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Ornithologists officially call this practice “brood parasitism”. We’ve noted before the trait of the notorious Brown-Headed Cowbird to lay its eggs in the nests of other songbirds. A Yellowthroat was also once found in the stomach of a largemouth bass. FYI, the Shrikes like to hang their captured prey, such a frogs, small rodents and other small birds, on barbed wire fences.
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Sometimes the Yellowthroat falls prey to interesting predators like the Loggerhead Shrike, which is both a songbird and a small fierce predator with nicknames like “the butcher bird” and “the executioner”. The Yellowthroat is considered a “warbler”, and if you are not familiar with bird terminology, warblers are small, active insect eaters found in gardens, woodlands, and marshes.Īpparently the Yellowthroat has a special place in bird history, it was one of the first bird species to be catalogued from the New World, when a specimen from Maryland was described by Linneaeus in 1766. The Cornell Lab describes it like this: “A broad black mask lends a touch of highwayman’s mystique to the male Common Yellowthroat.” In Ms Wolf’s photo of a juvenile one can barely see the faint signs of those dark “mask” feathers beginning to develop around its eyes. In the Midwest the adult Yellowthroat is called the “Yellow Bandit”, because of its Lone Ranger style black mask around its eyes. Today, Brooklyn Bird Watch features a Heather Wolf photo of a male juvenile Common Yellowthroat.