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Varied Thrush

Ixoreus naevius ORDER: PASSERIFORMES FAMILY: TURDIDAE

IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern

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Varied Thrush Photo

A large, robin-like thrush of the Pacific Northwest, the Varied Thrush is a characteristic bird of the mature, dark coniferous forests. Wandering individuals turn up regularly far from home, wintering around feeders in the midwestern states.

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At a GlanceHelp

Measurements
Both Sexes
Length
7.5–10.2 in
19–26 cm
Wingspan
13.4–15 in
34–38 cm
Weight
2.3–3.5 oz
65–100 g
Other Names
  • Grive à collier (French)
  • Zorzal pechicinchado, Mirlo pecho cinchado (Spanish)

Cool Facts

  • Males, but only rarely females, defend and maintain small feeding territories around bird feeders. They are aggressive and dominate many other feeder bird species.
  • To defend a territory a male may first give a Tail-Up display where the bird faces away from the intruder and holds its tail up to show off the gray-and-white patterned undertail coverts. If the intruder keeps coming the male may turn around and give the Head-Forward display with the wings fanned to show off the orange wing stripe and the tail cocked up over the head showing the white corners.
  • Data from Project FeederWatch show that populations go up and down every other year. Go here for a discussion.

Habitat


Forest

  • Breeds in wet coniferous or mixed forests. Prefers mature forests with a closed canopy, but found in second growth forests.
  • Winters in forests, parks, and gardens.

Food


Insects

Arthropods, fruit, acorns.

Nesting

Nesting Facts
Clutch Size
1–6 eggs
Egg Description
Light sky blue, usually with small dark brown spots.
Condition at Hatching
Helpless and with small patches of down.
Nest Description

Open cup with an outer layer of twigs and leaves; a middle layer of rotten wood, moss, and mud; and an inner layer of fine grass and moss. Nest on branches of small conifer in understory of forest.

Nest Placement

Tree

Behavior


Ground Forager

Feeds primarily on ground for litter-dwelling arthropods; grabs litter in bill, hops back, tosses litter aside, then examines cleared area.

Conservation

status via IUCN

Least Concern

Breeding populations in United States are declining, perhaps because of logging of mature forests. Not listed. May benefit from reserves established for Spotted Owl.

Credits

  • George, T. L. 2000. Varied Thrush (Ixoreus naevius). In The Birds of North America, No. 541 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA.

Range Map Help

Varied Thrush Range Map
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