Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Northern Mockingbird

Mimus polyglottos

Description:

Northern Mockingbirds are medium-sized mimids that have long legs and tails, with abridged and arched wings. The Mockingbirds' color is either a gray with a grayish-brown tint for its upperparts, while its underparts have a white or whitish-gray color. It has parallel wing bars on its adjacent half of the wings conntected with its white patch that has a distinguished appearance in flight. The black central retrices and typical white lateral retrices also are noticeable in flight. The iris is usually a light green-yellow or a yellow, but has been instances of a orange color. The bill is black with a brownish black appearance at the base. The juvenile appearance is marked by its streaks on its back, distinguished spots and streaks on its chest, and a gray or grayish-green iris. Mockingbirds measure from 20.5 to 28 cm (8.1 to 11 in) including a tail almost as long as its body. The wingspan can range from 31–38 cm (12–15 in) and body mass is from 40–58 g (1.4–2.0 oz). Males tend to be slightly larger than females.

Habitat:

The Mockingbird usually resides in vacated areas and forest edges. It is usually sighted in farmlands, roadsides, city parks, suburban areas, and open grassy areas with thickets and brushy deserts. When foraging for food, it prefers short grass or sheer substrate. It also has an affinity for mowed lawns. This bird refrains from residing within densely forested areas.

Notes:

This is our resident male. After his last 3 moved out of the nest he disappeared for a month. Then about a week after building the water feature he showed back up. I'm so glad to see him back. I guess he had to get the babies established in another area, far, far away. LOL He visits the water several times a day. The first three pics are from one episode and the last three from another. Even though he's fluffed up on the last three, he had just jumped in and out prior to these. He hadn't even flown away yet before he was jumping back in. We hit 100 degrees today.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

nexttogone
Spotted by
nexttogone

Bandera, Texas, USA

Spotted on Sep 7, 2012
Submitted on Sep 8, 2012

Related Spottings

Mimus polyglottos Unnamed spotting Northern Mockingbird Northern Mockingbird

Nearby Spottings

Scudder's Bush Katydid Nymph House Finch Northern Cardinal Fox Squirrel
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team