I have to share my #anting story...
We were #birding at the #Audubon #CorkscrewSwamp in S #Florida. Most of the hike is on a boardwalk so you are up high looking down at #birds on the ground when not over water. We see a #CommonYellowthroat #Warbler on the ground attacking a group of ants. It was odd because he didn't look like he was eating them, just tossing them around like he was mad at them.
Many years later I was reading "The Birder's Handbook" (which has an interesting format, one bird description on each right-hand page, and a more general bird-related essay on the left). I got to the essay on "Anting" and remembered that little bird and the ants! Not mad, not hungry... He just needed a little bug repellent!
Note that elsewhere on a sister site there is an article that seems to contradict all of the above... ?!
https://feederwatch.org/blog/anting-blue-jays-taking-a-bath-or-preparing-dinner/
Thanks to student blogger, Lauren Smith, for this entertaining post about why Blue Jays engage in βanting.β Imagine that you are an ant. Bright sunlight streams down, warming the white pavement stretched before you. You peer out from between cool green stalks and wave your antennae, sensing for any dangerous chemicals wafting your way. Tasting [β¦]
I have a personal #CommonYellowThroat story...
I was in the #CorkscrewSwamp Preserve (S. #Florida) many years ago on a boardwalk when I looked down that the roots of a tree and saw a Yellowthroat attacking, but not eating, some ants. I thought "That's odd," and checked the bird off my year list. At the time I had no idea what I had witnessed.
Years later, doing some bird-related reading I discovered "Anting" a form of self-maintenance, self-medication! π π€·ββοΈ
Blue Dasher Dragonfly in Water Lettuce
Corkscrew Swamp, FL
More at (and more coming to) - http://fenichel.com/corkscrew.shtml
#myphoto #Fenfotos #nature #photography #dragonfly #CorkscrewSwamp