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Trumpeter%20Swans

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Trumpeter Swans Trumpeter Swan ... With a wingspan over 7 feet, these snow-white birds are truly spectacular. ... Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Trumpeter%20Swans


1
Trumpeter Swans
2
Trumpeter Swan Information
  • The Trumpeter Swan is the largest waterfowl
    species native to North America.
  • Most Trumpeters weigh 21-30 pounds, although
    large males may exceed 35 pounds.
  • The male is called a cob the female is called a
    pen the young swans up to one year of age are
    called "cygnets".

3
Trumpeter Swan Information
  • With a wingspan over 7 feet, these snow-white
    birds are truly spectacular. Standing on the
    ground, an adult Trumpeter stands about 4 feet
    high.
  • Trumpeter Swans mate for life and may live for 20
    to 30 years.

4
Can you find the Trumpeter Swan?
5
Did you get it correct?
  • If you picked the second swan you are correct.
  • The first one is a Mute Swan, and the second bird
    is a Tundra Swan.

6
History of Trumpeter Swans
  • Trumpeter Swans were once fairly common
    throughout most of the northern United States and
    Canada. They were almost completely extinct due
    to hunting and the trade market.
  • By 1900, it was widely believed that the species
    had become extinct. Fortunately, a small
    non-migratory population survived in the remote
    mountain valleys of Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming.
    Two nests were found in Yellowstone National Park
    in 1919 and in 1932, 69 Trumpeters were
    documented in the region. We now know that a
    population of several thousand Trumpeters also
    survived in remote parts of Alaska and Canada.

7
Trumpeter Swans Today
  • The Trumpeter Swans are now protected. They can
    no longer be hunted throughout their regions.
  • Their population is slowly beginning to increase.

8
Trumpeter Swans and their nest
  • Nest-building begins in mid-April and may take up
    to two weeks.
  • The nests may reach a diameter of 6 feet or more.
    Trumpeters build their nests on top of muskrat or
    beaver lodges, or they pile sedges and cattail
    tubers into a mound.
  • The cob uproots the vegetation and transfers it
    to the pen, who piles it high, then uses her body
    to form a depression for the eggs.
  • The same nest structure may be used from one year
    to the next.
  • Water usually surrounds the nest making it
    difficult for a predator to surprise the swans.

9
Trumpeter Swans and their nest
  • When the pen leaves the nest, she covers the eggs
    with nest material. The cob stands guard on or
    near the nest to deter predators.
  • Intruding swans or predators are vigorously
    chased away. The adults perform a "triumph
    display" after intruders are repelled. Facing one
    another, they quiver their wings and trumpet
    loudly.
  • When the cygnets hatch in June, they weigh about
    7 ounces. After a day or two, they take to the
    water to feed on insects.

10
References
  • http//www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/er/factsheets/
    birds/swan.htm
  • http//www.nps.gov/yell/nature/animals/birds/trump
    eter.htm
  • http//www.trumpeterswansociety.org/id.htm
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