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White-browed Blackbirds

Icteridae

White-browed Blackbird, Sturnella superciliaris

White-browed BlackbirdThe White-browed Blackbird, Sturnella superciliaris, is a passerine bird in the New World family Icteridae.

Despite its name and coloration, it is in the same genus as the meadowlarks, and is less closely related to the Red-winged Blackbird group. It is, of course, completely unrelated to the European Blackbird, which is a thrush.


Distribution / Range

The White-browed Blackbird breeds in northeastern Brazil and in southern South America from southwestern Brazil through Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina. Southern populations are partially migratory.

Like other meadowlarks, it is a bird associated with open country, including moist grasslands, pasture and cultivation, preferably with the odd bush or fence post for males to use as a songpost.

White-browed Blackbird has benefited from the more open habitat created by forest clearance and ranching, and is extending its range.


White-browed BlackbirdCalls / Vocalization

In display the male flies up to 10 m in the air, then parachutes down on folded wings whist singing an initially buzzing song, followed by a series of notes TZZZZZZ-teee-chu-chu-chak-chak. The call is a short chuck.


Breeding / Nesting

The White-browed Blackbird builds a deep grass-lined open cup nest on the ground amongst tall grasses, with several nests often close together. The normal clutch is three to five reddish brown-blotched greenish eggs.

This species is often parasitised by the Shiny Cowbird, and on one occasion 19 cowbird eggs were found with one blackbird egg in a nest.


Description

White-browed Blackbird is a small icterid.

The male has mainly black plumage, apart from a bright red throat, belly and wing shoulder patches (epaulets), and a white supercilium.

Female White-browed BlackbirdThe female has buff edged dark brown upperpart feathers, buff underparts, and pale streaks through the crown and eye.

Juveniles resemble the female, but are paler.

Similar Species ID: This species is very closely related to the Red-breasted Blackbird, S. militaris which breeds further north, and was formerly considered to be subspecies of that bird.

The male White-browed is easily distinguished by his bright white supercilium, but females of the two species are almost identical. Female Red-breasted Blackbird is longer billed, smaller, and shorter winged than White-browed, with more red and less streaking on the underparts.


Diet / Feeding

This gregarious bird feeds mainly on insects and some seeds, including rice, and forages on the ground like a Bobolink.


Copyright: Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia.org

White-browed Blackbird



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