Gloria (@00217) • Hey
The thrushes are a passerine bird family, Turdidae, with a worldwide distribution.
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- Turdidae can nest in tree-holes, rock crevices, cup-shaped or dome-shaped nests, on the ground and in burrows, according to the geographic location and the habitat.
- The most beautiful songs are uttered by the thrushes.
- Males usually sing from exposed perch in spring and during the breeding season, at dawn and dusk.
- The song is usually very melodious, involving rich phrases, clear notes and whistles.
- Courtship feeding can be observed in several species.
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- When the pair is formed, the male attacks all the females with enter or approach the place.
- The male performs courtship displays with chases, and then, both mates fly together within the territory.
- The territory is occupied and strongly defended by both sexes.
- Turdidae are territorial and almost always monogamous.
- When the leaf litter is dry, we can hear the noise produced by such foraging behaviour!
- They also remove the leaves with the bill, thanks to a quick head flick.
- Their technique is very typical and described as “stop – start – pounce”!
- They forage as well in deep shade in forests as in open areas.
- These birds feed mainly on invertebrates, insects and earth-worms, but also on fruits and berries.
- They forage actively on the ground, in the soil, the leaf litter, and in vegetation.
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- The major part of the species is able to run and hop on the ground.
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- Turdidae often perform undulating flight.
- This family includes numerous birds with some similar attitudes and behaviours, but the plumage offers a wide range of colours and patterns.
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- Plumages vary from brown or grey, to blue, chestnut or orange, sometimes with conspicuous wing patches, eyebrows, collars…
- Male and female often differ, with female duller than male.
- Usually, all the juveniles of this family shows cryptic plumage heavily spotted.
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- The bill is strong and straight, eyes are large, wings are mainly rounded and tail is square or slightly rounded, legs are medium-sized with strong feet.
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- These birds are rather small.
- This family includes the different types of thrushes.
- Turdidae Family belongs to the Order Passeriformes.
- Turdidae Family belongs to the Order Passeriformes.
- Slate-colored Solitaire (Myadestes unicolor)
Kama’o (Myadestes myadestinus)
Amaui (Myadestes woahensis)
Oloma’o (Myadestes lanaiensis)
Oma’o (Myadestes obscurus)
Puaiohi (Myadestes palmeri)
- **“Chestnut-backed Solitaire” (M. r. plumbeiceps)**
**“Venezuelan Solitaire” (M. r. venezuelensis)**
**“Bolivian Solitaire” (M. r. ralloides)**
- **Black-faced Solitaire (Myadestes melanops)**
**Varied Solitaire (Myadestes coloratus)**
**Andean Solitaire (Myadestes ralloides)**
- Cuban Solitaire (Myadestes elisabeth)
Rufous-throated Solitaire (Myadestes genibarbis)
“Jamaican Solitaire” (M. g. solitarius)
“Rufous-throated Solitaire” (M. g. genibarbis)
“St. Vincent Solitaire” (M. g. sibilans)
- Finsch’s Rufous Thrush (Stizorhina finschi)
Townsend’s Solitaire (Myadestes townsendi)
Brown-backed Solitaire (Myadestes occidentalis)
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- White-tailed Ant-Thrush (Neocossyphus poensis)
Fraser’s Rufous Thrush (Stizorhina fraseri)
- Western Bluebird (Sialia mexicana)
Mountain Bluebird (Sialia currucoides)
Red-tailed Ant-Thrush (Neocossyphus rufus)
“Red-tailed Ant-Thrush” (N. r. gabunensis)
“Coastal Ant-Thrush” (N. r. rufus)
- Eastern Bluebird (Sialia sialis)
“Eastern Bluebird” (S. s. sialis)
“Mexican Bluebird” (S. s. guatemalae)
- Grandala (Grandala coelicolor)
- As currently configured, the family comprises somewhere in the approximate range of 171 to 249 species (plus between six and ten recently extinct).
- but increasingly regarded as a complex that could conceivably comprise over 30 species.
- A prime example is the Island Thrush (Turdus poliocephalus), traditionally considered a single, widespread, internally diverse species,
- This leaves many populations at ambiguous stages of speciation, where their status is a matter of judgment or opinion, complicated by a lack of information.
- Many tropical thrushes are sedentary, and those that inhabit islands or become isolated for other reasons tend to diverge.