The News-Times (Sunday)

BACKYARD BUDDIES

YOU’RE NOT GOING FAR FROM HOME – AND NEITHER ARE THE ANIMALS YOU SPY OUT YOUR WINDOW

- By Julian Avery Julian Avery is an assistant research professor of wildlife ecology and conservati­on at Pennsylvan­ia State University. This article was provided by theconvers­ation.com.

Watching the wildlife outside your window can boost your mental wellbeing, and it’s something lots of people have been doing a lot more of lately.

Maybe you’ve been wondering if you’re seeing one persistent gray squirrel or a rotating cast of furry characters. Maybe you’ve been thinking about which birds are passing through for the season and which are townies who stick around all year.

As a wildlife ecologist, I’ve learned to pay attention to patterns that show me what the animals outside my window are up to, and I usually know which individual­s are my regulars.

Whether you’re spying on animals in a city, town or rural area, with a little background knowledge, you too can keep tabs on the private lives of your neighborho­od critters.

For many species, winter is a time when individual­s compete less with one another and gather in large groups.

For example, eastern cottontail rabbits congregate around areas with plenty of food and places to escape to. Birds form large mixed-species flocks, which helps them better find food and avoid being hunted. They even form temporary allegiance­s as they forage together, following specific individual­s who help determine where the flock goes.

As the season changes to spring, migratory species start arriving. A steady parade of individual­s moves through the neighborho­od. As animals transition to their breeding season, plumage and appearance­s may change as they work to attract mates. For many species, defense of a piece of land becomes an overriding concern.

During the summer months, adult animal numbers stabilize, and the drive to establish a territory means you’re likely to have the same individual­s active outside your windows for the majority of summer.

Splitting up the neighborho­od

A territory is a chunk of habitat. Its size will vary depending on the amount of food and breeding resources it holds. A territory with few trees, for example, may need to be bigger to hold enough forage for the animal that owns the turf.

Territory sizes for different species can range from the size of a large kitchen table (common lizards like green anoles and skinks) to an area greater than 120 football fields (a raptor such as the Cooper’s hawk). The cool thing is that animal home ranges are governed by their own needs and often do not follow the lines of human fences and alleyways.

I like to think of animal territorie­s as quilts that drape over your neighborho­od. For some species, like anoles, the squares in that quilt will have many small and intricate pieces, and you could fit many quilt pieces within each individual human property boundary. Some of those pieces will even overlap other patches.

Small songbirds will have quilt patches that span several human properties, though they may use specific parts more than others. Larger species will have quilt patches that cover entire neighborho­ods with one territory.

Frequently spotted

If you’ve become familiar with the animals in your neighborho­od, chances are you’ll see some of the same individual­s again year after year. Eastern cottontail­s are likely to live up to three years in the wild, and they stay in the same general territory throughout their lives. Even the young have a tendency to stay close to their birth place.

Researcher­s have recaptured gray squirrels year after year in their original territorie­s. On average, these critters survive about six years and can live longer than 20.

Birds also have long lives and will often stay in the same territory year after year. However, when eggs don’t hatch or young die in the nest, some birds may choose a new territory the following year. This means there can be high turnover in your local bird network if the local habitat is unpredicta­ble or full of urban predators.

Birds that don’t migrate and stay in residence year-round, like chickadees, often have a tendency to stay in the same area, which means you’ll be seeing the same individual birds outside your window across seasons.

Some species will have territorie­s that don’t overlap much at all. For others, the overlap can be extensive.

This means that generally during the breeding season, you could be watching many gray squirrels visiting outside your window.

There may also be a couple of male cottontail­s, but probably a single female because they tend to not overlap with other females.

Maybe you’ll spy the same pair of cardinals along with a reliable pair of chickadees. If you’re watching closely like I was the other day, you may get lucky and catch another male cardinal from the territory next door trying to flirt with your female, at least until her mate realizes what’s about to happen. That is a clue to the invisible lines birds have drawn between their own domains.

When it comes to smaller animals, like lizards and insects, all bets are off for how many unique individual­s are present outside your window. But you can expect more of everything as the number of native plants increases.

Tips for watching

If you’re interested in trying to keep track of particular wildlife friends through the window, try to watch for identifyin­g marks.

In my research, I attach colored bands to bird legs or mark the scales of turtles and snakes so we can figure out how many exist in an area. Many animals have enough individual variation that you can keep track of them using their natural unique marks and scars. Squirrels can have torn ears or injured tails, lizards can have unique scars or healed injuries, and birds can have subtle difference­s in color or pattern.

Also try paying attention to the maximum number you see at any one point. Where do they go after eating or basking? You may get lucky and spy a nest or resting place. See if you can spot other individual­s coming from different directions and territorie­s.

At my house, we had a nest of rabbit kits born under our deck. I thought there was only one surviving newborn because we never saw more than one offspring. Two weeks later, there were three babies foraging simultaneo­usly in the yard, and it became clear that they’d previously been taking turns coming out of hiding.

If you start watching closely, I think you’ll find so much drama happening in your neighborho­od that you may get hooked on the action.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Bunnies live out yard all year long, and are joined by migratory animals in spring.
Getty Images Bunnies live out yard all year long, and are joined by migratory animals in spring.
 ?? Eblis / Getty Images / iStockphot­o ?? A green common garden lizard takes in the sun on a beautiful summer day.
Eblis / Getty Images / iStockphot­o A green common garden lizard takes in the sun on a beautiful summer day.

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