Website Adopts 3.9.2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Website Adopts 3.9.2020 Adopt-An-Animal Any animal at Fresno Chaffee Zoo can be adopted. Animals that are highlighted green always have a plush available. Animals that are highlighted purple temporarily have a plush. Animals that are black do not have a corresponding plush. *If you select an animal without a plush, we will attempt to contact you. If we do not receive a response within two weeks, the package will be sent as is. *Some of our animals are not exhibit animals Amphibians & Reptiles Birds Elephants & Ungulates Primates Amphibians American flamingo Apes Andean condor Elephants Siamang California tiger salamander African elephant Frogs Bateleur eagle Sumatran orangutan Black-necked stilt Lemurs African bullfrog Ungulates Anthony’s poison arrow frog Black vulture Antelope Red ruffed lemur Bicolored poison dart frog Blue-crowned motmot Addax Ring-tailed lemur Blue poison dart frog Blue-throated piping-guan Common eland Monkeys Giant waxy tree frog Boat-billed heron Greater kudu Black-and-white colobus monkey Golfodulcean poison frog Cape thick-knee Kenyan impala Goeldi's monkey Green-and-black poison dart frog Cockatoos Barbary sheep Golden lion tamarin Panamanian golden frog Goffin's cockatoo Chacoan peccary Lesser spot-nosed guenon Tomato frog Lesser sulphur-crested cockatoo Common wildebeest Vietnamese mossy tree frog Long-billed corella Giraffe White's tree frog Moluccan cockatoo Masai giraffe Valley Farm Yellow-and-blue poison dart frog Rose breasted cockatoo Reticulated giraffe Alpaca Yellow-banded poison dart frog Sulphur-crested cockatoo Rhinoceros Cow Newts Common ostrich Greater one-horned rhinoceros Chicken Anatlia newt Common shama thrush Southern white rhinoceros Goat California newt Duck Sulawesi babirusa Miniature horse Emperor newt Laysan teal Warthog Sheep Iranian newt Puna teal Ringed teal Reptiles Mandarin duck American Alligator White-faced whistling duck Fish & Rodents Lizards East African grey crowned-crane Baja blue rock lizard Egyptian goose Fish Boesman’s rainbowfish Blue spiny lizard Elegant crested tinamou Catfish Caiman lizard Emu Bristlenose catfish Chinese crocodile lizard Golden eagle Suckermouth catfish Emerald tree monitor Green aracari South American lungfish Geckos Guam rail Stingray Bay Fish Giant gecko Guira cuckoo Sharks Leaf-tailed gecko Hawks Nurse shark Leopard gecko Harris hawk Whitespotted bamboo shark Standing's day gecko Western red-tailed hawk Rays Gila monster Hornbills Cownose ray Green crested basilisk Rhinoceros hornbill Southern red stingray Haitian giant anole Trumpeter hornbill Iguanas Inca tern Rodents Fiji banded iguana Lady Ross' turaco Capybara Utila Island iguana Laughing kookaburra Chinchilla Komodo dragon Luzon bleeding-heart dove Domestic rat Legless lizard Macaws Prehensile-tailed porcupine San Esteban Island chuckwalla Blue-and-gold macaw Skinks Green wing macaw Blue-tongued skink Hyacinth macaw Prehensile-tailed skink Scarlet macaw Insects, Etc. Sudan plated lizard Owls Arachnids Uromastyx Burrowing owl Asian forest scorpion Snakes Eurasian eagle owl Boas Western screech owl Insects Arabian sand boa Parrots (small) Madagascar hissing cockroach Emerald tree boa Australian rainbow lorikeet Madagascar tree boa Princess parrot Red-tailed boa Red-lored Amazon Rubber boa Sun conure Marine Mammals, Marsupials East African green mamba Yellow-naped Amazon Eastern indigo snake Pelicans & Miscellanous Honduran milksnake California brown pelican Gaboon viper Pink-backed pelican Marine Mammals California sea lion King cobra Pigeons Harbor seal Mangrove snake Nicobar pigeon Pacific gopher snake Pied imperial pigeon Marsupials Philippine pit viper Roseate spoonbill Common wallaroo Pythons Scarlet ibis Opossum Ball python Southern screamer Red kangaroo Blood python Sunbittern Tammar wallaby Rattlesnakes Tawny frogmouth Colorado desert sidewinder Venezuelan troupial Miscellanous Northern Pacific rattlesnake Western cattle egret Armadillos Taylor cantil White-necked raven Six-banded armadillo Tentacled water snake Yellow-billed stork Southern three-banded armadillo Thai bamboo racer Yellow-rumped cacique Giant anteater Woma Ferret Tortoises Hedgehog African pancake tortoise Linnaeus' two-toed sloth African spurred tortoise Madagascar hissing cockroach Asian brown tortoise Slender-tailed meerkat Desert tortoise Canines & Felines Striped skunk Egyptian tortoise Canines Galapagos tortoise Fennec fox Madagascar spider tortoise Red wolf Northern leopard tortoise Pancake tortoise Felines Radiated tortoise African lion Southern spider tortoise Cheetah Turtles Malayan tiger Black-breasted leaf turtle Serval Fly river turtle Indochinese box turtle Matamata turtle Ornate box turtle Pacific pond turtle Spot-bellied side-necked turtle Yellow-spotted Amazon River turtle Last update: 3/9/2020.
