44 



USEFUL BlIWS. 



The Amount of Food required by Young Birds. 



It seems necessary to the health and comfort of the nest- 

 ling bird that its stomach be filled with food during most 

 of the day. Xearlj half a centur}^ ago Prof. I). Treadwell 



called attention to the great 

 food requirements of the 

 young Robin. Two young 

 birds from the nest were 

 selected for his experiment. 

 One soon died of starvation, 

 as the supply of food given 

 them at first was much too 

 small. The food of the re- 

 maining bird was gradually 

 Fig. 21. - A young Woodcock, ready to increased from day to day, 



leave the nest. . , ^ ^ "^ > 



until on the seventh day it 

 was given thirty-one angleworms ; but there was no increase 

 in its weight until, on the fourteenth day, it received sixty- 

 eight worms, weighing, all told, thirty-four pennyweights.^ 



Later the same bird ate 

 nearly one-half its own 



weight of beef in a day. \t^/ llT^'^^ 



A young man eating at ^'■^-Jf '" - *.»t'.« >^\\ 

 this rate would consume /' 

 al)out seventy pounds of 

 beefsteak daily. The 

 Robin even when full 

 grown required one-third 

 of its weight of beef 



J •! Fig. 22. — Young Rol)ins, in the nest. 



Mr. Charles W. Nash fed a young Robin from fifty to 

 seventy cutworms and earthworms a day for fifteen days. 

 While experimenting to see how many cutworms the bird 

 would eat in a day, he fed it five and one-half ounces of this 

 food, or one hundred and sixty-five cutworms. As the 

 Robin weighed but three ounces in the mornino% it must 



^ The Food of Young Robins, by D. Treadwell. Proceedings of the Boston 

 Society of Natural History, Vol. VI, pp. 396-399. 



