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Page "Bell's Vireo" ¶ 3
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Cowbirds and sometimes
This species, though less vulnerable than other cup-nesters, is still sometimes victim to brood parasitism from Brown-headed Cowbirds that have taken advantage of the fragmentation of Eastern forests to expand their range in the last century.
Cowbirds sometimes parasitise the nest.

Cowbirds and lay
Brown-headed Cowbirds lay eggs in the nests of these birds in some areas.

Cowbirds and eggs
It seems that Brown-headed Cowbirds periodically check on their eggs and young after they have deposited them.
The host ’ s eggs and chicks are not destroyed, but there is considerable doubt about the theory that the young Giant Cowbirds benefit the host ’ s chick by removing and eating parasitic flies.

Cowbirds and Bell's
Cowbirds use Bell's Vireo nests as their own nurseries.

Cowbirds and nests
Chats are apparently vigilant guards of their nests, as parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds is not as frequent as with other cup nest builders.
* Their nests are often parasitized by Brown-headed Cowbirds.

Cowbirds and .
The Red-winged Blackbird is occasionally a victim of brood parasites, particularly Brown-headed Cowbirds.
Notes on Parasitism by Bronzed Cowbirds Molothrus-Aeneus in El-Salvador.
Parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds can have a significant impact on Pine Siskin productivity, and forest fragmentation has increased their contact with cowbirds.
nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds, as well as loss of habitat in the winter range.
Eggs and chicks are vulnerable to chipmunks, raccoons, Blue Jays, American Crows, black rat snakes, Brown-headed Cowbirds, Common Grackles, southern flying squirrels, gray squirrels, least weasels, white-footed mice, domestic cats, Great Horned Owls, and Sharp-shinned Hawks.
Brown-headed Cowbirds are now commonly seen at suburban birdfeeders.
This is unsuitable for young Brown-headed Cowbirds, meaning almost none survive to fledge.
( 1998 ) Cowbirds and Other Brood Parasites.
People have also intervened to protect this bird against nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds, to which these birds are highly susceptible.
Interspecific brood-parasites include the Old World cuckoos in Eurasia and Australia, Cowbirds and Black-headed Ducks in the Americas, and indigobirds, whydahs, and the honeyguides in Africa.
* Cowbirds and Cuckoos ( Swim Slowly, 2009 ) as Ryland Bouchard.
Cowbirds are birds belonging to the genus Molothrus in the family Icteridae.
Nests are often parasitised by Shiny Cowbirds.
Cowbirds often parasitise the nest.

sometimes and lay
Sometimes the monks were directly subject to the lay abbot ; sometimes he appointed a substitute to perform the spiritual functions, known usually as dean ( decanus ), but also as abbot ( abbas legitimas, monasticus, regularis ).
In the modern Islamic Republic of Iran the rahbar ( Supreme Leader, at present Ali Khamenei ) serves as head of state, above the elected ( sometimes lay ) president, who is formally the constitutional head of government.
Zeppelins would sometimes land on the sea surface next to a minesweeper, bring aboard an officer and show him the lay of the mines.
Duchies frequently changed hands ; control of Poznań, Gniezno and Kalisz sometimes lay with a single duke, but at other times these constituted separate duchies.
In the words of David C. Rowe " A racial concept, although sometimes in the guise of another name, will remain in use in biology and in other fields because scientists, as well as lay persons, are fascinated by human diversity, some of which is captured by race.
The main differences between the two lay in the difference in terrain on which Vauban and Van Coehoorn constructed their defences: Vauban in the sometimes more hilly and mountainous terrain of France, Van Coehoorn in the flat and floodable lowlands of the Netherlands.
Though the world is dominated by a divine power that the gods bestow in different ways on men, nothing but " darkness " lay ahead and life was sometimes frail and unsubstantial.
Initially, a large proportion of noncoding DNA had no known biological function and was therefore sometimes referred to as " junk DNA ", particularly in the lay press.
In Orthodox circles, the occasion is sometimes celebrated during a weekday service that includes reading from the Torah, such as a Monday or Thursday morning service, in which case the Bar Mitzvah will also lay tefillin for the first time publicly.
Instead of building their own nests, falcons appropriate old nests of other birds, but sometimes they lay their eggs on cliff ledges or in tree hollows.
Pepin II was probably born in Herstal ( Héristal ), modern Belgium ( where his center of power lay ), whence his byname ( sometimes " of Heristal ").
The family quickly realised that Henri's talent lay in drawing and painting, and a friend of his father, Rene Princeteau visited sometimes to give informal lessons.
Coins minted at Cnossus from the fifth century showed the kneeling bull or the head of a goddess crowned with a wreath of grain and on the reverse — the " underside "— a scheme of four meander patterns joined at the centre windmill fashion, sometimes with sickle moons or with a star-rosette at the center: " it is a small view of the nocturnal world on the face of the coin that lay downward in the printing process, and is, as it were, oriented downward ".
Civil claims with an amount in controversy under £ 5, 000 are dealt with in the County Court under the Small Claims Track ( sometimes known to the lay public as " Small Claims Court ," although it is not a separate court ).
A hand consisting of the top five cards of the trump suit is mathematically unbeatable from any position ; this is sometimes referred to as a lay-down, as a player with such a hand may often simply lay all five cards on the table at once.
Some images of the Madonna were paid for by lay organizations called confraternities, who met to sing praises of the Virgin in chapels found within the newly reconstructed, spacious churches that were sometimes dedicated to her.
Services are usually officiated by a priest, but lay leaders sometimes fill in when no priest is available.
Although it is sometimes mistakenly thought to be Rostropovich, Tortelier is the inventor of the bent cello pin, enabling the instrument to lay more horizontally than vertically.
A case is sometimes made that groups such as the Muslim Brotherhoods ( in many countries ) and specifically the Muslim Brotherhood of Egypt ( the first, or first known ), are modern inheritors of the tradition of lay tariqa in Islam.
This condition, is caused by body louse ( Pediculus humanus humanus, sometimes called Pediculus humanus corporis ) is a louse which infests humans and is adapted to lay eggs in clothing, rather than at the base of hairs, and is thus of recent evolutionary origin.
Roughly speaking, the distinction was that a rector directly received both the greater and lesser tithes of his parish while a vicar received only the lesser tithes ( the greater tithes going to the lay holder, or impropriator, of the living ); a perpetual curate with a small cure and often aged or infirm received neither greater nor lesser tithes, and received only a small salary ( paid sometimes by the diocese ).
They lay two to five speckled eggs, sometimes laying two or more clutches per year.
Female parasitic cuckoos sometimes specialize and lay eggs that closely resemble the eggs of their chosen host.
" Like the cuckoo, they sometimes lay their eggs in the nests of other species such as seagulls, abandoning them to be raised by those birds.
They normally lay one or more chalky-blue eggs on the ground or sometimes in a tree nest.

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