Recommended publications
  • Rubber Boas in Radium Hot Springs: Habitat, Inventory, and Management Strategies
    Rubber Boas in Radium Hot Springs: Habitat, Inventory, and Management Strategies ROBERT C. ST. CLAIR1 AND ALAN DIBB2 19809 92 Avenue, Edmonton, AB, T6E 2V4, Canada, email [email protected] 2Parks Canada, Box 220, Radium Hot Springs, BC, V0A 1M0, Canada Abstract: Radium Hot Springs in Kootenay National Park, British Columbia is home to a population of rubber boas (Charina bottae). This population is of ecological and physiological interest because the hot springs seem to be a thermal resource for the boas, which are near the northern limit of their range. This population also presents a dilemma to park management because the site is a major tourist destination and provides habitat for the rubber boa, which is listed as a species of Special Concern by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC). An additional dilemma is that restoration projects, such as prescribed logging and burning, may increase available habitat for the species but kill individual snakes. Successful management of the population depends on monitoring the population, assessing the impacts of restoration strategies, and mapping both summer and winter habitat. Hibernation sites may be discovered only by using radiotelemetry to follow individuals. Key Words: rubber boa, Charina bottae, Radium Hot Springs, hot springs, snakes, habitat, restoration, Kootenay National Park, British Columbia Introduction The presence of rubber boas (Charina bottae) at Radium Hot Springs in Kootenay National Park, British Columbia (B.C.) presents some unusual challenges for wildlife managers because the site is a popular tourist resort and provides habitat for the species, which is listed as a species of Special Concern by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC 2004).
    [Show full text]
  • Rosy Boas Can Be Housed in a 10 Gallon Zilla® Critter Cage® Product
    Husbandry Handbook Housing Housing must be sealed and escape proof. Hatchling Rosy Boas can be housed in a 10 gallon Zilla® Critter Cage® product. Adults will require a minimum of a Rosy Boa 20L Zilla® Critter Cage® product. While Rosy Boas can reach a length of 36", they are terrestrial and don’t need a tall tank. Provide Rosy Boas with substrates that enable burrowing such as Zilla® Lizard Litter. Decorate the tank with driftwood, Lichanura trivirgata rocks, logs and other décor for ample basking and hiding opportunities. Geographical Variation Temperature and Humidity Rosy Boas are one of two species of boidae in the United States, the other being It is important to create a thermal gradient (or a warm side) in the cage/ the Rubber Boa. One very unique characteristic of Rosy Boas is that their color enclosure. This can be done with an appropriate sized Zilla® Heat Mat adhered and patterns vary greatly depending on where they live. Most have lateral striping to the bottom of the tank on one side. Ideal temperatures for Rosy Boas range in two different colors but a few have a reticulated granite pattern. Many experts from 65-75°F on the cool side and 80-85°F on the warm side. Provide a basking can tell exactly where the snake came from just based on its coloration and area on the warm side around 90-95°F. Using a Zilla® Mini Heat & UVB Fixture pattern. Around Morongo Valley, CA, they are striped with bright orange and with a Zilla® 50W Mini Halogen bulb and a Zilla® Desert Mini Compact blue/grey but in the Maricopa Mountains of AZ they are striped with deep brown Fluorescent UVB Bulb will provide the correct heat and UV for your Rosy Boa to and cream white.
