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Other Nature Related Information => General Nature Discussion => Topic started by: Donna on 26-Feb-10, 05:42:54 PM



Title: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 26-Feb-10, 05:42:54 PM
It doesn't look like the rest of the Starlings at the suet. The others were irredescent, this one not!


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: MAK on 26-Feb-10, 06:06:52 PM
It's definitely a starling Donna. :wave:


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 26-Feb-10, 06:11:51 PM
It's definitely a starling Donna. :wave:

Thanks MAK   :notworthy:  but is it a juvie? Why is he different from the rest?


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: MAK on 26-Feb-10, 06:30:13 PM
I don't know why. Sometimes they just look darker. Maybe it has something to do with what they eat or the lighting? Maybe a bird expert out there can tell us.   :confused:


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 26-Feb-10, 06:50:20 PM
I don't know why. Sometimes they just look darker. Maybe it has something to do with what they eat or the lighting? Maybe a bird expert out there can tell us.   :confused:

The ones here are black with shiny irredescent blues & purpleish like the one here:

Found this too:  LOL




Starlings know if you are watching them

May 1st, 2008 | weird

Starlings can tell if you are watching them, according to a study that has shown for the first time that starlings respond to a human’s gaze.

Starlings will keep away from their food dish if a human is looking at it. However, if the person is just as close, but their eyes are turned away, the birds resumed feeding earlier and consumed more food overall, according to experiments by Julia Carter and colleagues at the University of Bristol, reported today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society Biological Sciences.

Could this be exploited to make a better scarecrow? “Starlings do seem to have a reasonably strong aversion to eyes, even to artificial eyes, but these birds are also very quick learners,” she says.

“Previous studies have shown that starlings will learn within a matter of hours to ignore even relatively elaborate bird scarers – these devices never do what a real predator would, they don’t actually chase the birds or present any other signs of danger, so the birds quickly learn to ignore them.”



Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: MAK on 26-Feb-10, 07:01:42 PM
That eye contact thing is interesting. When I lived in the country(Hamlin,NY) I had problems with them devouring my suet and pooping purple on everything. I had to stop putting it out! They also love taking baths. They are quite entertaining to watch but can be a real nuisance.


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Aafke on 27-Feb-10, 06:18:32 AM
I'm not an expert, but maybe he was very wet from all that snow? :laugh:
Your starling looks exact the same as the ones I have in my garden.
greetings Aafke


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 27-Feb-10, 07:21:30 AM
I'm not an expert, but maybe he was very wet from all that snow? :laugh:
Your starling looks exact the same as the ones I have in my garden.
greetings Aafke


So are you saying I have a Hague starling at the feeder??  :2funny:  :devil:


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Lizz on 28-Feb-10, 06:41:01 PM
I hate to sound dumb, but, this looks like a grackle to me.  They have the tiny wedge-shaped white marks on their feathers and do not "shine" like starlings do.


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 28-Feb-10, 07:59:36 PM
I hate to sound dumb, but, this looks like a grackle to me.  They have the tiny wedge-shaped white marks on their feathers and do not "shine" like starlings do.

My exact same thought when I first saw this bird. The spots threw me off as being a starling. Ok then :)


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Bird Crazy on 28-Feb-10, 08:50:21 PM
It is not a grackle trust me on this. It is a starling in its winter plumage. They get there shiny feathers in the spring. Search starling winter plumage and the pictures look just like yours.


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: MAK on 28-Feb-10, 09:01:21 PM
Grackles are all black with irredescent heads and beaty yellow eyes, This is absolutely a starling.


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: dale on 28-Feb-10, 11:40:09 PM
That is SO a starling. If you heard him, did he sound like he was getting paid more than all of us put together by the cellphone company to transmit text messages? That's a starling.


Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Dumpsterkitty on 01-Mar-10, 07:11:37 AM
And, from Cornell (http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/european_starling/id)

Color Pattern
At a distance, starlings look black. In summer they are purplish-green iridescent with yellow beaks; in fresh winter plumage they are brown, covered in brilliant white spots.



Title: Re: Is this a Starling?
Post by: Donna on 01-Mar-10, 07:33:43 AM
And, from Cornell (http://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/european_starling/id)

Color Pattern
At a distance, starlings look black. In summer they are purplish-green iridescent with yellow beaks; in fresh winter plumage they are brown, covered in brilliant white spots.



 :clap: :clap: :clap: That's it Ei....Thanks. I'm glad that's solved. Didn't know they changed plumage for the seasons.