Chaetura vauxi

(Townsend, 1839)

Vaux's Swift

G5Secure Found in 48 roadless areas NatureServe Explorer →
G5SecureGlobal Rank
Least concernIUCN
Identity
Unique IDELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.101463
Element CodeABNUA03020
Record TypeSPECIES
ClassificationSpecies
Classification StatusStandard
Name CategoryVertebrate Animal
IUCNLeast concern
Endemicoccurs (regularly, as a native taxon) in multiple nations
KingdomAnimalia
PhylumCraniata
ClassAves
OrderApodiformes
FamilyApodidae
GenusChaetura
Other Common Names
Martinet de Vaux (FR) Vencejo de Vaux (ES)
Concept Reference
American Ornithologists' Union (AOU). 1998. Check-list of North American birds. Seventh edition. American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C. [as modified by subsequent supplements and corrections published in The Auk]. Also available online: http://www.aou.org/.
Taxonomic Comments
May constitute a superspecies with C. pelagica and C. chapmani (AOU 1998). Populations in southern Mexico and in Yucatan Peninsula (and on Cozumel Island) formerly were treated as two separate species: C. richmondi and C. gaumeri (AOU 1983).
Conservation Status
Rank MethodExpertise without calculation
Review Date2016-04-07
Change Date1996-12-02
Range Extent20,000-2,500,000 square km (about 8000-1,000,000 square miles)
Number of Occurrences81 to >300
Rank Reasons
Secure primarily because of large range; fairly common. Significant declines have been reported for some large areas (e.g. Washington State); status is poorly known in many areas. Breeding habitat threatened by large scale logging of old growth trees and large snags.
Range Extent Comments
BREEDING: southeastern Alaska, southern British Columbia, northern Idaho, and western Montana south to central California (migratory populations); also southwestern Tamaulipas and southeastern San Luis Potosi, Yucatan Peninsula, western Mexico south to Panama, and in northern Venezuela (resident populations) (AOU 1983, Bull and Collins 1993, Rappole 1995). NON-BREEDING: central Mexico south through breeding range in Middle America and Venezuela; casual in California, southern Louisiana, and western Florida (AOU 1983, Bull and Collins 1993).
Threat Impact Comments
Logging of older trees and hollow snags eliminates nest and roost habitat. "Forest health" management activities that reduce incidence of heartrot and aerial insects would also reduce potential habitat and prey. Factors that reduce abundance of Pileated Woodpeckers may in turn reduce cavity availability and impact swifts. Logging reduced old-growth habitats in the Pacific Northwest (Bull and Beckwith 1993). In California, where the species occurs in greatest abundance in coastal redwood forests, less than 10% of the original old-growth redwood forests remain (Sterling and Paton 1996). To a much lesser extent, swifts may be losing nesting possibilities where brick chimneys are replaced with insulated pipe or covered with screen spark-arresters (Bull and Collins 1993). Large migratory roosts in chimneys may be lost when chimneys are covered or replaced, or birds may even be killed by inadvertent use of the chimneys' furnaces, etc. (Eshbaugh 2000). Activities such as pesticide spraying that impact aerial insects could decrease food availability, but no data available.
Ecology & Habitat

Description

A 12-cm-long bird with long narrow wings, a small cigar-shaped body, and a short stubby tail; plumage is dark blackish, with a whitish throat.

Diagnostic Characteristics

Differs from the chimney swift (CHAETURA PELAGICA) in smaller size, usually paler rump and ventral body plumage, shorter wings, and lesser tendency to soar.

Habitat

Found in mature forests but also forages and migrates over open country (Tropical to Temperate zone) (AOU 1983; Bull and Collins 1993). Forages over land and water. Often roosts in large flocks in hollow trees or chimneys just prior to and during migration (Bull and Blumton 1997, Eshbaugh 2000).

