Image by John Carleton
EVERY SUMMER thousands of tiny Vaux swifts swoop into Portland, Oregon, to spend several months feasting on flying insects during the day and roosting in the tall chimney at Chapman School at night. NW Portland is a regular vacation stopover for swifts during their annual migration from Alaska/Canada to Mexico/South America.
Historically, migrating swifts roosted in big hollow trees they found in Oregon’s old growth forests, but now, thanks to logging and urban sprawl, most of those trees are gone. In 1994, some adventurous swift scouted out new digs in the brick chimney atop Chapman Elementary School. The little birds, 4-5" ("cigars with wings"), like the rough surfaces and cracks in the bricks that give them lots of convenient toe holds, plus the chimney is big enough to accomodate between 20,000 to 40,000 birds.
The school children and their teachers welcomed the swifts in their chimney. They researched the swifts and other migratory birds, drew and painted pictures of their feathered friends, and even elected the swift as the school mascot. As the days grew colder in late September and October, students wore their coats to class so that administrators could postpone starting up the school furnace until after the swifts left the chimney to fly south. At last, the Portland Public Schools and the Audubon Society teamed up to raise grant money to stabilize the chimney for the swifts and to install a new gas heating system for the school. The renovation cost approximately ,000 (that’s not chicken feed!), and was funded by the Collins Foundation, the Metro Central Enhancement Grant Committee, and the Autzen Foundation.
Nine years have gone by, and the swifts are still summer celebrities in Portland. If you wander over to Chapman in the early evening, you’ll find a crowd of spectators sitting on a grassy bank overlooking the school. Some bring their picnic suppers, some bring champagne, many have binoculars and cameras. All ages come to watch the swifts as they congregate and prepare to call it a day. At first, there are just a few of the little birds circling the chimney, dipping close to the mouth of the chimney stack, then abruptly pulling up and flying away to repeat the cycle. As more and more birds arrive, from a distance, they look like a cloud of bees, wheeling round and round the chimney. Other birds – predators – also appear. A hawk sits on the rim of the chimney, watching, waiting, then suddenly strikes and carries off his unlucky prey. Occasionally, the tables are turned, and a gang of irate swifts attack the hawk, driving him away, at least for a short time.
The flock grows and grows until the cloud of birds turns black, and still they circle. What are they waiting for? Maybe they’re waiting for late arrivals? Maybe they are still catching insects as they fly? (Swifts eat in the air, and during their migration, sleep midair, too). Maybe they’re waiting for the air in the chimney to be the right temperature, or for the setting sunlight to fall at a certain angle? The Audubon Society has put an information kiosk in the schoolyard; perhaps it explains what finally triggers the birds’ descent.
Gradually the circling picks up speed. The birds fly several rapid last laps, and then…..Swooosh! They dive down the chimney and disappear. The sky is suddenly empty, blank. The sun is going down, too, and evening is here. Time to go home. The swifts will stay a few more weeks, until the days get shorter and the weather gets colder. Then mid-October or so, possibly when we fall back to standard time, they will fly away to winter in Mexico.
Text from here.
More info here.
Question by izzy: Does surrounding color affect an insects eating habits?
or Does exercise affect heart rate?
Give your answer to this question below!
Yes. Spiders, Butterflies, Bees and Aphids respond very well to color. Ever wonder why the sticky traps placed by Agricultural Extension agents at WalMart or Home Depot landscape plant area are colored yellow? The aphids when they have wings and are in flight will drop off, eat and establish themselves when the vegetations is yellow or yellow green which indicates to them young growing tender luscious plants.
With spiders, they often see colors beyond our range, and often use those colors to decide if they mate or they eat. Butterflies and bees are also known to operate in the colors beyond our range, but affect them and trigger them to stop and feed or fly past some flowers.
And yes, exercise is good for you, but when in excess, it is also bad. Any activity that raises your heart rate and sustained for 20 to 30 minutes each day are one of the best recommendations for a healthy life.
JoeReal
November 18, 2012 at 8:32 am