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Brown thrasher

The brown thrasher (Toxostoma rufum), sometimes erroneously called the brown thrush or fox-coloured thrush, is a bird in the family Mimidae, which also includes the New World catbirds and mockingbirds. The brown thrasher is abundant throughout the eastern and central United States and southern and central Canada, and it is the only thrasher to live primarily east of the Rockies and central Texas. It is the state bird of Georgia.

Brown thrasher
Adult in New York, U.S.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Mimidae
Genus: Toxostoma
Species:
T. rufum
Binomial name
Toxostoma rufum
Range of T. rufum
  Breeding range
  Year-round range
  Wintering range
Synonyms
  • Turdus rufus Linnaeus, 1758
  • Orpheus rufus Swainson, 1831
  • Harporhynchus rufus Baird, 1858[2]

As a member of the genus Toxostoma, the bird is relatively large-sized among the other thrashers. It has brown upper parts with a white under part with dark streaks. Because of this, it is often confused with the smaller wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina), among other species. The brown thrasher is noted for having over 1000 song types, and the largest song repertoire of birds.[3] However, each note is usually repeated in two or three phrases.

The brown thrasher is an omnivore, with its diet ranging from insects to fruits and nuts. The usual nesting areas are shrubs, small trees, or at times on ground level. Brown thrashers are generally inconspicuous but territorial birds, especially when defending their nests, and will attack species as large as humans.[4]

Taxonomy and naming

The brown thrasher was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Turdus rufus.[5] The genus name Toxostoma comes from the Ancient Greek toxon, "bow" or "arch" and stoma, "mouth". The specific rufum is Latin for "red", but covers a wider range of hues than the English term.[6]

Although not in the thrush family, this bird is sometimes erroneously called the brown thrush.[7] The name misconception could be because the word thrasher is believed to derive from the word thrush.[8][9] The naturalist Mark Catesby called it the fox-coloured thrush.[10]

Genetic studies have found that the brown thrasher is most closely related to the long-billed and Cozumel thrashers (T. longirostre & guttatum), within the genus Toxostoma.[11][12]

Description

The brown thrasher is bright reddish-brown above with thin, dark streaks on its buffy underparts.[13] It has a whitish-colored chest with distinguished teardrop-shaped markings on its chest. Its long, rufous tail is rounded with paler corners, and eyes are a brilliant yellow. Its bill is brownish, long, and curves downward. Both male and females are similar in appearance.[14] The juvenile appearance of the brown thrasher from the adult is not remarkably different, except for plumage texture, indiscreet upper part markings, and the irises having an olive color.[10]

 
Adult with juvenile (r) in Virginia, U.S.

The brown thrasher is a fairly large passerine, although it is generally moderate in size for a thrasher, being distinctly larger than the sage thrasher (Oreoscoptes montanus) but similar or somewhat smaller in size than the more brownish Toxostoma species found further west. Adults measure around 23.5 to 30.5 cm (9.3 to 12.0 in) long with a wingspan of 29 to 33 cm (11 to 13 in), and weigh 61 to 89 g (2.2 to 3.1 oz), with an average of 68 g (2.4 oz).[15] Among standard measurements, the wing chord is 9.5 to 11.5 cm (3.7 to 4.5 in), the tail is 10.9 to 14.1 cm (4.3 to 5.6 in), the culmen is 2.2 to 2.9 cm (0.87 to 1.14 in) and the tarsus is 3.2 to 3.6 cm (1.3 to 1.4 in).[10] There are two subspecies:[10] the 'brown thrasher' (T. rufum rufum), which lies in the eastern half of Canada and the United States,[10] and the 'western brown thrasher' (T. rufum longicauda (Baird, 1858)),[16][17] which resides in the central United States east of the Rocky Mountains and southern central Canada. The western brown thrasher is distinguished by a more cinnamon upper part, whiter wing bars, and darker breast spots than T.rufum rufum.[10][17]

The lifespan of the brown thrasher varies on a year-to-year basis, as the rate of survival the first year is 35%, 50% in between the second and third year, and 75% between the third and fourth year.[14] Disease and exposure to cold weather are among contributing factors for the limits of the lifespan. However, the longest lived thrasher in the wild is 12 years, and relatively the same for ones in captivity.[14]

Similar species

The similar-looking long-billed thrasher has a significantly smaller range.[18] It has a gray head and neck, and has a longer bill than the brown thrasher.[10] The brown thrasher's appearance is also strikingly similar to the wood thrush, the bird that it is usually mistaken for.[10] However, the wood thrush has dark spots on its under parts rather than the brown thrashers' streaks, has dark eyes, shorter tail, a shorter, straighter bill (with the head generally more typical of a thrush) and is a smaller bird.[10][19]

Distribution and habitat

 
In Texas, U.S.

