Just a heads-up to everybody, a common denominator I am seeing in person and in 
looking at photographs taken by others: a lot of insectivorous neotropical 
migrants, as this spring migration peaks, are finding Boxelder (Acer negundo) 
to be a good restaurant.  The reason is a small caterpillar lurking in leaflets 
tied together with silk called the Boxelder Leafroller (Caloptilia negundella). 
 This lime green with a black head caterpillar is small and hides inside 
leaflets that it pulls around itself like a sleeping bag and then ties together 
with silk.  Its mission is to eat itself out of its home and transform into a 
small, unimpressive moth.

Boxelder is an atypical type of maple in that it has compound leaves, usually 3 
leaflets (sometimes 5) comprising one leaf.  The branches display leaves that 
are opposite in arrangement (like other maples).  They are usually found in 
riparian habitats.  Do a search for images of boxelder and become familiar with 
it.  The birds find the caterpillars by looking for deformed leaflets, knowing 
that the makers of the deformities are also food.  They probe inside the leaf 
roll and extract the caterpillar.

Birds I have seen doing this of late (and in the wonderful photographs of 
others like Tom and Mary France, Mark Chavez, etc.) are: Mourning Warbler, 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo, Black-headed Grosbeak, Blackpoll Warblers, Rose-breasted 
Grosbeak, Golden-winged Warbler, Bullock's Oriole.  Probably many other birds 
are discovering this entree this wet spring.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins
                                          

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