed changes to clutchmates.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bird-embryos-vibrate-to-warn-one-another-of-danger-before-they-hatch/
BY JENNIFER LEMAN
Before they hatch, developing baby gulls seem to prepare for the worst when they hear the piercing predator-warning calls of nearby adultsand may also alert their less-developed nestmates.
Yellow-legged gull embryos exposed to the warnings of adults and neighboring embryos that had not been exposed to the sounds both displayed a series of behavioral and physiological changes when newly hatched, according to a study published Monday in Nature Ecology & Evolution. By vibrating, the embryos exposed to the call appeared to transfer knowledge of the threat to the others in their nestthe first time such a behavior has resulted in observed changes to clutchmates.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/bird-embryos-vibrate-to-warn-one-another-of-danger-before-they-hatch/
AllaN01Bear
(23,029 posts)7. i love you, i love you too. i love you. i love you too.