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Northern Cardinal Identification - All About

Northern Cardinal Identification - All About
Northern Cardinal Identification - All About 

Widespread and abundant, has expanded its range over the past century or more. Current numbers may be stable.
Cardinals, Grosbeak, and Pontings family
Habitat: Forest edges, orchards, suburban parks, desert towns, and lakes. Found in a variety of scrub-covered or semi-open habitats in the east, from cobbles and swamps to urban parks, just about anywhere there are dense shrubs for nesting. In the southwest, more local; found in tall scrub, streamside forests, and mesquite groves in the desert.
One of our most famous birds, the cardinal is the official bird of at least seven eastern states. Found in abundance in the southeast, its range has expanded northward for decades and it now brightens winter days with its color and whistling song as far south as southeastern Canada. Feeders full of sunflower seeds may have contributed to its northward spread. West of the Great Plains, the cardinal is mostly absent, but it is common locally in the southwestern deserts.

Photo gallery

feeding behavior
Feeds mainly by jumping on the ground or in low bushes, sometimes higher up in trees. It comes easily to bird feeders where sunflower seeds are preferred.

Eggs

3-4, sometimes 2-5. White to pale blue or greenish-white, with brown, purple, and grey hues. Incubation is usually by the female alone, 12-13 days.

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Both parents feed the chicks. The young leaves nest about 9-11 days after hatching. The male may feed the chicks while the female begins the next nesting attempt. 2-3 broods per year, rarely 4.

Diet

Mainly seeds, insects, and berries. Food is very diverse. Feeds on many insects including beetles, true bugs, grasshoppers, caterpillars, ants, flies, and many others, as well as spiders, insects, and snails. Most of the diet consists of plant material, including weeds and weed seeds, grain residues, leaf and flower buds, many berries, and wild fruits. The young feed mainly on insects.

nesting

The male sings to defend the nesting area, actively attacking intruding males (and attacking the reflection of his own image in windows and mirrors). During courtship, both males and females hold their heads high, swaying back and forth while singing softly; the male often feeds the female early in the breeding season. The female sings mainly in spring before nesting begins. Nest: Usually well hidden in dense shrubbery, vines, or low trees, and is 3 to 10 feet above the ground, sometimes higher. The nest (built by the female) is an open cup made of twigs, grasses, grass, strips of bark, leaves, and small roots and lined with fine grass or hair.

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