BREEDING: In North America, prefers late seral stages of coniferous and mixed deciduous/coniferous forests; more abundant in old-growth forests than in younger stands (Manuwal and Huff 1987, Gilbert and Allwine 1991, Huff and Raley 1991, Lundquist and Mariani 1991; Manuwal 1991; Bull and Collins 1993). In Washington, found more abundant in old-growth (> 250 years old) than in younger (< 165 years old) forest stands (Manuwal and Huff 1987), and more abundant in wet old-growth than mesic or dry old-growth (Manuwal 1991). In the southern Washington Cascade Mountains, abundance was positively correlated with high density of live trees >100 cm in diameter at breast height (mainly Douglas-fir [PSEUDOTSUGA MENZIESII], Western Hemlock [TSUGA HETEROPHYLLA], and Western Redcedar [THUJA PLICATA]) and with large snags (Douglas-fir and Western Hemlock; Lundquist and Mariani 1991). The multi-layered broken overstory of old-growth forests may also provide easier access to aerial insects than closed, continuous canopies of younger forests (Lundquist and Mariani 1991). In northern California, uses Douglas-fir forests but highest densities are in coastal redwood (SEQUOIA SEMPERVIRENS) habitats (Sterling and Paton 1996; CDFG 2000).

BREEDING AND WINTERING: In the neotropics, found in mixed coniferous-broadleaf, deciduous broadleaf, and broadleaf evergreen forests (Rappole et al. 1995). In Mexico, breeds in highlands, ranging into lowlands in migration or winter; although a disjunct population is resident on the Yucatan Peninsula (Howell and Webb 1995). In Honduras, common in humid Caribbean lowlands to interior highlands up to 2000m; one breeding record in cloud forest; flock also recorded feeding around a large almendro tree (DIPTERYX OLEIFERA) in an open field (Monroe 1968). In Costa Rica, resident in highlands (700-2000 m), occasionally ranging higher or into lowlands (Stiles and Skutch 1989).

NEST SITES: Nests are usually in large-diameter hollow trees, broken-top trees, or stumps; also in chimneys. Nest is a saucer-shaped structure of twigs and spruce or pine needles glued to interior vertical wall of hollow tree, stump, chimney, dark attic, or similar dark cranny. Usually locates nest near bottom of cavity (Baicich and Harrison 1997; Bull and Collins 1993).

In Oregon, nests have been recorded in live or dead Grand Fir (ABIES GRANDIS) and Bigleaf Maple (ACER MACROPHYLLUM) with hollow chambers where heartwood had decayed (Bull and Cooper 1991; Bull and Collins 1993). For 21 nests located in a northeastern Oregon study, nest trees averaged 67.5 cm diameter at breast height (range 45-96 cm) and 25 m tall (range 15-37 m), and usually occurred in old-growth forest with an average canopy closure of 71%. All of these nests were in trees hollowed out by Indian paint fungus (ECHINODONTIUM TINCTORUM) and with an entrance hole excavated by Pileated Woodpeckers (Bull and Cooper 1991). In Washington, one nest recorded in a broken-topped Western Redcedar (THUJA PLICATA) 10 m tall and 76 cm diameter at breast height in old-growth forest (Lundquist and Mariani 1991). In Montana, three nests recorded in old broken-topped Western Hemlock (TSUGA HETEROPHYLLA; Baldwin and Zaczkowski 1963). Less typical records in cottonwood (POPULUS spp.) and sycamore (Platanus spp.; Taylor 1905). In British Columbia, the only confirmed tree nest was in a hollow Bigleaf Maple; there are several other records of birds seen entering or leaving Western Redcedars and Black Cottonwoods (POPULUS TRICHOCARPA), but nesting was not confirmed (Campbell et al. 1990, M. G. Shepard, pers. comm.).

ROOSTS: Two roosts were recorded in northeastern Oregon, both in Grand Fir trees 200-300 years old, > 100 cm diameter at breast height in old-growth forest stands (Bull 1991). Postfledging swifts in Oregon roosted in the nest tree (44% of juveniles, 64% of adults) or in trees up to 9.2 kilometers away. Roost trees were hollow, live or dead grand firs (94%) or ponderosa pines (6%), with an average DBH of 77 cm and an average height of 26 m (Bull and Blumton 1997). One record of birds roosting in the open: in southern California a large tight cluster was found on the trunk of a tamarisk tree (TAMARIX spp.; Stager 1965). In Oregon, the largest migratory roost (15,000 to 40,000 birds) is in a large brick chimney at a school in Portland (Eshbaugh 2000).