The brown thrasher resides in various habitats. It prefers to live in woodland edges, thickets and dense brush,[20] often searching for food in dry leaves on the ground.[21] It can also inhabit areas that are agricultural and near suburban areas, but is less likely to live near housing than other bird species.[10][14] The brown thrasher often vies for habitat and potential nesting grounds with other birds, which is usually initiated by the males.[14]

The brown thrasher is a strong, but partial migrant, as the bird is a year-round resident in the southern portion of its range.[8] The breeding range includes the United States and Canada east of the Rocky Mountains, but has been occasionally spotted West of the Rockies.[22][23] The increase in trees throughout the Great Plains during the past century due to fire suppression and tree planting facilitated a westward range expansion of the brown thrasher[24] as well as range expansions of many other species of birds.[25][26][27] Studies indicate that thrashers that reside in the New England region of the United States during the breeding season fly toward the Carolinas and Georgia, birds located in the east of the Mississippi winter from Arkansas to Georgia, and birds located in the Dakotas and the central Canadian provinces head towards eastern Texas and Louisiana.[10] When the species does migrate, it is typically for short distances and during the night.[14] There are also records of the bird wintering in Mexico,[28] as well as a British record of a transatlantic vagrant.[29]

Behavior

 
John James Audubon's picture depicting ferruginous thrush

The brown thrasher has been observed either solo or in pairs. The brown thrasher is usually an elusive bird, and maintains its evasiveness with low-level flying.[30][31] When it feels bothered, it usually hides into thickets and gives cackling calls.[31] Thrashers spend most of their time on ground level or near it. When seen, it is commonly the males that are singing from unadorned branches.[32] The brown thrasher has been noted for having an aggressive behavior,[33] and is a staunch defender of its nest.[14] However, the name does not come from attacking perceived threats, but is believed to have come from the thrashing sound the bird makes when digging through ground debris.[14][34] It is also thought that the name comes from the thrashing sound that is made while it is smashing large insects to kill and eventually eat.[35]

Feeding

This bird is omnivorous, which has a diet that includes insects, berries, nuts and seeds, as well as earthworms, snails, and sometimes lizards and frogs.[36] Across seasons and its breeding range, it was found 63% of stomach contents were made of animal matter, the remaining 37% being plant material.[37] During the breeding season, the diet consists primarily of beetles, grasshoppers, and other arthropods, and fruits, nuts and seeds. More than 80% of the diet of brown thrasher from Illinois is made of animal matter, about 50% being beetles.[38] In Iowa, about 20% of the summer diet was found to consist of grasshoppers.[39] By the late summer, it begins to shift towards more of a herbivore diet, focusing on fruits, nuts, seeds, and grains, 60% of the food in Illinois being fruits and seeds.[38][40] By winter, the customary diet of the brown thrasher is fruit and acorns.[41] Wintering birds in Texas were found to eat 58% plant material (mainly sugar berry and poison ivy) and 42% animal material in October; by March, in the dry period when food supply is generally lower, 80% of the food became animal and only 20% plants.[42] Vertebrates are only eaten occasionally and are often comprised by small reptiles and amphibians, such as lizards, small or young snakes, tree frogs and salamanders.[37][43]

The brown thrasher utilizes its vision while scouring for food. It usually forages for food under leaves, brushes, and soil debris on the ground using its bill.[44] It then swipes the floor in side-to-side motions, and investigates the area it recently foraged in.[14] The brown thrasher forages in a similar method to the long-billed thrasher and Bendire's thrasher (T. longirostre & bendirei), picking food off the ground and under leaf litter, whereas thrashers with sharply decurved bills are more likely to dig into the ground to obtain food.[45] Foraging success is 25% greater in dry leaf litter as compared to damp leaf letter.[46] The brown thrasher can also hammer nuts such as acorns in order to remove the shell.[14] It has also been noted for its flexibility in catching quick insects, as the amount of vertebrae in its neck exceeds giraffes and camels.[47] In one case, a brown thrasher was observed to dig a hole about 1.5 cm (0.59 in) deep, place an acorn in it and hit the acorn until it cracked, considered to be a form of tool usage.[48] In a laboratory experiment, a brown thrasher was found to be able to discern and reject the toxic eastern newt (Notophthalmus viridescens) and a palatable mimic of that species, the red salamander (Pseudotriton ruber), but continued to eat palatable dusky salamanders (Desmognathus spp.).[49]

Breeding

 
Nest and eggs

Brown thrashers are typically monogamous birds, but mate-switching does occur, at times during the same season.[36][50] Their breeding season varies by region. In the southeastern United States, the breeding months begin in February and March, while May and June see the commencement of breeding in the northern portion of their breeding range. When males enter the breeding grounds, their territory can range from 2 to 10 acres (0.81 to 4.05 ha).[50][51] Around this time of the year the males are usually at their most active, singing loudly to attract potential mates, and are found on top of perches.[36][52] The courting ritual involves the exchanging of probable nesting material. Males will sing gentler as they sight a female, and this enacts the female to grab a twig or leaf and present it to the male, with flapping wings and chirping sounds. The males might also present a gift in response and approach the female.[53][54] Both sexes will take part in nest building once mates find each other, and will mate after the nest is completed.[14]

The female lays 3 to 5 eggs, that usually appears with a blueish or greenish tint along with reddish-brown spots.[20] There are rare occurrences of no spots on the eggs.[4] The nest is built twiggy, lined with grass, leaves, and other forms of dead vegetation. The nests are typically built in a dense shrub or low in a tree, usually up to 2.1 m (6.9 ft) high, but have built nests as high as 6 m (20 ft).[4] They also on occasion build nests on the ground. Between eleven days to two weeks, the eggs hatch. Both parents incubate and feed the young, with the female doing most of the incubating. Nine to thirteen days after hatching, the nestlings begin to fledge. These birds raise two, sometimes even three, broods in a year.[55] The male sings a series of short repeated melodious phrases from an open perch to declare his territory,[56] and is also very aggressive in defending the nest, known to strike people and animals.[57]

