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Thread started 10/29/09 4:02pm

baroque

PIGEONS ARE COOL!!!



rigins: Pigeons and doves have been around for a long time—long before humans. Rock Doves are thought to have originated in southern Asia several million years ago. Compare this to modern humans that first appeared about 120,000 years ago.

Size and weight: A pigeon is about 13 inches (32 cm) in length from bill to tail and weighs a little less than a pound (0.35 kg). Males are slightly bigger than females.

A pigeon family:

Hen: an adult female pigeon
Cock: an adult male pigeon
Hatchling: a newly hatched pigeon
just a few days old
Squab: a young pigeon from 1–30 days old.
When ready to leave its nest, a squab can sometimes weigh more than its parents.
Peeper or Squeaker: a young bird that is learning to eat
Fledgling: a bird that is ready to fly or that has just taken its first flight
Juvenile: a bird out of its nest and flying but less than eight months old
Nest and roosting sites: A pigeon nest usually is constructed on covered building ledges that resemble cliffs, a Rock Dove’s natural habitat. They also nest and roost on the support structures under bridges in cities and along highways.

Nests: Pigeons build their nests with small twigs. A cock brings the nesting material to his mate, one piece at a time, and she builds the nest. Nests are usually well-hidden and hard to find.

Eggs and incubation: Pigeons usually lay two white eggs. The parents take turns keeping their eggs warm (incubating). Males usually stay on the nest during the day; females, at night. Eggs take about 18 days to hatch.

Food for young: Both male and female parent pigeons produce a special substance called "pigeon milk," which they feed to their hatchlings during their first week of life. Pigeon milk is made in a special part of the bird’s digestive system called the "crop." When hatchlings are about one week old, the parents start regurgitating seeds with crop milk; eventually seeds replace the pigeon milk.

Colors: There may be as many as 28 pigeon color types, called "morphs," but Project PigeonWatch groups them into just seven morphs. Pigeons also have colorful neck feathers. These iridescent green, yellow, and purple feathers are called "hackle." Adult males and females look alike, but a male’s hackle is more iridescent than a female’s.

White "color:" White feathers are actually feathers that have no color pigments. So, when you see white on pigeons you are actually seeing no color.

Feathers: Pigeons have many types of feathers including contour feathers, the stiff feathers that give the body its shape, and down, the fluffy insulating feathers. Many pigeon feathers are accompanied by one or two filoplume feathers, which look like hairs. These filoplumes may have sensory functions, such as, detecting touch and pressure changes.

Eye colors: Adults have orange or reddish orange eyes; juveniles that are less than six to eight months old have medium brown or grayish brown eyes.

Leg and feet colors: Pigeon legs and feet are red to pink to grayish black. Their claws are usually grayish black but can be white on some pigeons. Some birds have "stockings," which are feathers on their legs and feet!

Cere: The cere is the fleshy covering on the upper part of a pigeon's beak. It is grayish in young birds or juveniles, and white in adults. Albino birds may have pinkish ceres.

Eyesight: Pigeon eyesight is excellent. Like humans, pigeons can see color, but they also can see ultraviolet light—part of the light spectrum that humans can’t see. Pigeons are sometimes used in human search-and-rescue missions because of their exceptional vision.

Hearing: Pigeons can hear sounds at much lower frequencies than humans can, such as wind blowing across buildings and mountains, distant thunderstorms, and even far-away volcanoes. Sensitive hearing may explain why pigeons sometimes fly away for no apparent reason: maybe they heard something you can’t.

Sounds: Pigeons make two types of sounds: vocal (using voice) and nonvocal. The primary call used by males to attract mates and defend territories is coo roo-c’too-coo. From their nests they might say oh-oo-oor. When they are startled or scared they might make an alarm call like: oorhh! Pigeon babies make nonvocal sounds such as bill snapping and hissing. After mating, males often make clapping sounds with their wings.

Unique drinking behavior: Most birds take a sip of water and throw back their heads to let the water trickle down their throats. But pigeons (and all of their relatives in the family Columbidae) suck up water, using their beaks like straws.

Magnetic sensitivity: Do pigeons have compasses in their heads? Not really, but pigeons, especially those bred for their homing instincts, seem to be able to detect the Earth’s magnetic fields. Cornell University pigeon researcher Dr. Charles Walcott says that magnetic sensitivity, along with an ability to tell direction by the sun, seems to help pigeons find their ways home.

Locomotion: On the ground, pigeons don’t hop the way many birds do. They walk or run with their heads bobbing back and forth. Pigeons are strong fliers and can fly up to 40 or 50 miles per hour. Some pigeons are raised for their exceptional abilities to fly fast and find their ways home. These pigeons may fly as far as 600 miles in a day. Although feral pigeons are good fliers too, most of these birds seem to stay close to their regular feeding sites.

