Somehow I doubt that this is the work of sparrows, as the news story suggests, but I am unsure what species might be to blame. Anyone care to wager a guess?
Somehow I doubt that this is the work of sparrows, as the news story suggests, but I am unsure what species might be to blame. Anyone care to wager a guess?
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Brewer’s blackbirds, maybe?
@Barbara: That might make sense. With my east coast blinders on I didn’t even think of them.
Those are most likely Brewer’s Blackbirds at that location, given they’re saying the birds were black. Northern Mockingbirds are also known to get a bit — enthusiastic — in protecting their nests around here.
I got pecked on the back of the head as I was leaving the center three weeks ago. The bird flew away before I could get a really good look, but I thought from the squawking it made that it might be a European starling. in the shade they look black, though you can see the speckled underside when they’re flying above you.
@Hangaku Gozen: I live in Europe and have never heard of starlings attacking / pecking people. That would be quite unusual, I guess?
@Jochen- When I lived in the Midwest, a starling built a nest in a tree adjacent to our office’s rear entrance. It began attacking everyone who used that door—deliverymen, smokers slipping out for a cigarette break, our poor custodial staff. There was a discussion over whether we should remove the nest before the bird drew blood: happily, it was decided to leave it alone until the babies left the nest in the summer, while directing people to use our front entrance instead.
Maybe US starlings are more aggressive? 🙂
I love the sign: “Incidents of small black birds pecking of public.” Translated from the …?
I’m pretty sure it’s Brewer’s blackbirds. They’re quite common here. One particularly aggressive one in SF’s Financial District got pretty notorious a few years ago: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odCo0F51MXw