In October, 1961, a local member of an ornithological society delivered to Oscar T. Owre, a biologist at the University of Miami, a gruesome bundle she thought would interest him: a Chuck-will鈥檚-widow found dead in a nearby Florida town.
That find alone was noteworthy; the nocturnal birds are often heard but rarely seen. But what shocked Owre enough to document the specimen in an ornithology journal was what he found when he pulled open the bird鈥檚 mouth: Jammed in the esophagus of the Chuck-will鈥檚-widow was a Common Yellowthroat. 鈥淒eath of both birds would seem to have been by suffocation,鈥 . Lest the discovery be mistaken for some kind of freak collision, Owre also reported what he found next: Inside the larger bird鈥檚 stomach was another warbler, this one a Cape May, mostly undigested.
Chuck-will鈥檚-widows typically feed on moths, beetles, and other insects, but there鈥檚 solid evidence that, when opportunities arise, they鈥檙e game to gulp down much larger winged prey. Owre鈥檚 was one of several records in the scientific literature of the birds swallowing whole various warblers, sparrows, flycatchers, and bats. The behavior, roughly analogous to a human housing a in one bite, is just one example of why Chuck-will鈥檚-widows and other members of the nightjar family are some of the strangest, coolest birds around.
鈥淔or a long time we just assumed they鈥檙e like a bigger songbird, but they鈥檙e very much not,鈥 says Elly Knight, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Alberta whose research has focused on the Common Nighthawk and other nightjar species. 鈥淲ith nightjars you kind of have to throw all your ornithological assumptions out the window.鈥
No species better embodies the oddness of nightjars than Chuck-will鈥檚-widows. Like some others in the group, the species gets its name from its song. On summer nights in southeastern woodlands, the species can be heard whistling its own name, just like the Eastern Whip-poor-will farther north and the Common Poorwill in dry, open areas of the West.
Chuck-will鈥檚-widows are larger than North America鈥檚 other nightjar species but share their general appearance鈥攁nd it鈥檚 a weird one. Squat with short necks and big, flattish heads, they look like someone squished them as you would a hamburger patty. They鈥檝e got little comb-like structures on their middle toes, thought to be useful in grooming. Around their teensy beaks are stiff bristles that scientists think help to funnel food into their mouths. And oh, those mouths. 鈥淚 often compare them to little Jabba the Hutts,鈥 Knight says. 鈥淭hey have these tiny bills, but then they open their mouths and their head splits open.鈥
It鈥檚 that huge mouth鈥攐n spine-tingling display in 鈥攖hat allows Chucks, as nightjar fans call them, to scarf the occasional warbler. But that鈥檚 just icing on the evolutionary cake鈥攖he real need for such a prodigious maw comes from the bird鈥檚 nocturnal lifestyle. Unlike owls, which have fine-tuned hearing that allows them to pinpoint prey even in total darkness, nightjars have to hunt by sight. Their big eyes help them see insects in low light, and their gaping cakeholes provide some extra room for error, like playing basketball with a hula hoop for a rim.
Even so, these adaptations go only so far; when there鈥檚 not enough moonlight, the birds only forage for an hour or so at dusk, then take the rest of the night off, using their low metabolic rate to make each calorie count. 鈥淭hey have a very, very sedentary lifestyle,鈥 says Ryan O鈥機onnor, a postdoctoral fellow at Universit茅 du Qu茅bec 脿 Rimouski.
O鈥機onnor wrote his master鈥檚 thesis on Chucks and found that their nocturnal behavior isn鈥檛 the only reason they鈥檙e a tough species to study. Like other nightjars, they are extremely good at blending into their surroundings. 鈥淭heir camouflage is unbelievable,鈥 O鈥機onnor says. He set out to do a basic study of their breeding behavior鈥攚hat their nesting sites look like, whether both sexes incubate eggs, how often adults bring food to chicks, and other fundamental data. 鈥淯nfortunately,鈥 he says, 鈥渟ince they were so hard to find, we only found six nests.鈥 (Nests is putting it generously. Like other nightjars, Chucks don鈥檛 build a structure for nesting. They don鈥檛 even make a scrape in the dirt. They just lay their eggs on leaves or bare ground and cover them with their camouflaged bodies.)
Limited as it was, on a half-dozen nest sites may be some of the best information available on how Chucks breed. 鈥淰irtually every aspect of the biology of this species is in need of additional information,鈥 the . 鈥淟ittle is known about its nesting behavior, breeding success, habitat use, and population status, knowledge gaps that are especially troubling.鈥
Troubling, that is, because nobody really knows if we鈥檙e swallowing up the bird鈥檚 habitat with urban sprawl or wiping out its main food source with pesticides. Chucks don't appear to be at particularly high risk for now, but their numbers are thought to be declining in some areas. If that's true, it's not only a loss for the ecosystem, but for Southerners who delight in the bird's mysterious, melancholy songs on warm summer nights.