Natural predators: One species of falcon, Merlin, eats so many pigeons its scientific name is Falco columbarius (with the "columba-" meaning pigeon) and it was formerly called Pigeon Hawk. Merlins are medium-sized falcons and although they are not very common in cities, you can bet they are preying on pigeons living in open parks near marshes and ponds. In cities where Peregrine Falcons have become established, they catch and eat feral pigeons, often carrying them back to feed to their nestlings. Red-tailed and Cooper’s hawks also prey on pigeons in cities and in rural areas.

Fancy pigeons: People raise all kinds of fancy pigeons. The breeds have names, such as rollers, tumblers, and fantails, which reflect the way the birds fly or the way they look. Sometimes, people take their fancy pigeons to compete in shows.

info gotten from http://www.birds.cornell....ut-pigeons
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Reply #1 posted 10/29/09 4:04pm

DesireeNevermi
nd

dove and pigeon are same bird just different coloring.
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Reply #2 posted 10/29/09 4:05pm

DesireeNevermi
nd

their doody is toxic.


they mate for life.


they are smart lil bastids
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Reply #3 posted 10/29/09 4:15pm

baroque

DesireeNevermind said:

their doody is toxic.


they mate for life.


they are smart lil bastids



i have sweet memories of these divine birds. running around chasing them. trying to touch their talons. everything is wonderful when your 5. alas! pigeons still remain cool!
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Reply #4 posted 10/29/09 4:20pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

they never bothered me nod
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Reply #5 posted 10/29/09 4:21pm

baroque

PurpleDiamond2009 said:

they never bothered me nod



yay!


[Edited 10/29/09 16:22pm]
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Reply #6 posted 10/29/09 4:21pm

baroque

PurpleDiamond2009 said:

they never bothered me nod



yay!

pigeons are truly cool!
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Reply #7 posted 10/29/09 4:24pm

Teacher

It's evil when you see them in the city with half a foot or something where they got stuck somewhere and had it ripped off, or flying inside the subway halls. shake I feel sorry for them, I don't mind them but the generic pidgeon isn't really an animal to me... they've become so "deanimalised" because they're always in the city, not being in a natural setting. We have wood doves here, they're pretty though. nod
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Reply #8 posted 10/29/09 4:46pm

ZombieKitten

2 pigeons collided mid air in front of my face yesterday WTF!!!! lol







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Reply #9 posted 10/29/09 5:04pm

baroque

PIGEON DOMINATION !!!!

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Reply #10 posted 10/29/09 5:22pm

peacenlovealwa
ys

avatar

DesireeNevermind said:

their doody is toxic.



one pooped on my head..I touched my head with my hand hoping it was water..nope. neutral slimy stuff. mad
unlucky7 reincarnated
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Reply #11 posted 10/29/09 6:38pm

PurpleDiamond2
009

ZombieKitten said:

2 pigeons collided mid air in front of my face yesterday WTF!!!! lol









you know i have never witnessed in my life pigeons pooping on people I thought it was only seagulls that do that eek
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Reply #12 posted 10/29/09 7:46pm

iGene



PurpleDiamond2009 said:

ZombieKitten said:

2 pigeons collided mid air in front of my face yesterday WTF!!!! lol









you know i have never witnessed in my life pigeons pooping on people I thought it was only seagulls that do that eek
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Reply #13 posted 10/29/09 7:49pm

PunkMistress

avatar

Bert agrees.

It's what you make it.
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Reply #14 posted 10/29/09 7:51pm

baroque

PunkMistress said:

Bert agrees.




yes soon my pigeon thread will rule..dare i say it..the world!!

PIGEON POWAHH!!
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Reply #15 posted 10/29/09 8:59pm

DesireeNevermi
nd

I once saw a little old Asian lady throw rocks at pigeons and when they fell, she picked them up and put them in her cloth satchel then went away. I think she was going to cook them. People just stared. I guess all us city folk were in shock.
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Reply #16 posted 10/29/09 9:28pm

funkyslsistah

avatar

lurking They get on my nerves especially the citifed urban ones. I had experiences of walking down the street and one would pass in front of me and stop and just look at me like I'm in its way. No, you're in my way, MOVE! lol
"Funkyslsistah… you ain't funky at all, you just a little ol' prude"!
"It's just my imagination, once again running away with me."
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Reply #17 posted 10/30/09 8:40am

veronikka

I love this photo Byron took of some pigeons, their colors! love

Rhythm floods my heart♥The melody it feeds my soul
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