Dave: We have been carefully observing the plant cover types where we are 
seeing the dickcissels. Myself and a range conservationist discussed this 
very topic yesterday on our trip to see Dickcissels south of Alamosa. Here 
is the San Luis Valley perspective....list:

Tall Brome Grasses: Usually of nonnative grasses like smooth brome, timothy
Tall Grasses-Alfalfa complex: Birds are in a mix of these two plant cover 
types. 
Barley: Today I heard one singing in a barley field. These are all cover 
types. Habitat types or plant associations usually refer to native plant 
potentials. A cover type is just the combo of plants that are currently on 
an ecological site.
Most of these types are currently being cut for hay. In which case, birds 
have moved to fencelines or uncut corners and edges. We will be looking at 
this population to see if we can see breeding evidence, aka Atlas 
procedures. 

I have not seen or heard any Dickcissels in the San Luis Valley that are on 
native habitat types/plant associations. Not surprising since we lack true 
tall grass prairie ecosystems in our high desert shrubland communities. 

John Rawinski
Retired Soil Scientist USDA


On Monday, June 26, 2017 at 12:08:12 PM UTC-6, Dave Leatherman wrote:

> I would be interested in hearing from COBIRDS folks about their 
> observations of the dominant plant(s) in the areas where Dickcissels seem 
> to be territorial (lots of singing on multiple days).  Of course, alfalfa 
> has always been a crop that seems to attract Dickcissels, presumably 
> because of the sulphur and white butterfly caterpillars found in these 
> fields, and probably a lot of other insects like grasshoppers.
>
>
> During this year when the Colorado prairie and foothills are lush with 
> plant life due to much needed moisture over the last couple years, 
> Dickcissels can exist in our midst and they seem to have choices.  Which 
> choices are they making?  In addition to alfalfa fields, I have also seen 
> them in salt-cedar/tamarisk (of all things, in this case near Nee Noshe Res 
> south of Eads (Kiowa)) and in wild licorice (*Glycyrrhiza lepidota*) 
> north of Nunn (Weld).
>
>
> What other plants are you seeing Dickcissels favor?
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Dave Leatherman
>
> Fort Collins
>

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