Vocal development

 
Singing, Illinois

The male brown thrasher may have the largest song repertoire of any North American bird, which has been documented as at least over 1,100 songs.[14] Some sources state that each individual has up to 3,000 song phrases,[58][59] while others put the number beyond 3,000.[60][61][62] The males' singing voice usually contains more of a melodic tone than that of the related grey catbird.[63] Its song are coherent phrases that are iterated no more than three times, but has been done for minutes at a time.[4][64] By the fall, the male sings with smoother sub-songs.[4] During the winter, the males may also sing in short spurts during altercations with neighboring males.[41]

In the birds' youth, alarm noises are the sounds made.[14] As an adult, the brown thrasher has an array of sounds it will make in various situations. Both male and females make smack and teeooo-like alarm calls when provoked, and hijjj sounds at dusk and dawn.[65] Others calls may consist of an acute, sudden chakk,[4] rrrrr, a Tcheh sound in the beginning that ends with an eeeur, kakaka, and sounds reminiscent of a stick scraping a concrete sidewalk.[66] Brown thrashers are noted for their mimicry (as a member of the family Mimidae), but they are not as diverse in this category as their relative the northern mockingbird.[4][35] However, during the breeding season, the mimicking ability of the male is at its best display, impersonating sounds from tufted titmice (Baeolophus bicolor), northern cardinals (Cardinalis cardinalis), wood thrushes, northern flickers (Colaptes auratus), among other species.[50]

Predation and threats

Although this bird is widespread and still common, it has declined in numbers in some areas due to loss of suitable habitat.[67][68][69] Despite the decrease, the rate does not warrant a status towards vulnerable.[70] One of the natural nuisances is the parasitic brown-headed cowbird (Molothrus ater), but these incidents are rare. Whenever these situations occur, the brown thrashers usually discard of the cowbirds' eggs.[24][71] Occasionally, the thrasher has thrown out their own eggs instead of the cowbird eggs due to similar egg size,[72] and at least one recorded event raised a fledgling.[71] Northern cardinals and grey catbirds are also major competitors for thrashers in terms of territorial gain.[72] Because of the apparent lack of opportunistic behavior around species like these, thrashers are prone to be driven out of zones for territory competition.[73] Brown thrashers have tendencies to double-brood or have failures on their first nesting attempts due to predation.[74] Grey catbirds have been seen invading brown thrashers' nests and breaking their eggs.[14] Other than the catbird, snakes, birds of prey, and cats are among the top predators of the thrasher.[75] In Kansas, at least eight species of snake were identified as potentially serious sources of nest failure.[76] Among the identified avian predators of adults are Cooper's hawks (Accipiter cooperii),[77] northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis),[78] broad-winged hawks (Buteo platypterus),[79] merlins (Falco columbarius),[80] peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus),[81] eastern screech-owls (Megascops asio),[82] great horned owls (Bubo virginianus)[83] barred owls (Strix varia)[84] and long-eared owls (Asio otus).[84]

The brown thrasher methods of defending itself include using its bill, which can inflict significant damage to species smaller than it, along with wing-flapping and vocal expressions.[75]

State bird

The brown thrasher is the state bird of Georgia. The brown thrasher also was the inspiration for the name of Atlanta's former National Hockey League team, the Atlanta Thrashers, who relocated in 2011 to become the current Winnipeg Jets (the original Jets relocated to Phoenix in 1996 to become the Coyotes).[85]

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  76. ^ Cavitt, J. F. (1998). The role of food supply and nest predation in limiting reproductive success of Brown Thrashers (Toxostoma rufum): effects of predator removal, food supplements and predation risk. Phd Thesis. Kansas State Univ. Manhattan.
  77. ^ Toland, B. (1985). "Food habits and hunting success of Cooper's Hawks in Missouri". Journal of Field Ornithology. 56 (4 (Autumn)): 419–422.
  78. ^ Curnutt, J. (2007). Conservation Assessment for Northern Goshawk (Accipiter gentilis) Linnaeus in the Western Great Lakes. USDA Forest Service. 105 pp.
  79. ^ Burns, F. L. (1911). "A monograph of the Broad-winged Hawk (Buteo platypterus)". The Wilson Bulletin. 23 (3–4): 143–320.
  80. ^ Sodhi, N. S.; Oliphant, L. W. (1993). "Prey selection by urban-breeding merlins". The Auk. 110 (4): 727–735. doi:10.2307/4088628. JSTOR 4088628.
  81. ^ Ward, F. P., & Laybourne, R. C. (1985). A difference in prey selection by adult and immature peregrine falcons during autumn migration. Conservation studies on raptors. Page Brothers, Norwich, England, pp. 303–309.
  82. ^ Vancamp, L. F.; Henny, C. J. (1975). "The Screech Owl: Its Life History and Population Ecology in Northern Ohio" (PDF). North American Fauna. 71: 1–65. doi:10.3996/nafa.71.0001. from the original on September 24, 2017.
  83. ^ Murphy, R. K. (1997). Importance of prairie wetlands and avian prey to breeding Great Horned Owls (Bubo virginianus) in northwestern North Dakota. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, North Central Forest Experiment Station, pp. 286–298.
  84. ^ a b Errington, P. L. (1932). "Food habits of southern Wisconsin raptors. Part I. Owls". Condor. 34 (4): 176–186. doi:10.2307/1363563. JSTOR 1363563.
  85. ^ Haywood, Karen Diane (2005). Georgia. Marshall Cavendish. pp. 4. ISBN 978-0-7614-1862-7.