    [Show full text]
  • Rubber Boa March 2019
    Volume 32/Issue 7 Rubber Boa March 2019 RUBBER BOA INSIDE: Reptiles Heads or Tails? Snakes – Sinister or Sacred? © Tony Iwane CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, Flickr © Natalie McNear CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, Flickr © Natalie McNear CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, Flickr © J. Maughn CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, Flickr © J. Maughn CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, Flickr Rubber Boa o you know that a boa constrictor lives Rubber boas may be found throughout Idaho in Idaho? Many people are surprised from deserts to pine forests. They need water Dto learn that there is a boa constrictor and downed logs or leaf litter nearby. They are found in our state. It is the rubber boa. Its very shy and will burrow in soil and under logs scientific name is Charina bottae (CHA-ree-na and rocks when frightened. They spend most of BOW-tay). Charina means graceful. This is a the day safe in a burrow and come out at dusk fitting name! Rubber boas are graceful as they or during the night. However, they may venture slide and slither over the ground. out of their burrows on a mild, cloudy day to look for food. Sometimes they are seen basking Rubber boas got their name for how they look in the sun, but this is rare. and feel. They have small scales, and the skin is loose on the body. This gives them the look and Rubber boas kill their prey by constriction just feel of rubber. It is sometimes hard to tell which like larger boas.
    [Show full text]
  • Amphibians & Reptiles Birds Canines & Felines Fish & Rodents Elephants
    Adopt-An-Animal Any animal at Fresno Chaffee Zoo can be adopted. Animals that are highlighted green always have a plush available. Animals that are highlighted purple temporarily have a plush option. Animals that are black do not have a corresponding plush. *Animals without a plush can be adopted with any other available plush option. *Some of our animals are not exhibit animals Amphibians & Reptiles Birds Canines & Felines Primates Amphibians American flamingo Canines Apes Siamang Aquatic caecilian Andean condor Fennec fox California tiger salamander Bateleur eagle Red wolf Sumatran orangutan Black-necked stilt Lemurs Frogs African bullfrog Black vulture Felines Red ruffed lemur Bicolored poison dart frog Blue-crowned motmot African lion Ring-tailed lemur Blue poison dart frog Blue-faced honeyeater Black-footed cat Monkeys Dyeing poison frog Blue-throated piping-guan Cheetah Black-and-white colobus monkey Giant waxy tree frog Boat-billed heron Malayan tiger Goeldi's monkey Golfodulcean poison frog Cape thick-knee Serval Golden lion tamarin Green-and-black poison dart frog California brown pelican Lesser spot-nosed guenon Mossy frog Cockatoos Panamanian golden frog Goffin's cockatoo Elephants & Ungulates Sambava tomato frog Lesser sulphur-crested cockatoo Elephants Valley Farm Splashback poison dart frog Long-billed corella African elephant Alpaca White's tree frog Moluccan cockatoo Asian elephant Bourbon red turkey Yellow-banded poison dart frog Rose breasted cockatoo Chickens Newts Sulphur-crested cockatoo Ungulates Orpington chicken
    [Show full text]
  • Life History Account for Northern Rubber
    California Wildlife Habitat Relationships System California Department of Fish and Wildlife California Interagency Wildlife Task Group NORTHERN RUBBER BOA Charina bottae Family: BOIDAE Order: SQUAMATA Class: REPTILIA R046 Written by: S. Morey, H. Basey Reviewed by: T. Papenfuss Edited by: R. Duke Updated by: CWHR Program Staff, March 2002 and November 2014 DISTRIBUTION, ABUNDANCE, AND SEASONALITY The northern rubber boa is uncommon to common in suitable habitats. Occurs throughout the Sierra from Ventura Co. north, across the northern part of the state and in the Coast Ranges south nearly to Point Conception. Elevational range is from sea level to 2740 m (9040 ft). Found in a variety of montane forest habitats including red fir, ponderosa pine, hardwood, hardwood-conifer, Douglas fir, redwood, mixed conifer and riparian. Also found in montane chaparral and wet meadow habitats, usually, in the vicinity of streams. A geographically isolated race, once included in this species, was recently updated to the new species C. umbratica (Rodríguez-Robles et al. 2001). It appears to be extremely uncommon and is apparently restricted to the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mts. (Erwin 1974). SPECIFIC HABITAT REQUIREMENTS Feeding: Food consists primarily of small mammals and lizards (Stebbins 1954, though, it may occasionally take smaller snakes (Linder 1963) and Ensatina (Macey 1983). Cover: The rubber boa is an extremely secretive snake seeking cover in rotting logs, pieces of bark, boards, rocks, and other surface debris. Burrows through loose soil or decaying vegetation. Occasionally climbs. Reproduction: Young are born in loose, well aerated soil, under surface objects, or within rotting logs. Water: No additional information on water requirements.
