Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lord of the flies

Easily identified by its looooong tail, scissortai­l is a flying bug-zapper

- JERRY BUTLER

Scissor-tailed flycatcher­s rank among the most elegant and easily recognizab­le songbirds in Arkansas and all of North America.

With extremely long tails and peachyrose breast color that peeks out from beneath slate-colored wings, they are easy to spot and identify.

They perch openly on power lines, barbed wire fences and leafless tree limbs, and they are much more comfortabl­e around humans than many of their feathered relatives. They can be seen on golf courses, at airports and in cemeteries.

Arkansas has other birds in the flycatcher family, but the scissortai­l is the emperor of all the others for its size, abundance and distinctiv­e good looks.

Scissor-tailed flycatcher­s (Tyrannus forficatus) are plentiful in the western tier of Arkansas counties and are commonly seen in other parts of the state, especially on open pastures and cattle ranches. They like scrubby areas with scattered trees and water nearby. They aren’t so common where row crops or thick forests dominate the landscape.

Cornell University’s Laboratory of Ornitholog­y rates the bird’s conservati­on status as “least concern,” and it is abundant within its range.

According to the Peterson Field Guide to Birds of Eastern and Central North America,

the natural summer range blankets Texas and extends up through all of Oklahoma (where the scissor-tailed flycatcher is the state bird) and into southern Kansas. It also includes southweste­rn Missouri, western Arkansas and western Louisiana.

But researcher­s say the species’ range seems to be shifting toward the north and east, as are the ranges of several other kinds of birds.

During migration, a single scissortai­l may wander far from the typical migratory path into Central America, followed by the others in its tribe. Scissortai­ls have been reported as rare “accidental­s” in British Columbia and Nova Scotia.

These birds prefer open fields of grass and weeds where they can pose motionless on a snag or wire before swooping down on a hapless insect.

Their last name is “flycatcher,” but they feed on grasshoppe­rs, beetles and moths as well as flies. Hall of Famer Willie Mays caught 448 fly balls in his best year as a major league outfielder; a scissortai­l might catch that many flies in a week.

Insects provide most of their diet, although observers have noted that they also eat mulberries, hackberrie­s and perhaps other fruit.

TALL TAIL

An adult male flycatcher can grow to 15 inches long. Only 6 inches are the body of the bird, the other 9 are all tail feathers.

The long tail allows the bird to make acrobatic maneuvers in midair. It can pause momentaril­y like a helicopter while it snags prey midflight.

It opens and closes its primary tail feathers in a scissor-like motion during aerial courtship displays and occasional­ly while feeding. This behavior gave the bird its apt descriptiv­e name: scissor-tailed. (It has also been called the “swallow-tailed flycatcher” and the “Texas bird-of-paradise.”)

The male and the female adults have long tails. A juvenile’s tail feathers are noticeably longer than a similarly sized mockingbir­d, but noticeably shorter than the adult scissortai­ls.

Writing in The Auk in 2001, ornitholog­ists J.V. Regosin and S. Pruett-Jones reported that tail length, wing span and beak length were all factors in distinguis­hing sexual potency among scissor-tailed flycatcher­s, but that the length of the male’s tail was the factor most closely associated with “early clutch initiation” and clutch size.

This means that the longer the adult flycatcher’s tail is, the earlier the eggs of its mate will be laid and the greater the number of eggs in a nest.

The female builds the cup-shaped nest alone, usually in a tree, 7 to 25 feet above the ground. The nests are occasional­ly built on structures like towers, bridge girders, or utility poles. I once saw one nesting on the runway lights at the Hot Springs Memorial Field Airport. The nest can be made of stems, grasses, cotton fiber, feathers or human trash such as paper, carpet fuzz, cigarette filters or string.

She incubates four to seven creamy white eggs for 13 to 16 days. After the eggs hatch, the male parent assists in feeding the nestlings.

The young take flight from their home about two weeks after they hatch.

HANGING OUT

Scissor-tailed flycatcher­s will be seen alone or in pairs during summer nesting seasons. It

is not unusual to see them in the company of other birds in the flycatcher family.

Occasional­ly, four or five fledglings from the same nest will hang together for a few days until they gain confidence in their own independen­ce. As migration time approaches, they gather into large flocks for the trip to southern Mexico and the Pacific coast of Central America, where they winter.

The Cornell Lab of Ornitholog­y reported that some of these pre-migratory flocks may number as many as a thousand birds. I once observed a group of about a hundred scissortai­ls in late September as they gathered on utility wires near one of Lonoke’s public schools. They remained as a group in that general area for about a week before moving south.

Those flycatcher­s seemed to be unaffected by the noisy children on the playground and honking traffic nearby.

Scissortai­ls arrive in Arkansas in March and begin leaving in September but are not all gone until early November.

EYE-CATCHER

Birding Pals is a worldwide network of people who enjoy birds. They are linked together through the internet and assist people from different areas who want to see birds they may not usually have occasion to see.

For more than 10 years, I have been an Arkansas “Birding Pal.” During those years I have hosted about 40 people visiting the state, most of them from the East Coast; some I’ve hosted as a personal birding guide and others over the phone by helping them find birding areas.

When I ask them, “What bird would you most like to see?” they almost always mention the scissor-tailed flycatcher.

When they see it, they are never disappoint­ed.

 ?? Democrat-Gazette file photo ?? A scissor-tailed flycatcher built her nest using shreds of plastic grocery bag as well as natural things like twigs and leaves.
Democrat-Gazette file photo A scissor-tailed flycatcher built her nest using shreds of plastic grocery bag as well as natural things like twigs and leaves.
 ?? U.S. Fish&Wildlife Service ?? From March to early November, scissor-tailed flycatcher­s are easy to spot perching in the open on bare branches, power lines and barbed wire.
U.S. Fish&Wildlife Service From March to early November, scissor-tailed flycatcher­s are easy to spot perching in the open on bare branches, power lines and barbed wire.

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