External links

  • Brown Thrasher (BirdHouses101.com)
  • Photo and links to additional pages at GeorgiaInfo
  • "Brown Thrasher media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Stamps at bird-stamps.org
  • Brown Thrasher Species Account – Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  • at Florida Museum of Natural History
  • Brown Thrasher photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)


brown, thrasher, brown, thrasher, toxostoma, rufum, sometimes, erroneously, called, brown, thrush, coloured, thrush, bird, family, mimidae, which, also, includes, world, catbirds, mockingbirds, brown, thrasher, abundant, throughout, eastern, central, united, s. The brown thrasher Toxostoma rufum sometimes erroneously called the brown thrush or fox coloured thrush is a bird in the family Mimidae which also includes the New World catbirds and mockingbirds The brown thrasher is abundant throughout the eastern and central United States and southern and central Canada and it is the only thrasher to live primarily east of the Rockies and central Texas It is the state bird of Georgia Brown thrasherAdult in New York U S Conservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily MimidaeGenus ToxostomaSpecies T rufumBinomial nameToxostoma rufum Linnaeus 1758 Range of T rufum Breeding range Year round range Wintering rangeSynonymsTurdus rufus Linnaeus 1758 Orpheus rufus Swainson 1831 Harporhynchus rufus Baird 1858 2 As a member of the genus Toxostoma the bird is relatively large sized among the other thrashers It has brown upper parts with a white under part with dark streaks Because of this it is often confused with the smaller wood thrush Hylocichla mustelina among other species The brown thrasher is noted for having over 1000 song types and the largest song repertoire of birds 3 However each note is usually repeated in two or three phrases The brown thrasher is an omnivore with its diet ranging from insects to fruits and nuts The usual nesting areas are shrubs small trees or at times on ground level Brown thrashers are generally inconspicuous but territorial birds especially when defending their nests and will attack species as large as humans 4 Contents 1 Taxonomy and naming 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behavior 4 1 Feeding 4 2 Breeding 4 3 Vocal development 5 Predation and threats 6 State bird 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy and naming EditThe brown thrasher was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae as Turdus rufus 5 The genus name Toxostoma comes from the Ancient Greek toxon bow or arch and stoma mouth The specific rufum is Latin for red but covers a wider range of hues than the English term 6 Although not in the thrush family this bird is sometimes erroneously called the brown thrush 7 The name misconception could be because the word thrasher is believed to derive from the word thrush 8 9 The naturalist Mark Catesby called it the fox coloured thrush 10 Genetic studies have found that the brown thrasher is most closely related to the long billed and Cozumel thrashers T longirostre amp guttatum within the genus Toxostoma 11 12 Description EditThe brown thrasher is bright reddish brown above with thin dark streaks on its buffy underparts 13 It has a whitish colored chest with distinguished teardrop shaped markings on its chest Its long rufous tail is rounded with paler corners and eyes are a brilliant yellow Its bill is brownish long and curves downward Both male and females are similar in appearance 14 The juvenile appearance of the brown thrasher from the adult is not remarkably different except for plumage texture indiscreet upper part markings and the irises having an olive color 10 Adult with juvenile r in Virginia U S The brown thrasher is a fairly large passerine although it is generally moderate in size for a thrasher being distinctly larger than the sage thrasher Oreoscoptes montanus but similar or somewhat smaller in size than the more brownish Toxostoma species found further west Adults measure around 23 5 to 30 5 cm 9 3 to 12 0 in long with a wingspan of 29 to 33 cm 11 to 13 in and weigh 61 to 89 g 2 2 to 3 1 oz with an average of 68 g 2 4 oz 15 Among standard measurements the wing chord is 9 5 to 11 5 cm 3 7 to 4 5 in the tail is 10 9 to 14 1 cm 4 3 to 5 6 in the culmen is 2 2 to 2 9 cm 0 87 to 1 14 in and the tarsus is 3 2 to 3 6 cm 1 3 to 1 4 in 10 There are two subspecies 10 the brown thrasher T rufum rufum which lies in the eastern half of Canada and the United States 10 and the western brown thrasher T rufum longicauda Baird 1858 16 17 which resides in the central United States east of the Rocky Mountains and southern central Canada The western brown thrasher is distinguished by a more cinnamon upper part whiter wing bars and darker breast spots than T rufum rufum 10 17 The lifespan of the brown thrasher varies on a year to year basis as the rate of survival the first year is 35 50 in between the second and third year and 75 between the third and fourth year 14 Disease and exposure to cold weather are among contributing factors for the limits of the lifespan However the longest lived thrasher in the wild is 12 years and relatively the same for ones in captivity 14 Similar species Edit The similar looking long billed thrasher has a significantly smaller range 18 It has a gray head and neck and has a longer bill than the brown thrasher 10 The brown thrasher s appearance is also strikingly similar to the wood thrush the bird that it is usually mistaken for 10 However the wood thrush has dark spots on its under parts rather than the brown thrashers streaks has dark eyes shorter tail a shorter straighter bill with the head generally more typical of a thrush and is a smaller bird 10 19 Distribution and habitat Edit In Texas U S The brown thrasher resides in various habitats