Type of Nests of Different Bird
There are several types of nests. These include mound, scrape, burrow, cavity, cup, pendant, sphere, saucer and platform. Here are the different types of nest of animals (with photos).
Burrow
Many
burrow-nesting birds excavate their own burrows while some use those
excavated by other animals. Soil plays a different role in the burrow nest; here, the eggs and young—and in most cases the incubating parent bird—are sheltered under the earth.
Cup
Cup nest of a Common Blackbird
Cup
nests are smoothly hemispherical inside, with deep depression to house
the eggs. They are usually made of grass and a few are made of spider
silk, mud and saliva. The spider silk is a lightweight material which is
strong and extremely flexible, allowing the nest to mold to the adult
during incubation (reducing heat loss), then to stretch to accommodate
the growing nestlings; as it is sticky, it also helps to bind the nest
to the branch or leaf to which it is attached
Popular species that build cup nest
Many
Passerines, few non-passerines, some Hummingbirds, some Swifts,
Kinglets, Crests, Tyrant Flycatchers, Several New World Warblers
Saucer or Plate
The saucer or plate nest, though superficially similar to a cup nest, has at most only a shallow depression to house the eggs.
Mound
Mallefowl mound
Some species
of bird bury their eggs for incubation. This type of nest is called
Mound. It is constructed using soil, branches, sticks, twigs and leaves.
Birds lay their eggs within the rotting mass. The heat generated by
these mounds, which are in effect giant compost heaps, warms and
incubates the eggs.
A Coot Mound
Well-known Species that build Mound
Flamingo, Horned Coot, Mallefowl and Australian Bush Turkey
Platform
Platform
nests are large structure, often many times the size of the bird which
has built them. The platform built by eagles is called eyries. These
large nests are often used for many years, with new material added each
breeding season.
Well-known species that build Platforms
Ospreys, Eagles, Egrets
Pendant
Nesting colony of the Red-rumped Cacique (a single bird perched center-left).
Pendant
nests are elongated sac woven of pliable materials such as grasses and
plant fibers and suspended from a branch. There are several species that
weave pendant nests.
Nesting colony of Montezuma Oropendolas
Popular species that build Pendant
Caciques, Orioles, Oropendolas, Sunbirds and Weavers
Scrape
American Golden Plover’s Scrape nest with four eggs
The simplest nest construction is the Scrape. It
is merely a shallow depression in soil or vegetation. This type of nest
typically has a rim deep enough to keep the eggs from rolling away. It
is sometimes lined with bits of vegetation, small stones, shell
fragments or feathers.
Popular species that build Scrape
Ostriches,
most Tinamous, many Ducks, most Shorebirds, most Terns, some Falcons,
Pheasants, Quail, Partridges, Bustards and Sandgrouse, Lesser Nighthawks
and the Red-tailed Tropicbird, Marbled Godwits, Three-banded Courser
and Egyptian Plover.
Sphere
The Sphere
nest is a roundish structure; it is completely enclosed, except for a
small opening which allows access. One notable maker of sphere nest is
the Thick-billed Weaver.
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