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Gray Catbird

Dumetella carolinensis

Description:

Gray Catbirds are plain lead gray almost all over. The top of the head is darker. The undertail coverts are rust-colored and the remiges and rectrices are black, some with white borders. The slim bill, the eyes, and the legs and feet are also blackish. Adults weigh around 1.2–1.4 oz. This species is named for its cat-like call. Like many members of the Mimidae (most famously mockingbirds), it also mimics the songs of other birds, as well as those of Hylidae (tree frogs), and even mechanical sounds. In summer, Gray Catbirds eat mainly ants, beetles, grasshoppers, midges, caterpillars, and moths. When fruits are available they also eat holly berries, cherries, elderberries, poison ivy, greenbrier, bay, and blackberries. They are sometimes garden pests, eating or damaging raspberries, cherries, grapes, and strawberries.

Habitat:

Gray Catbirds live amid dense shrubs, vine tangles, and thickets of young trees in both summer and winter. Human disturbance and development often create these habitats in the form of clearings, roadsides, fencerows, abandoned farmland, and residential areas.

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2 Comments

keithp2012
keithp2012 11 years ago

new photos

keithp2012
keithp2012 12 years ago

Thank You!

keithp2012
Spotted by
keithp2012

New York, USA

Spotted on May 11, 2011
Submitted on May 11, 2011

Spotted for Mission

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