Welcome to WhatBird Forums Sign in | Join | Help
in Search

Whatbird.com

Egg & nest photos - please post yours

Last post 09-12-2009, 11:30 AM by Matt. 23 replies.
Page 1 of 2 (24 items)   1 2 Next >
Sort Posts: Previous Next
  •  05-19-2009, 11:18 AM 95811

    Egg & nest photos - please post yours

    Hello birders,

    I wanted to start this thread to stimulate discussion, allow the exchange of information about bird eggs, nests, and how to identify them. Please display our own photos, or if you post someone else's photo other than your own please attribute the source. Hopefully through sharing when we come upon a nest w/ eggs we may be better prepared to ID them in the field from what we've learned here. Thank you everyone. 

    Killdeer eggs in ground nest at roadside. Photo Spring 2009 Tulare County

     


    "Watch the birdie."
    Latest: Sage Thrasher, Ferruginous Hawk (Dark Morph).
  •  05-19-2009, 11:36 AM 95814 in reply to 95811

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Canada Goose


    Nikon D50
    80-400mm vr

    Paul O'Toole
    Kingston, Ontario
  •  05-19-2009, 12:47 PM 95821 in reply to 95811

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: egg-1.jpg
    I don't know what this is...do you?..iowa, on a beach  by a lake

    http://whatbird.com/forums/photos/early_summers_birds/
    IM: oldguyrich
  •  05-19-2009, 12:58 PM 95823 in reply to 95821

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Hi birdseye,

    Maybe you can photograph the egg you found next to a large-size chicken egg so we can use them both for comparison. And I guess I'm dumb but where on the lake did you find it? Was it on the baech like close to where a turtle would bury it or near a bush like cattails, or do you think a predator just left in the open?


    "Watch the birdie."
    Latest: Sage Thrasher, Ferruginous Hawk (Dark Morph).
  •  05-19-2009, 1:06 PM 95826 in reply to 95823

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Luv2bird -- unfortunately, i took this several years ago, and didn't think to measure it then... My Wife remembers it to have been about 1 1/2 to 2 " long. ..She is usually right..It was on a river sand (oxbow lake)  beach, maybe 10 feet from shoulder high grass. The Shell had been broken out, the fluid inside had leaked out, and formed a shelf of sand beneath it. You can see the interior membrane appears to be intact inside... there were a large variety of shorebirds, red winged black birds and such that were in that area all the time. That is all i can tell you...hope it helps. thanks
    http://whatbird.com/forums/photos/early_summers_birds/
    IM: oldguyrich
  •  05-19-2009, 9:54 PM 95945 in reply to 95826

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: MODO eggs.jpg

    If you have the same table top you can still do the comparison.  Photograph a chicken egg and a tape measure on the same pattern (tape measure offsets the various size eggs you can buy).

    Here is an unusual picture as dove nests usually have only two eggs (mourning).



    Latest Birds: Black-throated Green Warbler, Pine Warbler, Eastern Kingbird, Rufous-backed Robin, Crissal Thrasher
  •  05-20-2009, 8:35 PM 96123 in reply to 95945

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: ABTO eggs wb.jpg
    Abert's Towhee eggs.  I keep looking for these nests as they are a victim of brown-headed cowbirds to the point that there is concern.


    Latest Birds: Black-throated Green Warbler, Pine Warbler, Eastern Kingbird, Rufous-backed Robin, Crissal Thrasher
  •  05-20-2009, 9:02 PM 96132 in reply to 95811

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: DSC00675.jpg
    Mallard.

    My webspace - http://islelakephotos.shawwebspace.ca/
  •  05-21-2009, 8:39 AM 96174 in reply to 95811

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: stilt and nest.JPG
    Thanks for the thread Luv2! Here is a black-necked stilt and her eggs. (Before everyone gets upset, I was not the one who disturbed her).
  •  05-30-2009, 12:13 AM 97947 in reply to 96174

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Did you know:

    when a hen lays an egg that is mottled (or speckled) the shell itself is not colored.  the speckles are somehow deposited onto the eggs just before its layed.  if one was to handle a speckled eggs just after its layed, the specks will smear.  does someone have a more scientific explanation for this?  i have been trying to research this and can't find anything on it.

  •  05-30-2009, 10:36 AM 97984 in reply to 97947

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    natureboy:

    Did you know:

    when a hen lays an egg that is mottled (or speckled) the shell itself is not colored.  the speckles are somehow deposited onto the eggs just before its layed.  if one was to handle a speckled eggs just after its layed, the specks will smear.  does someone have a more scientific explanation for this?  i have been trying to research this and can't find anything on it.

    Click here to Read about egg strength theory
    "Watch the birdie."
    Latest: Sage Thrasher, Ferruginous Hawk (Dark Morph).
  •  05-30-2009, 10:57 AM 97987 in reply to 96123

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: CBTH eggs 720 540.jpg
    Curve-billed thrasher eggs.  These are great birds and very photogenic with their bright eyes and curved bill.


    Latest Birds: Black-throated Green Warbler, Pine Warbler, Eastern Kingbird, Rufous-backed Robin, Crissal Thrasher
  •  06-22-2009, 5:40 PM 102380 in reply to 97987

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Attachment: GTGR nest 720 540.jpg

    About 10 days ago I watched a female Great-tailed Grackle fly into a tree with a long piece of grass.  Today I pulled out the ladder to have a look and found this result.  Mom was not on the nest.  With only two eggs found I may have been early as they normally lay between 3-5 eggs.  This is also the second nest of the season which may also have an impact. 

    If you are interested in a detailed grackle study:

    http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/11/2/132

    Latest Birds: Black-throated Green Warbler, Pine Warbler, Eastern Kingbird, Rufous-backed Robin, Crissal Thrasher
  •  06-23-2009, 5:18 AM 102450 in reply to 95811

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Here is a Lark Sparrow top and a Northen Cardnal bottom


    Kurt
  •  06-25-2009, 9:22 PM 103011 in reply to 102450

    Re: Egg photos - please post yours

    Beautiful photos of two species' nests and eggs I haven't seen, thank you.

    "Watch the birdie."
    Latest: Sage Thrasher, Ferruginous Hawk (Dark Morph).
Page 1 of 2 (24 items)   1 2 Next >
View as RSS news feed in XML