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[[Image:American_Crow.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by <B>Leslie</B>]] | [[Image:American_Crow.jpg|thumb|550px|right|Photo by <B>Leslie</B>]] | ||
==Description== | ==Description== | ||
− | <B>Description</B>: 17-21" (43-53 cm). | + | <B>Description</B>: 17-21" (43-53 cm). Distinctive, stocky black bird with stout bill and fan-shaped tail. Smaller Northwestern Crow has hoarser voice; larger Common Raven has wedge-shaped tail. |
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==Identification== | ==Identification== | ||
<b>Habitat</b>: Deciduous growth along rivers and streams; orchards and city parks. Also mixed and coniferous woods, but avoids closed coniferous forests and desert expanses. | <b>Habitat</b>: Deciduous growth along rivers and streams; orchards and city parks. Also mixed and coniferous woods, but avoids closed coniferous forests and desert expanses. |
Revision as of 04:46, 1 August 2007
- Corvus brachyrhynchos
Description
Description: 17-21" (43-53 cm). Distinctive, stocky black bird with stout bill and fan-shaped tail. Smaller Northwestern Crow has hoarser voice; larger Common Raven has wedge-shaped tail.
Identification
Habitat: Deciduous growth along rivers and streams; orchards and city parks. Also mixed and coniferous woods, but avoids closed coniferous forests and desert expanses.
Nesting: 4-6 dull green eggs, spotted with dark brown, in a large mass of twigs and sticks lined with feathers, grass, and rootlets, and placed in a tree.
Range: Breeds from British Columbia, central interior Canada, and Newfoundland south to southern California, Gulf Coast, and Florida. Winters north to southern Canada.
Voice: Familiar caw-caw or caa-caa Intelligent, wary, virtually omnivorous, and with a high reproductive capacity, the American Crow is undoubtedly much more numerous than it was before the arrival of settlers. An opportunist in its feeding, the American Crow consumes a great variety of plant and animal food: seeds, garbage, insects, mice. Its nest-plundering is decried, but in orchards and fields it destroys many injurious insects such as grasshoppers and cutworms. However, the labeling of birds as either "harmful" or "useful" is misleading and antiquated. Crows do destroy many eggs and nestlings of woodland and meadow birds, but they also weed out the weak and feeble, and they alert the animals in a neighborhood when danger approaches.