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Cowbird (Family: Icteridae, Genus: Molothrus) - Wiki
Subject: Cowbird (Family: Icteridae, Genus: Molothrus) - Wiki
Brown-headed Cowbird, Molothrus ater 1.jpg
Resolution: 1050x701 File Size: 763209 Bytes Date: 2004:03:17 15:24:32 Camera: Digital Link (Applied Graphics Technologies) Upload Date: 2007:09:27 03:06:48

Cowbird (Family: Icteridae, Genus: Molothrus) - Wiki


Cowbird
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[Photo] Female Brown-headed Cowbird, Molothrus ater (de: Braunkopf-Kuhst??rling). Creator: Lee Karney, Fish and Wildlife Service. Licence: public domain

Cowbirds are birds belonging to the genus Molothrus in the family Icteridae. They are brood parasitic New World birds which are unrelated to the Old World cuckoos, one of which, the Common Cuckoo is the best-known brood parasitic bird.

This family includes five species of cowbirds that form the natural genus Molothrus. This has been determined by phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial DNA sequences (Lanyon 1992, Johnson and Lanyon 1999, Lanyon and Omland 1999, in Lowther, 2004).

The genus Molothrus includes:

Screaming Cowbird, Molothrus rufoaxillaris
Giant Cowbird, Molothrus oryzivorus [formerly Scaphidura oryzivorus]
Bronzed Cowbird, Molothrus aeneus
Shiny Cowbird, Molothrus bonariensis
Brown-headed Cowbird, Molothrus ater

It excludes the non-brood parasitic Bay-winged Cowbird Agelaioides badius [formerly Molothrus badius].

These birds feed on insects, including the large numbers that may be stirred up by cattle. In order for the birds to remain mobile and stay with the herd, they have adapted by laying their eggs in other birds' nests. The cowbird will watch for when its host lays eggs, and when the nest is left unattended, the female will come in and lay its own eggs.

The cowbird eggs do not look much different from the hosts' eggs, and the host will normally incubate the eggs. The cowbird chicks grow quickly, and may consume most of the food the host brings. If starvation does not kill the other birds, in some species the cowbird will use its large size to push the other chicks out of the nest. The Giant Cowbird does not appear to harm its host oropendola or cacique chicks.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowbird
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Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater)
French: Vacher à tête brune German: Braunkopf-Kuhstärling Spanish: Tordo Cabecipardo
Other common names: Common Cowbird
Subspecies and Distribution
M. a. obscurus (J. F. Gmelin, 1789) – breeds along Pacific seaboard from S Alaska S (E to the Cascades and Sierra Nevada) to NW & N Mexico (N Baja California, also on mainland S to Oaxaca); N populations migrate to S parts of breeding range, in Mexico extending to S Baja Califonia.
M. a. artemisiae Grinnell, 1909 – breeds from W Canada (interior British Columbia E to SC Manitoba) S in W USA (E from the Cascades and Sierra Nevada) to California, Nevada and New Mexico; migrates S to Mexico (S to Michoacán).
M. a. ater (Boddaert, 1783) – breeds from SE Canada (S Ontario E to Newfoundland) S throughout E USA to C Texas, Gulf Coast and C Florida, and in E Mexico S to Tamaulipas; winters in Florida and in Mexico S to Oaxaca.
Also breeds in Yukon (NW Canada); race undetermined, possibly artemisiae.

Giant cowbird
11/13
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