Ecology

Forages and migrates during day. May enter torpor in periods of cold weather (Terres 1980). Number of birds at two tree roosts monitored in northeastern Oregon ranged from 9 to 479, with highest counts in spring (Bull 1991). During migration can gather in very large roosting flocks; up to 40,000 regularly roost in one large chimney in Portland (Eshbaugh 2000), and other large chimney roosts occur in a variety of Oregon cities (Bull 2000) and in Los Angeles, California.

Reproduction

Nests singly or in small colony. Clutch size is 3-7 (usually 4-7). Incubation lasts 18-20 days (Stiles and Skutch 1989; Baicich and Harrison 1997). Young leave nest after 20-21 days; will perch on interior wall the nest is built on, but may not fly freely for up to another 7 days (Baldwin and Zaczkowski 1963). At least some birds nest at one year of age (Bull and Collins 1996). Will return to same nest site (Baldwin and Zaczkowski 1963; Bull and Collins 1996). In an Oregon study, 70% of 46 nest trees were re-used in subsequent years, and nest site fidelity was also high, with 14 of 15 marked birds recaptured at the same nest tree (Bull and Collins 1996).
Terrestrial Habitats
Forest - HardwoodForest - ConiferForest - MixedUrban/edificarian
Palustrine Habitats
RiparianAerial
Other Nations (2)
United StatesN5B
ProvinceRankNative
UtahSNAYes
WashingtonS3BYes
NevadaS3MYes
ArizonaS4MYes
OregonS4BYes
CaliforniaS3Yes
FloridaSNAYes
MontanaS4BYes
IdahoS3BYes
AlaskaS2BYes
CanadaN4B
ProvinceRankNative
British ColumbiaS4BYes
Roadless Areas (48)
Alaska (4)
AreaForestAcres
Game CreekTongass National Forest54,469
HyderTongass National Forest121,723
North RevillaTongass National Forest215,430
RevillaTongass National Forest29,298
Arizona (1)
AreaForestAcres
Catalina St. Pk. Roadless AreaCoronado National Forest951
California (10)
AreaForestAcres
Black ButteMendocino National Forest15,461
CajonSan Bernardino National Forest7,548
ChannellSequoia National Forest45,429
ChicoSequoia National Forest39,836
Crystal CreekSan Bernardino National Forest6,783
GrindstoneMendocino National Forest26,031
Magic MountainAngeles National Forest15,542
Mill PeakSan Bernardino National Forest7,884
Sespe - FrazierAngeles National Forest4,254
WoolstaffSequoia National Forest41,445
Montana (4)
AreaForestAcres
Buckhorn Ridge (MT)Kootenai National Forest34,716
Cabinet Face East #671Kootenai National Forest50,326
Cube Iron - SilcoxLolo National Forest36,998
Scotchman Peaks (MT)Kootenai National Forest53,909
New Mexico (1)
AreaForestAcres
Peloncillo (NM)Coronado National Forest43,339
Oregon (16)
AreaForestAcres
Bulldog RockUmpqua National Forest6,056
Bulldog RockWillamette National Forest559
Crane MountainFremont National Forest23,096
HellholeUmatilla National Forest65,679
HomesteadWallowa-Whitman National Forest5,817
LakeMt. Hood National Forest1,327
LarchMt. Hood National Forest12,961
Lord Flat Somers PointWallowa-Whitman National Forest67,738
Mill Creek Watershed (OR)Umatilla National Forest7,820
Mt. Hood AdditionsMt. Hood National Forest13,061
Roaring RiverMt. Hood National Forest27,316
Salmon - HuckleberryMt. Hood National Forest17,570
Snake RiverWallowa-Whitman National Forest31,229
Twin MountainWallowa-Whitman National Forest58,533
Upper Catherine CreekWallowa-Whitman National Forest6,446
Waldo - Many PrariesWillamette National Forest2,585
Washington (12)
AreaForestAcres
Big Lava BedGifford Pinchot National Forest19,043
Eagle RockMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest34,064
Higgins MountainMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest13,185
Liberty BellOkanogan National Forest108,495
Mill Creek Watershed (WA)Umatilla National Forest16,747
Mt. Baker MaMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest24,847
Mt. Baker Noisy - DiobsudMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest56,039
Mt. Baker NorthMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest16,873
Mt. Baker WestMt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest25,390
Norse PeakWenatchee National Forest10,169
Pasayten RimOkanogan National Forest17,074
TaneumWenatchee National Forest26,140
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