What is Baltimore Oriole?

Baltimore Oriole, which is not to be confused with the American baseball team, is the type of Kos, which is originally from North America. The bird can be easily identified by its distinctive color and unique calls. It is popular among birds and feeders. Oriole weighs an average of about 1.2 ounces (35 g). His call is a number of fast and slow, rich whistles, with occasional harsh remark. Females have a light brown body with a burnt orange lower abdomen. The wings are primarily black, with white edges on flight feathers. On the other hand, there is also a feather of tail tail, mostly orange, with a little black in the middle.

Baltimore Oriole is located in the eastern half of America. Birds prefer to inhabit deciduous forests where they build their nests. Like many North American songs, Baltimore Oriole migrates south for winter and can move to the south as Central America during winter migration.

FriThe Baltimore Oriole season starts at the beginning of April. Men usually arrive for mating several days before women and this time uses the territory. Once women arrive, men start singing and continue to sing almost continuously until they find a suitable friend.

After a pair of Baltimore Orioles friend, the nest begins to build almost immediately. The bird's nest resembles a small, tightly knit housing that hangs under a tree branch anywhere from 5 to 100 feet (1.5 to 30.5 meters) above the ground. The nest is made of a mixture of vegetable fibers, hair and bark, with conventional insulation consisting of hair, wool and grasses. Once the nest is completed, the woman generally lays four to five eggs that hatches after about two weeks.

Baltimore Oriole is an omnipotent bird that feeds primarily on insects, berries and floral nectar. Orioles also love Hummingbird food, but many brands with food and feeders specific to Oriole are available to buy. The bird also likes fruit and jelly that bird observers commonly use toattraction.

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