chaetura pelagica
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Blue Jay ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 30-33
Author(s):  
Nicole Firlotte ◽  
Timothy F. Poole ◽  
Christian Artuso ◽  
C-Jae C. Breiter ◽  
Laura D. Burns ◽  
...  

Previous attempts to provide purpose-built artificial chimneys in Manitoba for the threatened Chimney Swift (Chaetura pelagica) have not attracted swifts. A new design of artificial chimney was constructed in Winnipeg and moved to the Assiniboine Park Zoo. Chimney Swifts bred in this tower during the summer of 2019, the first confirmed use of purpose-built artifical habitat in western Canada.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanner K. Steeves ◽  
Shannon B. Kearney-McGee ◽  
Margaret A. Rubega ◽  
Calvin L. Cink ◽  
Charles T. Collins
Keyword(s):  

Blue Jay ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 10-15
Author(s):  
Timothy F. Poole ◽  
Gordon Ogilvie

Since 2007, the Manitoba Chimney Swift Initiative (MCSI) has conducted regular monitoring of roost and nest sites in communities across Manitoba.MCSI's observations have provided new information on habitat selection, notably in relation to nest site chimneys.


2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (6) ◽  
pp. 907-914 ◽  
Author(s):  
David B. Needle ◽  
Annabel G. Wise ◽  
Christopher R. Gregory ◽  
Roger K. Maes ◽  
Inga F. Sidor ◽  
...  

Five chimney swift fledglings died following a progressive loss of appetite and condition while being cared for by an experienced wildlife rehabilitator. All animals had severe necrotizing and heterophilic ventriculitis, with myriad epithelial cells characterized by karyomegaly with intranuclear inclusion bodies. Transmission electron microscopy showed distention of epithelial cell nuclei and chromatin peripheralization by nonenveloped, icosahedral, 75- to 85-nm-diameter virions. Degenerate nested PCR for a highly conserved region of the adenovirus DNA polymerase gene was positive. BLAST analysis of the amplicon sequence indicated the presence of a novel adenovirus, with 74% homology to Antarctic penguin adenoviruses and 72% homology to a bat adenovirus, at low query coverages of only 65% and 63%, respectively. BLAST analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence generated the highest scores for squamate adenoviruses at 100% query coverage. Based on phylogenetic analysis of the partial amino acid sequence of the DNA polymerase, the chimney swift virus was a novel adenovirus most closely related to the Atadenovirus genus. Using a probe based on the novel viral sequence, DNA in situ hybridization identified viral nucleic acid in the nucleus. While the tentatively named chimney swift adenovirus-1 (CsAdV-1) is so far classified with the Atadenoviruses, it is relatively divergent from other members of that genus and may represent the first identified member of a new genus of Adenoviruses.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth F. Purves ◽  
C. Myles Falconer ◽  
Douglas C. Tozer ◽  
Kristyn Richardson

2017 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 632
Author(s):  
Dean Evans ◽  
Jennie Pearce ◽  
Jennifer R. Foote

2017 ◽  
Vol 284 (1849) ◽  
pp. 20162602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis J. Evangelista ◽  
Dylan D. Ray ◽  
Sathish K. Raja ◽  
Tyson L. Hedrick

Chimney swifts ( Chaetura pelagica ) are highly manoeuvrable birds notable for roosting overnight in chimneys, in groups of hundreds or thousands of birds, before and during their autumn migration. At dusk, birds gather in large numbers from surrounding areas near a roost site. The whole flock then employs an orderly, but dynamic, circling approach pattern before rapidly entering a small aperture en masse . We recorded the three-dimensional trajectories of ≈1 800 individual birds during a 30 min period encompassing flock formation, circling, and landing, and used these trajectories to test several hypotheses relating to flock or group behaviour. Specifically, we investigated whether the swifts use local interaction rules based on topological distance (e.g. the n nearest neighbours, regardless of their distance) rather than physical distance (e.g. neighbours within x m, regardless of number) to guide interactions, whether the chimney entry zone is more or less cooperative than the surrounding flock, and whether the characteristic subgroup size is constant or varies with flock density. We found that the swift flock is structured around local rules based on physical distance, that subgroup size increases with density, and that there exist regions of the flock that are less cooperative than others, in particular the chimney entry zone.


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