Transcript BABIES

Characteristics
Food
Habitat
Babies
Life Cycle
Inuit Uses
The Ptarmigan
By Caely
Gr.4
Where I got my Info.
CHARACTERISTICS
• Ptarmigans are small chicken like birds. They have two
colors depending on the season. They are brownish white
with dark stripes in summer, but are completely white in
winter. In summer, they blend into tundra plants and look
like shadows, but in winter, they look like the snow.
Ptarmigans look just like small grouse, weighing from 10
½ ounces to 1 ½ pounds, except that their toes are
feathered, their wings are white all year, and they pure
white body plumage in winter.
HABITAT
• Ptarmigans live in alpine and Arctic tundras throughout the
northern hemisphere. There are three kinds of Ptarmigan
and they are all found in Alaska. They also have scattered
in the lands of Japan, Switzerland, and Spain. The WhiteTailed Ptarmigan also scatter along the lands of Yukon, and
New Mexico.
BABIES
• All Ptarmigan nests are getting made soon after the
snowmelts. Hens usually lay six to ten eggs, which are
incubated for three weeks or less weeks. Hatching takes
place in late June and early July throughout Alaska. The
male Willow Ptarmigan stays with the family and doesn’t
hesitate to defend the brood, but male White- Tailed and
Rock Ptarmigan leave the care of chicks entirely to hens.
The chicks grow with amazing speed. They can get off the
ground from 9 to10 days old and get off the ground to
flying when they are 8 to 10 weeks old.
FOOD
• When snow covers the ground, Willow Ptarmigan eat
willow buds, willow twigs, and a little birch. Rock
Ptarmigan nip off birch catkins, birch buds, and a little
willow.
• White -tails mix buds and catkins of willow, and alder in
varying amounts. This diet lasts until well along in the
courtship period of Spring, giving way as snow melts to a
blend of insects, berries, new leaves, and flowers.
LIFE CYCLE
• Ptarmigans move in flocks, and there is often about several
hundred during the migration. Autumn is a time of
restlessness. In October they tend to form a pattern the
females, drift lower down into brushy forest openings
while cocks stay close to Timberline. The extent of the fall
movements varies from place to place, but migrations of
100 to 150 miles one way propably are the longest
undertaken by any ptarmigans in Alaska.
INUIT USES
• Among the Alaskan natives, both Eskimo and Indian,
especially those in the northern two thirds of the Territory,
this bird is one of the most important sources food supply
and through the entire winter it is snared and shot in great
abundance, and many times it is the only defense Eskimo
possess against the ever recurring periods of scarcity and
famine.
Where I Got My Info
• http://search.yahooligans.com/search/ligans?p=ptarmigans
• http://www.state.ak.us/adfg/notebook/bird/ptarmiga.htm
• http://www.mbr-pwrc.usgs.gov/id/fram1st/i304id.html