LOCAL GEOGRAPHIES OF THE COASTAL CACTUS WREN AND THE 2025

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Open woods, thickets, towns, gardens. Breeds in a wide variety of semi-open habitats, including suburbs, orchards, woodlots, open forest, streamside groves, mountain pine-oak woods, and many others. Winters mostly in areas of dense low growth, including thickets and streamside brush.
Adult birds can be food for coyotes, hawks, fox, bobcats or domestic cats.
Contrary to many other bird species, the Cactus wrens do not migrate. These territorial species remain in one location year-round; they are permanent residents of salt desert habitats.
Cactus wrens are omnivores, feeding on a variety of insects, spiders, and small fruits. They are particularly fond of ants, beetles, and caterpillars, which they skillfully extract from crevices in cacti and other plants. Their diet also includes seeds and occasionally small vertebrates.
Habitat. Cactus Wrens live in scrubby areas in the Chihuahuan, Sonoran, and Mojave Deserts as well as in coastal sage scrub in California and thorn-scrub areas in Tamaulipas, Mexico. Food. Cactus Wrens eat mostly spiders and insects such as beetles, ants, wasps, grasshoppers, and butterflies. Behavior.
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Habitat. Star cactus grows on gravelly, somewhat salty, clay or loam soils in areas of sparse vegetation in grassy thornscrub.
The Cactus Wren disperses potentially important semi-arid rangeland plants through the material used in building nests; viable seeds can be spread over long distances in this manner (Milton et al. 1998).
May mate for life, pairs remaining together all year on permanent territory. Members of pair have greeting display, perching upright with wings and tail partly spread, giving harsh calls. Male may build extra nests while female is incubating. Adults sometimes puncture eggs of other birds nesting nearby.
In coastal southern California and adjacent Baja California, the Cactus Wren is wholly confined to low-elevation cactus scrub habitats within the coastal sage scrub and alluvial fan scrub plant communities, and is extremely sedentary, highly susceptible to local extinction, and isolated geographically from interior
By using cholla and saguaro cacti as nesting sites, the Cactus Wren benefits from spiky protection from potential nest predators, particularly snakes. The wrens bulky, football-shaped nest provides additional protection, with a narrow, tube-like side entrance that limits access to the nest chamber.

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