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My Personal Geocoin Black-capped Chickadee

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Owner:
yellow.warbler Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Origin:
Ontario, Canada
Recently Spotted:
In Dead End Cache

This is not collectible.

Use TB5TC0G to reference this item.

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Current Goal

This used to be a geocoin of a chickadee, then it was a car.  Now it is an Eagle.  Should the original coin ever turn up, please contact me.

Goal: Make it to Boreal Forests.

 

About This Item

The black-capped chickadee is found from coast to coast, from the northern half of the United States in the south, to James Bay, the southern edge of the Northwest Territories and the Yukon, and the southern half of Alaska in the north. In winter it may wander outside this range, both to the north and south.

Insects (especially caterpillars) form a large part of their diet in summer. The birds hop along tree branches searching for food, sometimes hanging upside down or hovering; they may make short flights to catch insects in the air. Seeds and berries become more important in winter, though insect eggs and pupae remain on the menu. Black oil sunflower seeds are readily taken from bird feeders. The birds take a seed in their bill and commonly fly from the feeder to a tree, where they proceed to hammer the seed on a branch to open it.

On cold winter nights, these birds reduce their body temperature by up to 10–12 °C (from their normal temperature of about 42 °C) to conserve energy. Such a capacity for torpor is rare in birds (or at least, rarely studied).

The Black-capped Chickadee nests in a hole in a tree, 1–7 m above ground. The pair either excavate the hole together, or use a natural cavity, or sometimes an old woodpecker nest.  The nest is built by the female only. It consists of a base of coarse material such as moss or bark strips, and lining of finer material such as mammal hair. Nestlings are fed by both sexes but are brooded by the female only (at which time the male brings food to her, which she passes on to the young). Young leave the nest 12–16 days post-hatching, in great part because the parents start presenting food only outside the nest hole. The young will still be fed by the parents for several weeks but are capable of catching food on their own within a week after leaving the nest.

The most familiar call is the chick-a-dee-dee-dee which gave this bird its name. This simple-sounding call is astonishingly complex. It has been observed to consist of up to four distinct units which can be arranged in different patterns to communicate information about threats from predators and coordination of group movement. Recent study of the call shows that the number of dees indicates the level of threat from nearby predators. In an analysis of over 5,000 alarm calls from chickadees, it was found that alarm calls triggered by small, dangerous raptors had a shorter interval between chick and dee and tended to have extra dees, usually averaging four instead of two. In one case, a warning call about a pygmy owl – a prime threat to chickadees – contained 23 dees.

Click to listen to the Black-capped Chickadee song

Gallery Images related to Black-capped Chickadee

View All 12 Gallery Images

Tracking History (20772.6mi) View Map

Visited 9/17/2013 Rboss05 took it to Dorothy's view Ontario, Canada   Visit Log
  • Black Capped Chickadee, Burlington, ON Chickadee meets friends
Retrieve It from a Cache 9/17/2013 Rboss05 retrieved it from Dorothy's view Ontario, Canada   Visit Log

Grabbed from Dorothy's View- will move. Cute coin

Discovered It 9/16/2013 RnGRRnGR discovered it   Visit Log

Discovered ina cache by Lake Ontario in Burlington

  • Discovered ina cache by Lake Ontario in Burlington Discovered ina cache by Lake Ontario in Burlington
Discovered It 9/16/2013 the sharps discovered it   Visit Log

Cool birdie.

Dropped Off 9/12/2013 gillj123 placed it in Dorothy's view Ontario, Canada - 30.35 miles  Visit Log

Dropped off

Grab It (Not from a Cache) 9/12/2013 gillj123 grabbed it   Visit Log

Dropped the cache at Dorothy's View

Retrieve It from a Cache 8/4/2013 Khrynisx retrieved it from Big Red Canoe Ontario, Canada   Visit Log

Moving this along!

Dropped Off 8/3/2013 kellykaym placed it in Big Red Canoe Ontario, Canada - 4.65 miles  Visit Log
Discovered It 7/28/2013 frinklabs discovered it   Visit Log

This coin is for the birds! (Ha!)

Spotted with kellykaym while geochatting

Retrieve It from a Cache 7/28/2013 kellykaym retrieved it from Lily's La La Land Ontario, Canada   Visit Log

Forgot to log that I picked this up today.

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