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Long-billed Thrasher

Toxostoma longirostre ORDER: PASSERIFORMES FAMILY: MIMIDAE

IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern

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Long-billed Thrasher Photo

A resident of dense brushy habitats, the Long-billed Thrasher is found only in southern Texas and eastern Mexico. It closely resembles its rustier relative, the Brown Thrasher, which spends the winter in some of the same areas.

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At a GlanceHelp

Measurements
Both Sexes
Length
10.2–11.4 in
26–29 cm
Wingspan
13 in
33 cm
Weight
2.4 oz
68 g
Other Names
  • Sennett's Thrasher
  • Moqueur à long bec (French)
  • Cuitlacoche pico largo, Cuitlacoche (Spanish)

Cool Facts

  • Although the Long-billed Thrasher has a longer bill than the similar-looking Brown Thrasher, it does not have a particularly long bill for a thrasher. Le Conte's and California thrashers, and even fellow Texan Crissal Thrasher have much longer and more strongly curved bills.
  • The Long-billed Thrasher has a long and complicated song like other thrashers and mockingbirds, but it is not known to include mimicry in its repertoire.

Habitat


Scrub

Riparian woodland and dense, scrubby thickets, especially of mesquite.

Food


Omnivore

Insects, spiders, snails, and berries.

Nesting

Nesting Facts
Clutch Size
2–5 eggs
Egg Description
Pale greenish white, minutely and heavily speckled with dingy brown markings.
Condition at Hatching
Helpless, with scattered tufts of black down.
Nest Description

A bulky cup made of thorny twigs, lined with grass, straw, bark, or rootlets. Nest in center of dense thickets under large trees.

Nest Placement

Shrub

Behavior


Ground Forager

Forages on ground, by sweeping bill side to side in leaf litter. Tosses aside leaf litter and twigs.

Conservation

status via IUCN

Least Concern

Clearing of brushland for agriculture caused decline of Long-billed Thrashers in the Rio Grande Valley, Texas over the last century. Given no special status.

Credits

  • Tweit, R. C. 1997. Long-billed Thrasher (Toxostoma longirostre). In The Birds of North America, No. 317 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C.

Range Map Help

Long-billed Thrasher Range Map
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