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    bird nest

    Explore " bird nest" with insightful episodes like "Nesting Niches", "Woodpeckers Carve Out Roost Cavities, Too", "Ospreys Never Stop Building", "Strange Places for a Nest" and "Digging around" from podcasts like ""BirdNote Daily", "BirdNote Daily", "BirdNote Daily", "BirdNote Daily" and "Counterpoint"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Nesting Niches

    Nesting Niches

    American Robins (like this male seen here with its young), House Finches, and Song Sparrows may all nest within one small garden. By selecting different nesting strata, the species avoid competing for the same nesting sites. If you plant your garden in multiple layers – trees both short and tall, shrubs, and ground-hugging thickets – you may be rewarded with a multi-layered medley of bird song.

    More info and transcript at BirdNote.org

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    Woodpeckers Carve Out Roost Cavities, Too

    Woodpeckers Carve Out Roost Cavities, Too

    In spring, we often hear woodpeckers hard at work, carving out nest holes in tree trunks. And now that fall has arrived, we may hear that excavating sound again. Some woodpecker species stay year round in the region where they nest, while others migrate south in winter. Those that remain, like this Pileated Woodpecker, are chiseling out roosting cavities, snug hollows where they’ll shelter during the cold nights of fall and winte

    More info and transcript at BirdNote.org

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    BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible.

    Ospreys Never Stop Building

    Ospreys Never Stop Building

    Ospreys are remarkable nest builders. Many reuse their massive stick nests from the previous year, but continue tinkering with it once the nesting season begins. And the nest transforms along with the growing chicks. It’s bowl-shaped at first, corralling the young birds, but it gets flatter after the chicks hatch. By the time they fledge, it has fully flattened out.

    More info and transcript at BirdNote.org

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    BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible.

    Strange Places for a Nest

    Strange Places for a Nest

    Birds are resourceful. Wherever they live, even in the biggest cities, they find clever places to build their nests. An initiative from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology called Celebrate Urban Birds, once asked people to share the funkiest and funniest places they’ve seen a bird nest. Among the highlights were a family of robins set up shop in a coiled cable hung near a welding rig, a wren nest in an old car motor, and a tiny hummingbird nest perched precariously on an outdoor string lightbulb.

    More info and transcript at BirdNote.org

    Want more BirdNote? Subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Sign up for BirdNote+ to get ad-free listening and other perks. 

    BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible.

    Digging around

    Digging around

    Are there foreign agents working in Australia right now and if so, where are they from? We have a huge supply of rare-earth minerals in this country so why are we exporting them rather than manufacturing them? What happened when the smallpox vaccine was rolled out and what do you think birds use to make their nests nowadays?

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