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Mountain
Bluebird
Unlike other bluebird species, male Mountain
Bluebirds have no chestnut red on their bodies.
The head, back, wings, and tail are a bright sky
blue. Males are light blue from the chin to the
belly, and grayish-white on the belly and
undertail coverts.
Females have brownish gray upperparts. The wings,
rump, and tail are a pale or light blue. Females
sometimes have a pale reddish throat and breast,
but more commonly, the throat and breast are gray
brown.
Juveniles look like adult females, but they are
darker and less colorful. Their breasts and sides
are streaked with brown.
Mountain Bluebirds are found in the western parts
of Canada and the United States. They are found
at elevations above 5,000 feet, and they nest in
open areas such as meadows, hayfields, grain
fields, savannas, prairies, clear cuts, and the
edges of coniferous and deciduous forests.
Mountain Bluebird Range Map

Mountain Bluebirds feed on a variety of insects,
including beetles, weevils, ants, wasps, cicadas,
flies, grasshoppers, katydids, and crickets.
Unlike their eastern or western relatives,
Mountain Bluebirds rarely eat seeds or berries.
Mountain Bluebirds also differ from other
bluebirds in that they often hover while
foraging.
Males return to the breeding grounds before the
females and establish territories. This happens
in late March in the south but not until early
April in the north. Females arrive several days
to a few weeks later. Initially, pairs
aggressively defend a large area around their
nest site, but as the breeding season progresses,
the size of the defended area decreases and
becomes more localized around the nest. Mountain
Bluebirds defend territories against others of
their own species, or conspecifics, as well as
against other bluebird species in areas where
their breeding ranges overlap.
Mountain Bluebirds are basically monogamous. But,
as with other bluebirds, both males and females
sneak copulations with individuals that are not
their mates. For this reason, males guard their
mates, from the time a pair forms until the
female lays her eggs. Pairs typically stay
together throughout the season; however,
individuals that have had an unsuccessful first
nesting attempt may find a new mate for the rest
of the breeding season. Some pairs mate for more
than one breeding season. As in many species, the
fact that many pairs mate with each other year
after year probably reflects a male and female
fidelity to a particular breeding site rather
than to one another.
Mountain Bluebirds are solitary nesters, but
pairs may nest in close proximity to others,
depending on nest site availability. The
beginning of the breeding season varies with
latitude; birds in the southern portion of the
range begin in early April, birds in northern
latitudes begin in late May. The female chooses a
nest site, which can be any natural cavity,
abandoned woodpecker hole, cliff crevice, or nest
box. Like other bluebirds, Mountain
Bluebirds compete with House Sparrows and
European Starlings for nest sites.
Only the female builds the nest, and it takes her
anywhere from a few days to over a week to
complete. Working most diligently in the morning,
she constructs the nest of grass, weed stems,
pine needles, twigs, rootlets, bark, and,
sometimes, wool, hair, or feathers. Males are
very attentive to their females during the
nest-building period and spend most of their
energy guarding their mates. Occasionally, they
carry nest material to the cavity, but they are
not known to actually weave it into the nest.
The first eggs are laid between late April and
early May. Females lay one egg per day until the
clutch is complete. The average clutch size is
five to six eggs, but there can be as few as four
or as many as eight. The eggs are smooth, glossy,
unmarked, and are pale blue, bluish-white, or,
rarely, white. Because all eggs laid by a female
are the same color, any odd-colored eggs in a
clutch indicates that another female has laid an
egg in that nest, a behavior known as egg
dumping.
While some sources report that both sexes
incubate, incubation is mainly done by the
female. Incubation begins when the next-to-last
or the last egg is laid and lasts 13 to 14 days.
Males often feed their mates during this period,
and they continue to do so after the eggs hatch.
The female broods the nestlings for about a week
after they hatch. The male does most of the
feeding during that time. When the female ceases
her daytime brooding and begins to brood only at
night, both sexes start feeding the young
equally. The nestlings fledge after 17 to 22
days. Initially, they are sedentary and depend
heavily upon their parents for food and
protection; however, as they mature, they begin
to follow the parents around and actively solicit
feedings. The male continues to care for the
fledged young when the female begins to re-nest.
After three to four weeks, the young are
independent.
If a nesting attempt fails, Mountain Bluebirds
will renest. They usually raise two broods in a
breeding season. The fledged young may assist
their parents in raising the next brood, but this
behavior is considered rare.
Mountain Bluebirds reuse old nest sites both
within a breeding season and in successive
breeding seasons. Pairs that successfully raise a
brood in a nest
box may become faithful to that
particular type of nest box. First-year breeding
birds tend to nest in boxes identical to their
natal box.
Families form flocks in late summer and merge
with other family flocks as the season
progresses. Juveniles that fledged early in the
season and adults that bred unsuccessfully during
the summer also join these flocks. It has not
been determined whether the birds stay together
in these flocks throughout migration or on their
wintering grounds.
Mountain Bluebirds are the most migratory of the
three bluebird species. Birds in the northern
portion of the range begin to migrate sooner than
those living in the southern portion. Mountain
Bluebirds migrate to the southern United States
and central Mexico, where they inhabit open
lowlands, deserts, plains, and grasslands.
Coveside
Bird House Features

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