It prefers to live in woodland edges thickets and dense brush 20 often searching for food in dry leaves on the ground 21 It can also inhabit areas that are agricultural and near suburban areas but is less likely to live near housing than other bird species 10 14 The brown thrasher often vies for habitat and potential nesting grounds with other birds which is usually initiated by the males 14 The brown thrasher is a strong but partial migrant as the bird is a year round resident in the southern portion of its range 8 The breeding range includes the United States and Canada east of the Rocky Mountains but has been occasionally spotted West of the Rockies 22 23 The increase in trees throughout the Great Plains during the past century due to fire suppression and tree planting facilitated a westward range expansion of the brown thrasher 24 as well as range expansions of many other species of birds 25 26 27 Studies indicate that thrashers that reside in the New England region of the United States during the breeding season fly toward the Carolinas and Georgia birds located in the east of the Mississippi winter from Arkansas to Georgia and birds located in the Dakotas and the central Canadian provinces head towards eastern Texas and Louisiana 10 When the species does migrate it is typically for short distances and during the night 14 There are also records of the bird wintering in Mexico 28 as well as a British record of a transatlantic vagrant 29 Behavior Edit John James Audubon s picture depicting ferruginous thrushThe brown thrasher has been observed either solo or in pairs The brown thrasher is usually an elusive bird and maintains its evasiveness with low level flying 30 31 When it feels bothered it usually hides into thickets and gives cackling calls 31 Thrashers spend most of their time on ground level or near it When seen it is commonly the males that are singing from unadorned branches 32 The brown thrasher has been noted for having an aggressive behavior 33 and is a staunch defender of its nest 14 However the name does not come from attacking perceived threats but is believed to have come from the thrashing sound the bird makes when digging through ground debris 14 34 It is also thought that the name comes from the thrashing sound that is made while it is smashing large insects to kill and eventually eat 35 Feeding Edit This bird is omnivorous which has a diet that includes insects berries nuts and seeds as well as earthworms snails and sometimes lizards and frogs 36 Across seasons and its breeding range it was found 63 of stomach contents were made of animal matter the remaining 37 being plant material 37 During the breeding season the diet consists primarily of beetles grasshoppers and other arthropods and fruits nuts and seeds More than 80 of the diet of brown thrasher from Illinois is made of animal matter about 50 being beetles 38 In Iowa about 20 of the summer diet was found to consist of grasshoppers 39 By the late summer it begins to shift towards more of a herbivore diet focusing on fruits nuts seeds and grains 60 of the food in Illinois being fruits and seeds 38 40 By winter the customary diet of the brown thrasher is fruit and acorns 41 Wintering birds in Texas were found to eat 58 plant material mainly sugar berry and poison ivy and 42 animal material in October by March in the dry period when food supply is generally lower 80 of the food became animal and only 20 plants 42 Vertebrates are only eaten occasionally and are often comprised by small reptiles and amphibians such as lizards small or young snakes tree frogs and salamanders 37 43 The brown thrasher utilizes its vision while scouring for food It usually forages for food under leaves brushes and soil debris on the ground using its bill 44 It then swipes the floor in side to side motions and investigates the area it recently foraged in 14 The brown thrasher forages in a similar method to the long billed thrasher and Bendire s thrasher T longirostre amp bendirei picking food off the ground and under leaf litter whereas thrashers with sharply decurved bills are more likely to dig into the ground to obtain food 45 Foraging success is 25 greater in dry leaf litter as compared to damp leaf letter 46 The brown thrasher can also hammer nuts such as acorns in order to remove the shell 14 It has also been noted for its flexibility in catching quick insects as the amount of vertebrae in its neck exceeds giraffes and camels 47 In one case a brown thrasher was observed to dig a hole about 1 5 cm 0 59 in deep place an acorn in it and hit the acorn until it cracked considered to be a form of tool usage 48 In a laboratory experiment a brown thrasher was found to be able to discern and reject the toxic eastern newt Notophthalmus viridescens and a palatable mimic of that species the red salamander Pseudotriton ruber but continued to eat palatable dusky salamanders Desmognathus spp 49 Breeding Edit Nest and eggsBrown thrashers are typically monogamous birds but mate switching does occur at times during the same season 36 50 Their breeding season varies by region In the southeastern United States the breeding months begin in February and March while May and June see the commencement of breeding in the northern portion of their breeding range When males enter the breeding grounds their territory can range from 2 to 10 acres 0 81 to 4 05 ha 50 51 Around this time of the year the males are usually at their most active singing loudly to attract potential mates and are found on top of perches 36 52 The courting ritual involves the exchanging of probable nesting material Males will sing gentler as they sight a female and this enacts the female to grab a twig or leaf and present it to the male with flapping wings and chirping sounds The males might also present a gift in response and approach the female 53 54 