Michigans Rare Kirtlands Warbler
by Lianne Schneider
Title
Michigans Rare Kirtlands Warbler
Artist
Lianne Schneider
Medium
Digital Art - Digital Painting/photographic Art
Description
Digitally hand painted tapestry of the endangered Kirtland's Warbler.
Please forgive my inability to respond to all comments in a timely fashion. Believe me when I say that I appreciate each and every one of them more than you could know. So what I will do instead, as much as possible, is visit each of you and catch up with your work and promote it too as my way of saying thank you. If I haven't visited your pages very recently, you can be sure that I will very soon. I'm so very grateful for the constant support I've received from all of you.
FROM: Michigan Department of Natural Resources
The endangered Kirtland's warbler is one of the rarest members of the wood warbler (Parulidae) family. It is a bird of unusual interest for many reasons. It nests in just a few counties in Michigan's northern Lower and Upper peninsulas, in Wisconsin and the province of Ontario and, currently, nowhere else on Earth. Its nests generally are concealed in mixed vegetation of grasses and shrubs below the living branches of five to 20 year old jack pine (Pinus banksiana) forests. The male Kirtland's warblers' summer plumage is composed of a distinctive bright yellow colored breast streaked in black and bluish gray back feathers, a dark mask over its face with white eye rings, and bobbing tail. The female's plumage coloration is less bright; her facial area is devoid of a mask. Overall length of the bird is less than six inches.
Because of its restricted home range and unique habitat requirements, the Kirtland's warbler probably has always been a rare bird. Scientists did not describe the species until 1851 when a male was collected on the outskirts of Cleveland, Ohio. That first specimen was sent to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The species eventually was named in honor of Dr. Jared P. Kirtland, a physician, teacher, horticulturist, and naturalist who authored the first lists of birds, mammals, fishes, reptiles, and amphibians of Ohio.
The diet of the warbler includes many different insect species at various developmental stages, including caterpillars, butterflies, moths, flies, grasshoppers, as well as ripe blueberries, when in season.
Breeding
Male Kirtland's warblers arrive back in Michigan from the Bahamas between May 3 and May 20, a few days ahead of the females. The males establish and defend territories and then court the females when they arrive. The males' song is loud, yet low pitched, ending with an upward inflection. As the female builds a nest of leaves and grass, lined with mosses or deer hair, the male begins to bring her food. This duty continues through laying and the incubation process, with which the males rarely help. Four to five cream white eggs speckled and blotched with brown are laid in late May, followed by an incubation of 13-16 days. Both parents feed the chicks, which grow quickly and have left the nest within nine days, staying in the undergrowth and lowest branches of the trees. Within five weeks, the parents have ceased feeding their young.
Jack Pine Habitat
The jack pine forest community provides the primary nesting habitat for the Kirtland's warbler. This forest species is adapted to dry land conditions and has been present on the sandy outwash plains of northern Michigan since the retreat of the Wisconsin ice sheet about 14,000 years ago. A narrow, band of jack pine habitat can be found across the north central states and the province of Ontario.
2nd place in the Warbler contest
I am very grateful to the following groups for featuring this image:
- Digital realism
- Landscapes, Flowers, Animals
- Vote and Vote Often
- Small Showroom
- Photography and Textures Make Beautiful Art
- Comfortable Art
- All Seasons Nature Mountains and Woodlands
- Feathers and Beaks
- Digital Touch
- Why Not Group
- Artists News
- Artists Best Five
- Beauty Captured
- Get Your Art Seen
- Harmony and Happiness
- Art Perspectives
- Hotel Lobby Art
- Art with Flair
- Art by God
- Wildlife One A Day
- Book Covers 1 Per Day
- FAA Featured Images
- Interpretations of Nature
- All Fine Art America Artwork
A derivative work - digital painting - based on an image in the public domain. Textures by Jerry Jones/Shadowhouse Creations and textures purchased from Flypaper Textures.
Image Copyright - Lianne Schneider http://lianne-schneider.artistwebsites.com All rights reserved.
All images and my personal poetry/prose are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced, downloaded, distributed, transmitted, copied, reproduced in derivative works, displayed, published or broadcast by any means or in any form without prior written consent from the artist. Copyright on works derived from or based on images in the public domain applies only to the subsequent manipulation or painting resulting from my changes. The original image remains in the public domain and such images are used in accordance with international copyright laws.
Uploaded
September 18th, 2013
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Viewed 6,930 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 03/28/2024 at 1:41 PM
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Comments (194)
Gary F Richards
Outstanding composition, lighting, shading, color and artwork! F/L … voted for this piece in the BIRDS contest!
Jo Ann Tomaselli
Eye catching color and beautiful texture overlay really make this image pop Lianne! Beautiful work!
David Arment
"Pinned" him on Pintrest. I'll read all the comments in hopes of finding out where this little guy was. He sure is pretty.
Jo Ann Tomaselli
I love this image Lianne! v/f and shared on my new FB art gallery page Planet 9 ART!
Bonnie Bruno
Lianne, I came across this beautiful warbler this morning and recognized it as your work immediately! You have developed a style all your own--so very detailed and lovely.
Lianne Schneider
Thank you so much everyone for your support and lovely comments. I hope to return each gift in person by visiting you soon if I haven't already done so.