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Northern Mockingbird - BirdForum Opus

Revision as of 23:43, 30 April 2018 by Deliatodd-18346 (talk | contribs) (Flight image, harassing a caracara. References updated)
Photo by Joe A.
Texas, USA, March 2014
Mimus polyglottos

Identification

Juvenile
Photo by mali
Fuquay-Varina, North Carolina, USA, 2016

23–28 cm (9-11 in)

  • Gray above, white below
  • Black flight feathers with large white patches that flash in flight
  • White outer tail feathers
  • Slim white eye-line

Adult has a yellow eye while the juvenile eye is brown

Similar Species

May be confused with a Shrike (Northern or Loggerhead), but note different body shape, bill shape, and mask. Bahama Mockingbird is occasionally seen in Florida, and in Mexico there are other species of Mockingbirds.

Distribution

Subspecies polyglottos, harassing a Crested Caracara
Photo by Stanley Jones
James H. Robbins Memorial Park, Smith Point, Chambers County, Texas, USA, April 2018

Breeds commonly throughout most of the USA but absent from the north-west and north-central states, also breeds sparsely in south-east Canada.

Interior populations are migratory wintering in the southern USA, on the east coast resident from Maine southwards.

Casual vagrant north of range.

Introduced to Hawaii.

In the Western Palearctic recorded in Britain, in Cornwall, August 1982 and Essex, May 1988, and at Schiermonnikoog in the Netherlands in October 1988 and another in the Netherlands in March 2001. These birds may have had a captive origin and others seen in Europe are generally considered to relate to escapes including one or two further British reports.

Taxonomy

Subspecies

Wing flashing behaviour[2]
Photo by CurtMorgan
Parker River NWR, Newbury, Massachusetts, April 2012

This is a polytypic species consisting of three subspecies[1]:

  • M. p. leucopterus:
  • M. p. polyglottos:
  • Eastern Canada to central, eastern and south-eastern US
  • M. p. orpheus:

Habitat

Woodland edges, copses and hedgerows, very common in suburban gardens and also found in many city parks.
In winter, maintains a small territory around patches of fruiting shrubs/trees that it defends from other birds.

Behaviour

As an intelligent and resourceful bird that is at home in a variety of habitats and can coexist with human settlement, this species is not likely to be endangered in any forseeable future.

They have a habit of wing-flashing, which hasn't been entirely explained.[2]

Diet

These birds forage on the ground or in vegetation and fly down from a perch to capture food. Diet includes insects, berries and seeds.

Breeding

They build a twig nest in a dense shrub or tree.

They aggressively defend the nest and territories from all encroachment, and will attack much larger animals and even humans who come too near.

Vocalisation

The species name is a result of its many and varied vocalizations, and its ability to mimic other bird calls and sounds of many types. Particularly at dawn it produces a veritable concert of songs, often not repeating the same pattern for a considerable period.

This habit of singing longest and loudest at dawn leads some people to resent the Mockingbird, and even attempt to eliminate it from their environments.

References

  1. Clements, J. F., T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, D. Roberson, T. A. Fredericks, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2017. The eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world: v2017, with updates to August 2017. Downloaded from http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  2. BF thread discussing wing-flashing behaviour
  3. Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive (retrieved February 2017)

Recommended Citation

External Links


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