Wild Facts About The American Robin
Quick Facts About American Robins
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Diet 13693_4a21b1-26> |
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Found 13693_90fce2-fb> |
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Description 13693_adf61f-60> |
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Watching, Not Listening
- Observers of American Robins may notice that these birds cock their heads to the side when feeding on lawns and in grassy areas.
- Some believe the birds are listening for the sounds of earthworms chewing their way through the soil.
- But this is not the case. While American Robins have excellent hearing, they cock their heads so that they can use their eyes (Tekiela 2004).
- Earthworms and insect larvae wriggling close to the ground surface often give their presence away by breaking the soil surface with portions of their bodies.
- American Robins tilt their heads to get a clear view of the soil between blades of grass. They are looking for patches of color and motion that indicate accessible prey.

Do As I Say, Not As I Do
Brood Parasitism In Birds
- Some species of birds are notorious brood parasites.
- A brood parasite is a bird species who lays their eggs in the nest of a different bird species. The nest owners end up incubating, protecting, and feeding offspring that are not their own, which drains considerable energy and resources from the host parents. The parasitic species benefits from the efforts of the host birds, while the host birds suffer.
- Brood parasites can be either “obligate” or “facultative”.
- An obligate brood parasite must lay their eggs in the nests of other birds because the parasitic species provides no parental care at all once the eggs are laid.
- Females abandon their eggs completely and rely on the host birds accepting the parasites’ eggs as their own.
- Brown-Headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater) is an example of an obligate brood parasite.
- A facultative brood parasite does not need to lay their eggs in the nests of other bird.
- The females of these species are perfectly capable of caring for their own eggs and babies—but they opt not to do so in certain circumstances.
- Facultative brood parasitism is rare in the bird world, but it does happen.
- An obligate brood parasite must lay their eggs in the nests of other birds because the parasitic species provides no parental care at all once the eggs are laid.
American Robins Are Little-Known Brood Parasites
- Enter the American Robin, a little-known facultative brood parasite.
- In a study published in the Wilson Journal of Ornithology, a scientist observed two American Robin eggs in the nest of a Gray Catbird (Dumetella carolinensis). The catbird parents successfully incubated the robin eggs and raised the American Robin hatchlings to fledging age (Redmond 2020, https://doi.org/10.1676/1559-4491-132.1.202).
- The funny thing about this finding is that American Robins aggressively reject the eggs of brood parasites.
- In fact, “American robins (Turdus migratorius) are one of only 10% of the over 200 potential host species to robustly reject parasitic eggs” and rejected model eggs dyed to resemble the color of Brown-Headed Cowbird eggs in 100% of trials (Croston and Hauber 2014, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-013-1649-8).
- While brood parasitism by American Robins is quite rare, it clearly happens.
- When it does, it’s a great reminder that even animals can have something of a double standard.

You’re In My Space
- Male American Robins are strongly territorial, but their territorial behavior looks quite different from that of other birds.
- The timing, extent, and aggressiveness of their response varies between individual males and even for the same male at different times of day.
- Resident males often lose territorial battles to intruders also, which is slightly unusual in the bird world.
- That said, when a male American Robin decides to defend his space, he puts on quite a show.
- Watch a group of American Robins on your lawn or in a grassy park sometime, especially in the spring, and you may see a male robin defend its territory.
- Males show their intolerance to other males in their territories in several ways:
- Wing Droops: Bird lowers its wing tips below tail level and puffs out its breast feathers.
- Tail Lifts: Bird lowers its head and tilts its tail up forty-five degrees.
- Attack Runs: Bird tilts itself down horizontally and runs directly towards a challenger.
- Pushing: One bird dashes a short distance towards another bird, who moves away a short distance.
- Less aggressive than a full-on attack run, but effectively shifts encroachers significant distances when repeated (Stokes 1979).

Singing, Sunbathing, and Raising the Babies
- Only male American Robins sing.
- Only female American Robins sit on the nests to incubate their eggs.
- Male American Robins do guard the nests for a few minutes every hour while the females fly off to feed themselves.
- Both sexes feed the hatchlings.
- But both sexes of American Robins seem to love sunbathing.
- They will lay out in the sun, stretch their wings out, and ruffle their feathers up.
- Scientists believe this behavior may reduce mites and other parasites that live in the birds’ feathers.
- It’s also possible that it simply feels good.
- Only the birds know for sure.

Scientific Classification
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Kingdom 13693_cd3c45-d0> |
Animalia (animals) 13693_19a4f3-8d> |
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Phylum 13693_75de30-78> |
Chordata (chordates) 13693_e9d3eb-2a> |
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Class 13693_cd8d4c-44> |
Aves (birds) 13693_f39a62-55> |
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Order 13693_0efd29-51> |
Passeriformes (perching birds) 13693_097486-b9> |
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Family 13693_e7dc2f-93> |
Turdidae (thrushes) 13693_e32dbd-a6> |
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Genus 13693_6acb78-e1> |
Turdus 13693_7afe97-0b> |
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Species 13693_dd357d-f8> |
T. migratorius 13693_af132d-fe> |
Scientific Name13693_fbc6c0-26> |
Turdus migratorius 13693_31eec4-43> |