Both sexes will take part in nest building once mates find each other and will mate after the nest is completed 14 The female lays 3 to 5 eggs that usually appears with a blueish or greenish tint along with reddish brown spots 20 There are rare occurrences of no spots on the eggs 4 The nest is built twiggy lined with grass leaves and other forms of dead vegetation The nests are typically built in a dense shrub or low in a tree usually up to 2 1 m 6 9 ft high but have built nests as high as 6 m 20 ft 4 They also on occasion build nests on the ground Between eleven days to two weeks the eggs hatch Both parents incubate and feed the young with the female doing most of the incubating Nine to thirteen days after hatching the nestlings begin to fledge These birds raise two sometimes even three broods in a year 55 The male sings a series of short repeated melodious phrases from an open perch to declare his territory 56 and is also very aggressive in defending the nest known to strike people and animals 57 Vocal development Edit Singing Illinois Brown thrasher song source source Problems playing this file See media help The male brown thrasher may have the largest song repertoire of any North American bird which has been documented as at least over 1 100 songs 14 Some sources state that each individual has up to 3 000 song phrases 58 59 while others put the number beyond 3 000 60 61 62 The males singing voice usually contains more of a melodic tone than that of the related grey catbird 63 Its song are coherent phrases that are iterated no more than three times but has been done for minutes at a time 4 64 By the fall the male sings with smoother sub songs 4 During the winter the males may also sing in short spurts during altercations with neighboring males 41 In the birds youth alarm noises are the sounds made 14 As an adult the brown thrasher has an array of sounds it will make in various situations Both male and females make smack and teeooo like alarm calls when provoked and hijjj sounds at dusk and dawn 65 Others calls may consist of an acute sudden chakk 4 rrrrr a Tcheh sound in the beginning that ends with an eeeur kakaka and sounds reminiscent of a stick scraping a concrete sidewalk 66 Brown thrashers are noted for their mimicry as a member of the family Mimidae but they are not as diverse in this category as their relative the northern mockingbird 4 35 However during the breeding season the mimicking ability of the male is at its best display impersonating sounds from tufted titmice Baeolophus bicolor northern cardinals Cardinalis cardinalis wood thrushes northern flickers Colaptes auratus among other species 50 Predation and threats EditAlthough this bird is widespread and still common it has declined in numbers in some areas due to loss of suitable habitat 67 68 69 Despite the decrease the rate does not warrant a status towards vulnerable 70 One of the natural nuisances is the parasitic brown headed cowbird Molothrus ater but these incidents are rare Whenever these situations occur the brown thrashers usually discard of the cowbirds eggs 24 71 Occasionally the thrasher has thrown out their own eggs instead of the cowbird eggs due to similar egg size 72 and at least one recorded event raised a fledgling 71 Northern cardinals and grey catbirds are also major competitors for thrashers in terms of territorial gain 72 Because of the apparent lack of opportunistic behavior around species like these thrashers are prone to be driven out of zones for territory competition 73 Brown thrashers have tendencies to double brood or have failures on their first nesting attempts due to predation 74 Grey catbirds have been seen invading brown thrashers nests and breaking their eggs 14 Other than the catbird snakes birds of prey and cats are among the top predators of the thrasher 75 In Kansas at least eight species of snake were identified as potentially serious sources of nest failure 76 Among the identified avian predators of adults are Cooper s hawks Accipiter cooperii 77 northern goshawk Accipiter gentilis 78 broad winged hawks Buteo platypterus 79 merlins Falco columbarius 80 peregrine falcons Falco peregrinus 81 eastern screech owls Megascops asio 82 great horned owls Bubo virginianus 83 barred owls Strix varia 84 and long eared owls Asio otus 84 The brown thrasher methods of defending itself include using its bill which can inflict significant damage to species smaller than it along with wing flapping and vocal expressions 75 State bird EditThe brown thrasher is the state bird of Georgia The brown thrasher also was the inspiration for the name of Atlanta s former National Hockey League team the Atlanta Thrashers who relocated in 2011 to become the current Winnipeg Jets the original Jets relocated to Phoenix in 1996 to become the Coyotes 85 References Edit BirdLife International 2016 Toxostoma rufum IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22711099A94277500 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22711099A94277500 en Retrieved 3 July 2023 Barrows W B 1912 Brown Thrasher in Michigan bird life Michigan Agricultural College Lansing Michigan p 661 Catchpole Clive K J B Slater Peter 2003 Bird Song Biological Themes and Variations Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 521 41799 0 a b c d e f g Brewer David 2001 Wrens Dippers and Thrashers Pica Christopher Helm p 230 ISBN 978 1 873403 95 2 Linnaeus C 1758 Systema Naturae per Regna Tria Naturae Secundum Classes Ordines Genera Species cum Characteribus Differentiis Synonymis Locis Tomus I Editio Decima Reformata in Latin Vol 1 Holmiae Laurentius Salvius p 169 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 343 389 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Mimic Thrush Columbia Encyclopedia sixth edition 2008 Retrieved 26 July 2012 a b Mobley Jason A 2009 Birds of the World