    [Show full text]
  • Snake Notebooking Pages Bw
    Snake Notebooking Pages 2019 Stacey Jones at Simple Living. Creative Learning PINTEREST! | WEBSITE | FACEBOOK All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form by any means without prior permission of the publisher. This workbook is licensed for personal/family use only. YOU MAY: ! Use these files for personal use only. ! Use in your personal classroom ! Download the files to your personal computer. ! Print as many copies as you would like to use for your personal use. ! Direct other to our website: https://simplelivingcreativelearning.com YOU MAY NOT: ! Edit any of these printables. ! Share the files with anyone else. ! Store or sell them on any website. ! Claim them as your own. ! Print and sell or distribute them to others Graphics and Font: Snake Notebooking Pages Snake Notebooking Pages Snake Notebooking Pages By: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Snake Notebooking Pages By: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Snake Notebooking Pages By: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Copperhead (Australian) Diet Habitat Characteristics Simple Living. Creative Learning ! Copperhead (Australian) ______________ ________0__000 00000000000000 Scientific Classification Order: ______________ ________________________ Suborder: ____________ Genus: _______________ ________________________ Species: _____________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ ________________________ Simple Living. Creative Learning
    [Show full text]
  • Protected Wildlife, Holding and Propagating Rules
    PROTECTED WILDLIFE, HOLDING AND PROPAGATING RULES CHAPTER 635 DIVISION 44 OREGON FISH AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION JUNE 9, 2016 SALEM, OREGON MARCH 18, 2016 • Revisions from informational briefing • Continue to receive public comment • Provide crossover table of revisions PRESENTATION OUTLINE Background Review Process Overview of Draft Rule Revisions Public Review and Comments BACKGROUND • Clear policy and procedures related to protected wildlife, wildlife holding permits & propagation licenses • Provide clear direction for law enforcement DIVISION 44 REVIEW • 2013 - Interagency Discussions • 2014 /15 - Wildlife Holding Advisory Group Internal Review • January 2016 – Stakeholder Review and Public Comment • March 2016 – Informational Briefing • June 2016 – Proposed Rule Adoption REMOVE CLASSIFICATION OF “NONGAME NON-PROTECTED” All free-ranging wildlife are protected EXCEPT: 1. Regulated take or permit/license or rule 2. Wildlife Holding Permit • Grandfathered animals • Nongame species distributed widely, abundant, secure 3. Propagation License 4. Department approval – Letter of Authorization GRANDFATHERING PROVISION • Black bear • Cougar • Wolf • Bobcat • Raccoon • Skunk • Squirrels • Chipmunk • Nongame Non-protected GRANDFATHERED ANIMAL FACILITIES • Facilities meeting ODFW Enclosure and Caging Standards (Exhibit 1) w/in 1 year • New permits or new acquisitions of captive black bear, cougar, bobcat, wolves • Facilities accredited by Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) DRAFT RULE REVISIONS • System for holding nongame wildlife based on science
    [Show full text]
  • Common Snakes Snakes Common
    Common Snakes in the East Bay 2950 Peralta Oaks Court, Oakland, CA 94605 Regional Park District 1-888-EBPARKS or 1-888-327-2757 ( TR S 711) ebparks.org Pacific Northern Pacific Visitor Centers Ardenwood Historic Farm, Fremont Gophersnake Rattlesnake 510-544-2797, [email protected] Slender Triangular Big Break Visitor Center at the Delta The background color of the head head The general coloration of the Big Break Regional Shoreline, Oakley Pacific gophersnake is glossy northern pacific rattlesnake 510-544-3050, [email protected] yellow to buff with black, brown, varies, usually matching the Greathouse and Sidney Flat Visitor Centers or reddish-brown blotches on the background soil color, with Black Diamond Mines Regional Preserve, Antioch back. The scales are keeled and the brown or black dorsal blotches. 510-544-2750, [email protected] tail pointed. Its general coloration The head is broad, flat, and Coyote Hills Visitor Center and behavior mimic a rattlesnake, triangular with facial pits and Coyote Hills Regional Park, Fremont but the Pacific gophersnake is vertically oriented, elliptical 510-544-3220, [email protected] harmless. This snake is a good eye pupils. The skin is dull Crab Cove Visitor Center climber and burrower. It lays with keeled scales. The tail, Crown Memorial State Beach, Alameda 510-544-3187, [email protected] an average of 6-7 eggs in the tapering with a“rattle,” is Slender Thick Rocky Ridge Visitor Center spring to early summer, with shiny dull made up of interlocking Del Valle Regional Park, Livermore the young hatching in about body body pieces of dry skin.
