I would have to agree that it is
definitely a thrasher by its general jizz and bill length, etc. We can
rule out thrushes and pipits, catbird and all mockingbirds. I would rule
out all of the exceptionally long-billed thrashers, as well as the short-billed
Sage Thrasher. That leaves Bendire's and Curve-billed Thrashers.
Location-wise you would have to go with Bendire's as Curve-billed is only an
accidental in Utah. The buff eyebrow would go with either, the bill may be
a little long for Bendire's. I can't explain the spots on the wing or the
short stripes on the outer tail feathers. It could be a juvenile of either
or possibly a hybrid of both.
--Steve Carr
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2004 10:13
AM
Subject: [BirdTalk] Mystery Bird
Well, hello all. Kind of a la Tim Avery, here is a quiz
for all of you folks. However, I don't know the answer. This
photo was taken at Red Hills Golf Course in St. George on June 18, 2004 at
about 1:30 p.m. It was just a little smaller than a flicker in
size. I have run this past Kris Purdy, Bill Fenimore, Milton Moody
who ran it past the records committee and Dennis Shirley, and Charlie in
St. George who has run it by some his friends, one of which monitors
Flickers and we have very effectively ruled out that it is a flicker in any
stage of its life. The only consensus we have is that it is a
Thrasher. Kris and I think it is a juvenile Thrasher. Too big
for a Rock Wren as some have suggested (sorry, just going to have to trust
me on this). Had I known it was going to be this difficult, I would
have taken a lot more photos. There were three of them in the
immediate vicinity of Tee #2. They did not call in the short time
they were there. Complicating things is that I also was only there
a short time (i.e. about 1.5 hours), and saw them only towards the end of
my stay there. Some golfers came along and scared them away, not to
be seen again (why there would be golfers on a golf course, go
figure). Each of the three were on the grass as you see these.
They seemed to be in search of food. They were very active, though I
never saw them actually get any food. When they flew, they flew to
parts unknown. They were only there a brief time that I could see, a
maximum of ten minutes.
Of the people who have seen it, there is one
vote so far for a juvenile LeConte's Thrasher, and this person has given
their reasoning. That certainly fits the size requirements. I
won't say who it is so as not to prejudice anybody's thinking. I
would appreciate it if you respond to birdtalk and not to me personally
just so that whoever joins in this can gain the same information. Oh,
and we also have one vote for a Bahama Mockingbird [but I won't tell you
who voted for that! ; )]. I do have four bird ID books and none have
a juvenile LeConte Thrasher for me to compare it with.
Thank you all
in advance and a big thank you to all who have already looked at it..
Sorry the quality isn't top notch. For those who do respond, please
give your reasoning as to why.
http://www.pbase.com/image/32199637 http://www.pbase.com/image/32199636/original
Brian
L. Currie
_______________________________________________
"Utah
Birds" web site: http://www.utahbirds.org
BirdTalk: To subscribe, e-mail: birdtalk-subscribe@utahbirds.org To
unsubscribe, e-mail: birdtalk-unsubscribe@utahbirds.org To
send a message, e-mail: birdtalk@utahbirds.org _________________________________________________
|