The Chuck-will’s-widow and Eastern Whip-poor-will

Nightjars, goatsuckers, whatever you want to call them鈥攖hese freaky birds are heard but rarely seen.

The Chuck-will's-widow and Eastern Whip-poor-will: An聽Odd Couple of Many Sorts

Lots of familiar birds get their names from the sounds they make. Chickadees, towhees, cuckoos, jays鈥攅ach were named after an onomatopoeic translation.

But two North American birds聽take things a step further. Somehow, the calls of these聽species translated into something more specific, more poetic, more . . . bizarre聽than any other bird on the continent. I鈥檓 talking, of course, about the Eastern Whip-poor-will and the Chuck-will鈥檚-widow.

I鈥檒l leave aside the debate about whether they聽actually sound like they鈥檙e saying 鈥渨hip poor Will鈥 and 鈥淐huck Will鈥檚 widow.鈥 My take is that the Chuck-will鈥檚-widow聽can sorta get away with it.

尝颈蝉迟别苍:听

But the Eastern Whip-poor-will聽doesn鈥檛 at all sound like it wants us to beat up on anyone.聽

Listen:

(The Mexican Whip-poor-will, recently elevated into a full species,聽).

What's聽more interesting to me is that of all the birds named for their songs, why did these birds get such detailed, evocative mnemonics?聽The names are themselves little fragments of unfinished stories. Who is this Will character, and why is the bird calling for his punishment? Did he steal聽something (he鈥檚 poor, after all, and perhaps needed food for his family)? Is poor Will the same man as Chuck Will? Is his widow聽lamenting his demise after the whipping? Or, even worse, is one bird calling for Chuck to be whipped to death, and the other calling for his new widow to be chucked off some towering聽precipice?聽The horror?!

In fact, whip-poor-wills, Chuck-will鈥檚-widows, and their kin have a history of inspiring fear.聽These species belong to the family Caprimulgidae, officially known as nightjars鈥攁 lovely term from the 鈥'jarring'聽sounds made by the male when the female is brooding.鈥

But before they earned that title,聽the family Caprimulgidae had been long known as 鈥済oatsuckers.鈥 That鈥檚 right, goatsuckers. It comes from the Latin word Caprimulgus, meaning "milker of goats" (Linnaeus was into it, apparently).聽According to (another cool name),聽in A.D.聽77, the wisdom of the time was that these strange birds snuck into goat pens at night and sucked milk聽from their udders, causing the goats to go blind. It wasn鈥檛 true then, and it isn't true now, but it perfectly illustrates the point that these聽birds are all-around聽weirdos.

Just look at them. Chuck-will鈥檚-widows and Eastern Whip-poor-wills are birds of the night, built with huge聽eyes to see in the dark and cryptic plumage to hide them during the day. They鈥檝e got tiny little bills that open up to reveal large, gaping mouths that make it easier to gulp down insects whole. 聽

With all these ridiculous features, you'd think these birds would be easy to spot. Nope.聽During the day, Whips and Chucks will silently lurk聽in the leaf litter or on a tree branch, unmoving. They鈥檙e so well camouflaged that only the luckiest birders can spot them. You鈥檒l have to wait until nightfall in spring to get a sense of just how many there are nearby, because they鈥檒l fill the evening with their loud, sadistic songs. Eastern Whip-poor-wills breed from Missouri and North Carolina up through New England and Minnesota, while Chuck-will鈥檚-widows breed further south, from east Texas and Florida to about the Mason-Dixon line. Whip-poor-wills love聽moist, leafy forests, whereas Chuck-will's widows prefer oaks, pines, and swampy edges.聽

Soon, these birds may be聽impossible to see. Like many聽woodland species, Eastern Whip-poor-wills and Chuck-will鈥檚-widows are declining:聽Populations are estimated to be down more than 60 percent聽since the 1960s, probably聽because of聽loss of proper habitat, predation by cats, and insecticides affecting their food sources.聽So, be sure to get out there and listen for Wills being whipped and widows being chucked聽before it鈥檚 too late. Only then will you be able to decide what crazy name you can give them yourself.