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£23.65
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Chickadee Snowflake Pewter Christmas Ornament
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Pewter Snowflake Decoration
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California Residents: Prop 65 Disclaimer
WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including lead and cadmium, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.About This Design
Chickadee Snowflake Pewter Christmas Ornament
Features the image of a chickadee perched on the branch of a birch tree. There are seven species of chickadees in North America. Chickadees are found throughout much of the continent including Alaska and most of Canada. They are also found on Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Queen Charlotte Island and Vancouver Island. In general, they do not migrate. Every couple of years when populations are high, birds that hatched within the past year may "irrupt" (spread out), or move southward in the fall. Have you ever wondered how chickadees, weighing about 12 grams and small enough to fit inside a human hand, can survive winter? They have high metabolic rates and little body fat. On cold winter nights, Chickadees reduce their body temperature by up to 10–12 °C (from their normal temperature of about 42 °C) to conserve energy. Such a capacity for torpor is rare in birds (or at least, rarely studied). While this may seem counterproductive, “nocturnal hypothermia” probably reduces energy expenditure by as much as ten percent. As winter approaches temperatures decrease as does the supply of insects, berries and seeds. The birds must eat during the day and put on sufficient fat to be metabolised as heat during the night. Some studies suggest chickadees may gain ten to a whopping 60 percent of their body weight in a day to keep warm through the long winter night. On extremely cold nights, a chickadee uses almost all of its body fat to keep warm, then replaces it the next day in order to repeat the cycle. To ensure a food supply, during autumn the chickadee roams a territory covering tens of square miles, gathering morsels of food and stores them in hundreds of hiding places in trees behind buckled pieces of bark, in patches of lichens and other caches. In the fall the chickadee's hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for spatial organisation and memory, grows by 30 percent. In the spring, when memory requirements lessen, the chickadee’s hippocampus shrinks back to its normal size, In the states of Alaska and Washington, and in parts of western Canada, Black-capped Chickadees are among a number of bird species affected by an unknown agent that is causing beak deformities, which may cause stress for affected species by inhibiting feeding ability, mating, and grooming. Black-capped Chickadees were the first affected bird species, with reports of the deformity beginning in Alaska in the late 1990s, but more recently the deformity has been observed in close to 30 bird species in the affected areas, as reported by the Alaska Science Centre of the United States Geological Survey.
Customer Reviews
4.7 out of 5 stars rating802 Total Reviews
802 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By P.19 January 2019 • Verified Purchase
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Really nice keep sake, arrived just in time, as quoted. As shown in the example
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Kathryn R.27 October 2022 • Verified Purchase
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I'm very pleased with the snowflake ornament quality. It is my go-to holiday ornament every year! I love that you can customize and make it your own. I am please with the picture quality on the snowflake ornaments!
from zazzle.com (US)
5 out of 5 stars rating
By C.20 November 2018 • Verified Purchase
Pewter Snowflake Decoration
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Really pleased with this; it's a lovely early Christmas gift. Good quality. No complaints!
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Product ID: 256344383672410327
Created on 02/12/2013, 19:14
Rating: G
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