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Northern Rubber
    Environmental and Economical Solutions Memorandum Date: December 3, 2018 To: Leanne Bilodeau, Associate Director Sustainability – UBCO Campus Planning and Development From: Carmen Chelick, M.Sc., and Mary Ann Olson-Russello, M.Sc., R.P.Bio. File: 18-2672 Subject: Information pertaining to Northern Rubber Boa presence at the UBCO Campus, Kelowna, BC 1.0 INTRODUCTION Ecoscape Environmental Consultants Ltd. (Ecoscape) was retained by the Campus Planning and Development Department at the University of British Columbia Okanagan (UBCO) to provide environmental consulting services pertaining to the presence of Northern Rubber Boa (Charina bottae) on the Okanagan campus. The Rubber Boa was reportedly observed on October 8, 2018 by Briana All, M.Sc. Biology student, and Robert Lalonde, Associate Professor of Biology. The Rubber Boa was observed at the top of a set of stairs near the Upper Cascade student residences (Figure 1; Photo 1). The Rubber Boa was subsequently moved to a location within the open Ponderosa pine forest adjacent to the Pine Trail in the northwest region of the campus (Figure 1; Photo 2). This intact forest pocket is surrounded by human disturbance; a golf course to the north, an agricultural field and John Hindle Drive to the west, UBCO campus to the east and south, and a walking trail bisecting the forest. Northern Rubber Boas (herein referred to as Rubber Boa) are found in the southern interior of BC and as far north as Williams Lake and south into Washington, Oregon, northern California and west to Montana (Environment Canada, 2016). Although Rubber Boa populations are impacted by human-induced habitat loss, their low reproductive rates and thermoregulation requirements also contribute to their small population sizes.
    [Show full text]
  • Northern Rubber Boa - Charina Bottae Abundance: Rare Status: NSS3 (Bb) Natureserve: G5 S2 Population Status: Vulnerable
    Northern Rubber Boa - Charina bottae Abundance: Rare Status: NSS3 (Bb) NatureServe: G5 S2 Population Status: Vulnerable. Restricted in numbers and distribution, extirpation is not eminent. Limiting Factor: Habitat: the low elevation forested habitat for this species is limited, but loss is not increasing significantly. Comment: None. Introduction In Wyoming, Northern Rubber Boas inhabit the northwest corner of the state, south into Star Valley and east to the Bighorn Mountains. A secretive and mostly nocturnal snake, it often spends its time beneath logs, flat rocks, tree bark, and in stumps and rodent burrows (Baxter and Stone 1985, Ernst and Ernst 2003). They are usually active from dusk and throughout the night, from April to November (Ernst and Ernst 2003). Northern Rubber Boas may only emerge nocturnally once every eight days (Dorcas and Peterson 1998). They hibernate during the winter in talus slopes, deep rock crevices, rodent burrows, and logs (Ernst and Ernst 2003). Northern Rubber Boas can swim, burrow, and climb well (Stebbins 2003). They feed on small mammals (shrews, mice, voles, moles, and pocket gophers), lizards, birds, salamanders, and reptile eggs (Baxter and Stone 1985, Ernst and Ernst 2003, Stebbins 2003). Northern Rubber Boas bear 1 to 10 live young, born from August to November, and may live up to 40 or 50 years in the field (Ernst and Ernst 2003, Stebbins 2003). They are highly prized by the pet industry due to their calm nature. Habitat Northern Rubber Boas are found in the foothills and lower montane zone of Wyoming and prefer areas with nearby water and an abundance of flat rocks, logs, stumps, and boulders (Baxter and Stone 1985, Ernst and Ernst 2003).