Marshall Cavendish p 108 ISBN 978 0 7614 7775 4 Schaars H W The Origin of the Common Names of Wisconsin Birds PDF The Passenger Pigeon 13 1 15 18 Retrieved 8 July 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k Brewer David 2001 Wrens Dippers and Thrashers Pica Christopher Helm p 229 ISBN 978 1 873403 95 2 Zink Robert M Dittmann Donna L 1999 Evolutionary Patterns of Morphometrics Allozymes and Mitochondrial DNA in Thrashers Genus Toxostoma The Auk 116 4 1021 38 doi 10 2307 4089682 JSTOR 4089682 Lovette I J Arbogast B S Curry R L Zink R M Botero C A Sullivan J P Talaba A L Harris R B Rubenstein D R Ricklefs R E Bermingham E 2012 Phylogenetic relationships of the mockingbirds and thrashers Aves Mimidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 63 2 219 229 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 07 009 PMID 21867766 American Museum of Natural History Birds of North America Western Region DK Publishing 2003 p 318 ISBN 978 0 7566 5868 7 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gray Philip 2007 Toxostoma rufum Animal Diversity Web University of Michigan Museum of Zoology Retrieved 22 June 2012 Sibley David Allen 2000 National Audubon Society The Sibley Guide to Birds New York Alfred A Knopf p 412 ISBN 978 0 679 45122 8 Taxostoma rufum Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 29 December 2013 a b Bent Arthur Cleveland 1948 Life histories of North American nuthatches wrens thrashers and their allies PDF Smithsonian Institution United States National Museum Bulletin Washington DC United States Government Printing Office pp 374 375 Brown Thrasher The University of Georgia Museum of Natural History Georgia Museum of Natural History 2008 Archived from the original on 8 May 2014 Retrieved 30 June 2012 Robbins Chandler S Bruun Bretel S Zim Herbert 2000 Birds of North America A Guide to Field Identification Golden Field Guides DK Publishing p 240 ISBN 978 1582380919 a b Semenchuk Glen Peter 1992 The Atlas of Breeding Birds of Alberta Federation of Alberta Naturalists p 234 ISBN 978 0 9696134 0 4 Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission A collaborative study of Florida s birdlife PDF Archived from the original PDF on 9 May 2014 Retrieved 21 July 2012 Patten Michael A McCaskie Guy Unitt Philipp 2003 Birds of the Salton Sea Status Biogeography and Ecology University of California Press p 257 ISBN 978 0 520 23593 9 Passeriformes Incertae Sedis Mimidae Schiffornis turdinus Wied Thrush like Schiffornis PDF AOU Checklist of North American Birds American Ornithologists Union 1998 p 416 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 11 18 Retrieved 2015 05 13 a b Cavitt J F and C A Haas 2014 Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum In The Birds of North America A F Poole ed Cornell Lab of Ornithology Ithaca NY USA doi 10 2173 bna 557 Livezey KB 2009a Range expansion of Barred Owls part I chronology and distribution American Midland Naturalist 161 49 56 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 161 1 49 S2CID 86276981 Livezey KB 2009b Range expansion of Barred Owls part 2 facilitating ecological changes American Midland Naturalist 161 2 323 349 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 161 2 323 S2CID 84426970 Livezey KB 2010 Killing barred owls to help spotted owls II implications for many other range expanding species Northwestern Naturalist 91 3 251 270 doi 10 1898 nwn09 38 1 S2CID 85425945 Peterson Roger Tory L Chalif Edward 1999 A Field Guide to Mexican Birds Mexico Guatemala Belize El Salvador Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 179 ISBN 978 0 395 79514 9 Brown Thrasher in Dorset a species new to Britain and Ireland PDF britishbirds co uk Retrieved 22 June 2012 Brewer David 2001 Wrens Dippers and Thrashers Pica Christopher Helm p 231 ISBN 978 1 873403 95 2 a b Alderfer Johnathan 2011 National Geographic Backyard Guide to the Birds of North America National Geographic Backyard Guides National Geographic p 174 ISBN 978 1426207204 Brewer David 2001 Wrens Dippers and Thrashers Pica Christopher Helm p 228 ISBN 978 1 873403 95 2 Partin H 1977 Breeding Biology and Behavior of the Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum PDF Ph D Thesis The Ohio State University United States Thesis Retrieved 22 June 2012 Book of North American Birds Reader s Digest Information Reader s Digest 1990 p 259 ISBN 978 0 89577 351 7 a b Maurice Burton Burton Robert 2002 Intnernational Wildlife Encyclopedia Volume 19 Marshall Cavendish p 2376 ISBN 978 0 7614 7285 8 a b c Gray Catbird Northern Mockingbird and Brown Thrasher PDF Retrieved 3 July 2012 a b Beal F E L W L McAtee E R Kalmbach 1916 Common birds of southeastern United States in relation to agriculture U S Dep Agric Farmer s Bull 755 USDA p 11 a b Graber R R Graber J W Kirk E L 1970 Illinois birds Mimidae Ill Nat Hist Surv Biol Notes 68 3 38 Gabrielson I N 1912 A study of the home life of the Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum Linn Wilson Bull 24 2 65 94 JSTOR 4154409 Icenoggle Radd 2003 Birds in Place A Habitat Based Field Guide to the Birds of the Northern Rockies Farcountry Press p 114 ISBN 978 1 56037 241 7 a b Cornell Lab of Ornithology The Project FeederWatch Top 20 feeder birds in the Southeast PDF Retrieved 22 June 2012 Fischer D H 1981 Wintering ecology of thrashers in southern Texas Condor 83 4 340 346 doi 10 2307 1367503 JSTOR 1367503 Bent A C 1948 Life histories of North American nuthatches wrens thrashers and their allies U S Natl Mus Bull p 195 Mobley Jason A 2009 Birds of the World Marshall Cavendish p 109 ISBN 978 0 7614 7775 4 Engels W 1940 Structural adaptations in thrashers Mimidae genus Toxostoma with comments on interspecific relations Univ Calif Publ Zool 42 341 400 Jaeger R G 1981 Birds as inefficient predators on terrestrial salamanders Am Nat 117 5 835 837 doi 10 