Birdist Rule #57: It’s Summer鈥擶atch Out for Juveniles!

Baby birds are about to be on the loose, but identifying them can be tricky.

Pretty soon this summer you might see a bird that you don鈥檛 recognize. It might look sort of like something you know, but . . . something鈥檚 just off. It doesn鈥檛 match anything in your field guide. What could it be?

Before you go and call the local university thinking you鈥檝e found a species new to science, consider whether it鈥檚 a recently fledged bird. There鈥檚 a sweet spot in the middle of summer when these birds have left their nests but aren鈥檛 yet sporting full adult plumage. This interim plumage is called 鈥渏uvenal鈥 and applies to birds in their鈥攜ou guessed it鈥攋uvenile phase. Like human teenagers, these birds are an odd-looking, awkward version of what they鈥檒l soon become. We鈥檝e all been there.

Birds in this juvenal plumage can be very difficult to identify in the field, but it鈥檚 worth trying, and you鈥檒l learn some important things about the development of young birds in the process.

Let鈥檚 start with a quick lesson about the stages of bird development. First, birds start as eggs. Did you know that? I really hope you did. Let鈥檚 continue.

Next, baby birds hatch out of eggs and become hatchlings. Some hatchlings are born into the nest completely defenseless, usually unfeathered and with their eyes closed. Others, such as plovers, quails, and other birds born in open country, are born with feathers and can run or swim (not fly) right away. This is to help them avoid predators.

Species that continue to develop in the nest are called nestlings (noticing a theme here?), and these birds hang out and wait for their parents to bring them food. As they grow and gain strength, they also shed their downy feathers for new feathers that allow them to fly. Once that happens and they鈥檙e ready to leave the nest, our nestlings become fledglings. Different species fledge at different times, but most songbirds and smaller species fledge from late June through July. So if you鈥檙e doing any birding during those months, be prepared to see some juvenile birds.

Out of the nest, fledglings are, obviously, much easier for the average birder to see than nestlings. It鈥檚 important to note here that fledgling birds can look pretty pathetic, and may even appear to be in trouble if you see them flapping around on the ground. However, as the ever-helpful  of Bird and Moon illustrates in her instructive comic, you should leave fledglings alone unless they鈥檙e in immediate danger; this is a natural step and the birds are usually in close proximity to their parents.

So, instead of trying to offer misguided help to a fledgling bird, maybe just go ahead and try to figure out what species it is.

Bob Mulvihill banded thousands of birds during his time at the Powdermill Avian Research Center in western Pennsylvania, which is the longest running year-round bird-banding station in the country. He鈥檚 handled birds in just about every conceivable plumage and knows firsthand how much of a challenge it can be to identify juvenile birds.

"Some juvenile species are fairly easy to identify, like American Robins, which just have brown spots over a reddish breast,鈥 says Mulvihill, who is now an ornithologist at the National Aviary in Pittsburgh. 鈥淏ut others are like 鈥榟uh?鈥欌 He rattles off some of the classic challenges: Dark-eyed Juncos and Eastern Towhees are streaky and bland; adolescent can look like Mourning Warblers; and young Swamp, Song, and Lincoln鈥檚 Sparrows are nearly inseparable, even in the hand. Mulvihill pointed me to one particularly difficult juvenile ID he had back in 2002 (halfway down the page ). It鈥檚 a Yellow Warbler, though I wouldn鈥檛 have guessed it.

Most field guides will include images of immature birds, but according to Mulvihill, there isn鈥檛 really any one good field guide for juvenal plumages. He does recommend Julie Zickefoose鈥檚 book for reference, though it鈥檚 not really a field guide. There is also a pretty good collection of reference pictures on the . Look at that tiny hot mess of a Gray Catbird!

If you scan the Powdermill site, you鈥檒l notice how some of those juvenile species look more like adults than others. The Black-and-white Warbler and the Louisiana Waterthrush, for example, are pretty recognizable, while the Common Yellowthroat and Black-throated Green Warbler are distinctly different. Mulvihill says that camouflage is a big part of it; juvenile open-country birds such as shorebirds are often cryptically patterned in order to make them more difficult to see, and a songbird鈥檚 juvenile blandness helps it blend into its surroundings.

What鈥檚 more, 鈥渋t鈥檚 expensive to produce fancy feathers,鈥 Mulvihill says. Young birds would would have to expend energy to create bright, multi-colored plumages鈥攅nergy that is badly needed to develop into an adult.

How can you tell if a weird bird you鈥檙e seeing is a juvenile? There are some clues. Juvenile birds are fluffier looking, as they鈥檙e replacing their down feathers with adult ones. Look again . See how scruffy those birds are? Cute, I know, but also a good sign that you鈥檙e not looking at a put-together adult.

Proportions can also help. Younger birds often have bills that look too big for their head, and short-looking, stubby feathers. The body can just look sort of 鈥渙ff鈥 as the bird grows into itself. Colorful or fleshy areas at the corners of the mouth鈥攃alled the 鈥済ape flange鈥濃攎ight be visible remnants of the bird鈥檚 recent days as a wide-mouthed, begging nestling.

Finally, though it sounds silly, the bird just might be acting young: begging and whining, not very steady on its feet, and generally dopey. Instead of gracefully flitting through the branches, the bird might just be slowly moving from one to another. Sometimes they鈥檒l just sit there looking kind of dazed. If it鈥檚 not acting like a typical adult bird, there's a chance you've got a juvenile.   

Getting good looks at these young birds is much more difficult without the benefit of a mist net and banding equipment. So, Mulvihill鈥檚 best advice for trying to identify these birds is to just wait. 鈥淢ost often when you see a juvenile bird, the adult bird will return or show itself within 60 seconds,鈥 he says. Though they鈥檝e fledged, juvenile birds stick close to their parents, who will still feed them and try to keep them out of danger.

Thankfully for confused summer birders (and for hard-working bird parents), fledglings don鈥檛 stay long in their awkward phase. Juvenal plumages in songbirds generally last less than four weeks, after which bird begins molting into a first-year plumage that often looks nearly identical to adults of the same species. So, enjoy this fleeting moment of avian adolescence while it lasts. By fall, these birds will have to tackle the very grown-up business of migration.