Hi Marty,
In my experience, at least some of the collared-doves in certain years breed year 'round in CO. I have always considered that a major secret to their successful invasion of our state. If one listens to concentrated spates of "whooo-whoo-whoo" (i.e., courtship) in places where you walk or bird on a regular basis, I think you will record at several such periods of time coinciding with the number of nesting cycles per year (at least 6 spread thru all seasons of the year). The two areas I frequent with enough regularity upon which to base these statements are Fort Collins' Grandview Cemetery (they are courting right now) and Lamar. I have found days-old doves on the ground following wind storms at Fairmount Cemetery in Lamar in early January more than once. Things seem to be quiet when the females are preoccupied with tending nestlings. In the recently-received, very nice BBA II book (nice job, Lynn Wickersham), Paul Opler's excellent account of ECDove states there might be more to learn about their breeding in CO and I would agree, including the an apparent dearth of breeding between late autumn and early spring. I have a photo of ECDove courtship taken 22September. The birds were sitting atop the head of the Soldier Monument at Grandview. Only the stonefaced soldier could hear what the male whispered in his prospective mate's ear but it might have been something about how he looked forward to their kids enjoying their first Halloween. In other words, I think the reported gap in breeding activity in late fall-early winter is an artifact of BBA volunteer effort, and NOT a correct depiction of reality.
Lots to learn about the life histories of all bird species, including the abundant ones. Thanks for your post.
Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2016 8:53 PM
To: cobirds@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cobirds] Nest-building by Eurasian Collared Doves today
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