1086 283772 JSTOR 2460773 S2CID 85187112 Cruickshank Allan D 1977 Cruickshank s Photographs of Birds of America 177 Photographs and Text Dover Publications p 159 ISBN 978 0486234977 Hilton B Jr 1992 Tool making and tool using by a Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum Chat 56 4 5 Howard R R Brodie E D Jr 1970 A mimetic relationship in salamanders Notophthalmus viridescens and Pseudotriton ruber Am Zool 10 475 a b c Fergus Charles 2003 Wildlife of Virginia and Maryland and Washington D C Stockpole p 308 ISBN 978 0811728218 Eastman John Hansen Amelia 1997 Birds of Forest Yard and Thicket Stockpole pp 180 ISBN 978 0 8117 2680 1 Kroodsma Donald E amp Parker Linda D 1977 Vocal virtuosity in the Brown Thrasher The Auk 94 4 783 785 doi 10 2307 4085282 JSTOR 4085282 Rylander Michael K 2002 Behavior of Texas Birds A Field Companion University of Texas Press p 293 ISBN 978 0 292 77119 2 Spess Jackson Laura Thompson Carol A amp Dinsmore James J 1996 The Iowa Breeding Bird Atlas University of Iowa Press p 292 ISBN 978 0 87745 561 5 James Ryan M 2009 Adirondack Wildlife A Field Guide University Press of New England p 155 ISBN 978 1 58465 749 1 Alderfer Johnathan Hess Paul 2011 National Geographic Backyard Guide to the Birds of North America National Geographic p 174 ISBN 978 1 58465 749 1 Species Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum Vancouver Avian Research Centre Vancouver Avian Research Centre 2012 Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 3 July 2012 Kroodsma Donald 2005 The Singing Life of Birds The Art and Science of Listening to Birdsong Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 425 426 ISBN 978 0 618 40568 8 Stap Don 2006 Birdsong A Natural History Oxford University Press p 89 ISBN 978 0 19 530901 0 All About Birds Cornell University Retrieved 26 June 2012 Thrasher TropicalBirds com Retrieved 26 June 2012 Brown Thrasher Outdoor Alabama Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Peterson Roger Tory 1998 A Field Guide to the Birds of Texas And Adjacent States Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 259 ISBN 978 0 19 530901 0 Hartshorne Charles 1956 The Monotony Threshold in Singing Birds The Auk 77 2 176 192 doi 10 2307 4081470 JSTOR 4081470 Lang Elliot 2004 Know Your Bird Sounds Songs and calls of yard garden and city birds Stackpole p 35 ISBN 978 0811729635 Dunne Pete 2006 Pete Dunne s Essential Field Guide Companion Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 508 509 ISBN 978 0 618 23648 0 Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum Michigan Bird Atlas PDF Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2016 Retrieved 8 July 2012 New Jersey Endangered and Threatened Species Field Guide Archived from the original on 2014 05 08 Retrieved 2023 04 04 BROWN THRASHER Toxostoma rufum Guidance for Conservation PDF audubon org Archived from the original PDF on 8 May 2014 Retrieved 8 July 2012 BirdLife International 2012 LC Brown Thrasher Toxostoma rufum IUCN Red List for birds Retrieved 26 July 2012 a b Rothstein S I 1971 Observation and Experiment in the Analysis of Interactions between Brood Parasites and Their Hosts The American Naturalist 105 941 71 74 doi 10 1086 282702 JSTOR 2459388 S2CID 84032938 a b Eastman John Hansen Amelia 1997 Birds of Forest Yard and Thicket Stackpole pp 181 ISBN 978 0 8117 2680 1 Eastman John 2012 The Eastman Guide to Birds Stackpole p 181 ISBN 978 1 81174 522 9 Eastman John 2012 The Eastman Guide to Birds Stackpole p 180 ISBN 978 1 81174 522 9 a b Facts about Brown Thrasher Encyclopedia of Life Archived from the original on 2011 10 16 Retrieved 2023 04 05 Cavitt J F 1998 The role of food supply and nest predation in limiting reproductive success of Brown Thrashers Toxostoma rufum effects of predator removal food supplements and predation risk Phd Thesis Kansas State Univ Manhattan Toland B 1985 Food habits and hunting success of Cooper s Hawks in Missouri Journal of Field Ornithology 56 4 Autumn 419 422 Curnutt J 2007 Conservation Assessment for Northern Goshawk Accipiter gentilis Linnaeus in the Western Great Lakes USDA Forest Service 105 pp Burns F L 1911 A monograph of the Broad winged Hawk Buteo platypterus The Wilson Bulletin 23 3 4 143 320 Sodhi N S Oliphant L W 1993 Prey selection by urban breeding merlins The Auk 110 4 727 735 doi 10 2307 4088628 JSTOR 4088628 Ward F P amp Laybourne R C 1985 A difference in prey selection by adult and immature peregrine falcons during autumn migration Conservation studies on raptors Page Brothers Norwich England pp 303 309 Vancamp L F Henny C J 1975 The Screech Owl Its Life History and Population Ecology in Northern Ohio PDF North American Fauna 71 1 65 doi 10 3996 nafa 71 0001 Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Murphy R K 1997 Importance of prairie wetlands and avian prey to breeding Great Horned Owls Bubo virginianus in northwestern North Dakota U S Dept of Agriculture Forest Service North Central Forest Experiment Station pp 286 298 a b Errington P L 1932 Food habits of southern Wisconsin raptors Part I Owls Condor 34 4 176 186 doi 10 2307 1363563 JSTOR 1363563 Haywood Karen Diane 2005 Georgia Marshall Cavendish pp 4 ISBN 978 0 7614 1862 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brown Thrasher Wikispecies has information related to Toxostoma rufum Brown Thrasher BirdHouses101 com Photo and links to additional pages at GeorgiaInfo Reproduction of Audubon s description Brown Thrasher media Internet Bird Collection Stamps at bird stamps org Brown Thrasher Species Account Cornell Lab of Ornithology Brown Thrasher Bird Sound at Florida Museum of Natural History Brown Thrasher photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brown thrasher amp oldid 1170470307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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