    [Show full text]
  • Southern Rubber Boa
    South Coast Red-Sided Garter Southern Sagebrush Lizard Snake Southern Rubber Boa Southern Rubber Boa (Charina umbratica) Management Status Heritage Status Rank: G5T2T3S2S3 Federal: USDA Forest Service Region 5 Regional Forester's Sensitive Species State: Threatened Other: None General Distribution Four populations of rubber boa are known to occur south of the Sierra Nevada. These populations are in the Tehachapi Mountains, Kern County; the Mt. Pinos area (including Mt. Abel and Alamo Mountain), straddling the Kern/Ventura County line; the San Bernardino Mountains in San Bernardino County; and the San Jacinto Mountains in Riverside County (Hoyer and Stewart 2000). Distribution in the Planning Area The southern rubber boa is found in the San Bernardino and San Jacinto Mountains at elevations of 5,050–8,070 feet (1,540–2,460 meters) (Stewart 1988). Approximately eight localities are known in the San Jacinto Mountains (including Fern Valley, Dark Canyon, Devil's Slide trail, and the North Fork San Jacinto River near the Highway 243 crossing); and over 40 locations are known in the San Bernardino Mountains (Loe 1985, Stewart 1990). Twenty-six of the localities in the San Bernardino Mountains are in a 10-mile (16-kilometer) strip between Twin Peaks on the west and Green Valley on the east (Stewart 1988). Other locations include Barton Flats, north-facing slopes immediately south of Big Bear Lake (Stephenson and Calcarone 1999), and the vicinity of Oak Glen Conservation Camp at the southern end of the San Bernardino Mountains (Loe pers. comm.). Systematics Three subspecies of rubber boa were recognized (Stebbins 1985), although elevation of the southern rubber boa to the specific level has been proposed (Hoyer 2001).
    [Show full text]
  • Predation by a Rubber Boa on Chestnut-Backed Chickadees in an Artificial Nesting Site
    NOTES PREDATION BY A RUBBER BOA ON CHESTNUT-BACKED CHICKADEES IN AN ARTIFICIAL NESTING SITE WILLIAM A. COPPER, CLIFFORD P. OHMART and DONALD L. DAHLSTEN, Division of BiologicalControl, Department of EntomologicalSciences, University of California, Berkeley,California 94720 During the past 9 years, by use of artificial nest boxes, we have conducted studieson the life history of the Mountain (Parusgambeli) and Chestnut-backed (P. rufescens)chickadees and their impacton insectpopulations. Nine studyplots consistingof 50 nestingboxes per plot at 100 m intervals(area of 50 ha) have been establishedin severalmontane regions of California(Dahlsten and Copper, unpublishedmanuscript). During the study years variousmortality factors (weather, disease,starvation, parasitesand predators)have acted upon theseavian populations and useof nest- ing boxeshas facilitatedthe detectionof predationduring the nestingperiod. Al- thoughconsiderable nest predation (presumably by weasels,mice and chipmunks) was noted, the evidencehas always been circumstantial. In most instancesthe nestshave been found in disarray and have containedremnants of adults and/or nestlings. However,on numerousoccasions nests have been found in which eggs Rubber Boa (Cbarina bottae) in nest box of Chestnut-hackedChickadee (Parus rufescens),Blodgett Experimental Forest, El DoradoCo., California,6 June1974. Photoby Cliff Ohmart Western Birds 9:41-42, 1978 41 NOTES and/or nestlingshave disappeared with little or no disturbanceto the nest. In these instancesbirds or snakeswould seemto be the most likely predators. A largebird suchas a jay can reachits headinside the nestbox and pluck out the nestlings(Copper, pers. observationof ScrubJay, Apbelocornacoerulescens), and small snakescan simply glide through the 32 mm diameter opening. The latter was the case on 6 June 1974 at the University of California's Blodgett Experi- mental Forest, E1 Dorado Co., California (elevation 1300 m), when a Rubber Boa (Cbarinabottae) wasfound preyingupon a nest of a Chestnut-backedChickadee.
    [Show full text]