veery in a sentence
Examples
- In the east, the veery is distinguished easily by its coloration; distinguishing western veeries from other " Catharus " thrushes is more difficult.
- The woodland sound of a barred owl, the flute-like song of the veery, and the hammering of a sapsucker all add to the wilderness experience.
- However, a case of interspecific parental care of a Veery nest by a Bicknell s Thrush in that males may feed nestlings at more than one nest and there may be multiple male feeders at nests.
- Birds living in the stream's watershed include worm-eating warblers, wood thrushes, ovenbirds, Eastern tufted titmouses, Eastern towhees, veerys, pileated woodpeckers, nuthatches, common yellowthroats, and American redstarts.
- Other named locations in the township include ( from south to north ) Glauque Beach, Royal Oak Beach, Veery Point, Long Point, Birchwood, and Silver Beach, all on the western shore of Mullett Lake.
- Neotropical migrant species that typically require large patches of forest to support viable populations are well represented and include ovenbird, black-throated blue warbler, eastern wood pewee, red-eyed vireo, scarlet tanager, eastern wood pewee and veery.
- For example, recordings from the night of Aug . 28-29, 1993, reveal that large migrations of bobolinks, which nest in hayfields and old pastures, and a woodland thrush called the veery occurred in a broad front across the state.
- Other commonly seen species include turkey vultures, red-tail hawks, swallows, swifts, black vulture, redstart, veery, indigo bunting, Louisiana waterthrush, northern waterthrush, winter wren, black-throated green warbler, willow flycatcher, and alder flycatcher.
- One recent morning, for example, weather conditions would probably have resulted in about 40 dead birds, Stotz said, but because the lights were out and curtains drawn, Mary Hennen, an assistant to Stotz, found only two catbirds, a veery and a white crown sparrow.
- Veerys in 1987 and 1997 were Britain's second and fourth records, a R�ppell's warbler in 1979 was Britain's second, an eastern Bonelli's warbler in 2004 was Britain's fourth, and a black-faced bunting in 2001 Britain's third.