NORTHERN MOCKINGBIRD
The 'Northern Mockingbird', '''Mimus polyglottos''', is the only mockingbird commonly found in North America.
The Northern Mockingbird breeds in southeastern Canada, the United States, northern Mexico, the Bahamas, Cayman Islands and the Greater Antilles. It is replaced further south by its closest living relative, the Tropical Mockingbird ''Mimus gilvus''. The endangered Socorro Mockingbird is, contrary to previous opinion, also closely related.[1][2]
This bird is mainly a permanent resident, but northern birds may move south during harsh weather. This species has occurred in Europe as an extreme rarity.
| Contents |
| Ecology |
| Song and calls |
| Mockingbird in US culture |
| References |
| External links |
Ecology
These birds forage on the ground or in vegetation; they also fly down from a perch to capture food. They mainly eat insects, berries and seeds. While foraging they frequently spread their wings in a peculiar two-step motion to display the white patches. There lacks consensus among ornithologists over whether this behavior is purely a territorial display, or whether the flashing white patches startles insects into giving up their cover.
The Northern Mockingbird builds a twig nest in a dense shrub or tree. It aggressively defends this nest and the surrounding area against other birds and animals, including humans. When a predator is persistent, Mockingbirds from neighboring territories, summoned by a distinct call, may join the attack. Other birds may gather to watch as the Mockingbirds harass the intruder.
Mockingbirds' willingness to nest near houses, loud and frequent songs, and territorial defense often annoy people. John van der Linden, author of the Eastern Birding Central FAQ, reports 25 to 50 percent of the e-mail questions he receives are concerned with how to deal with annoying mockingbirds.
Mockingbirds have a strong preference for certain trees such as maple, sweetgum, and sycamore. They generally avoid pine trees after the other trees have grown their leaves. Also, they have a particular preference for high places, such as the topmost branches of trees. Mockingbirds are often found in urban and suburban areas, where they perch on telephone poles, streetlights, or high points on buildings. While singing on a high perch they will often bolt several feet into the air in a looping motion, with wings outstretched to display their white underside, then land back on the perch without breaking a note. This action serves as a territorial display.
Song and calls
Although many species of bird imitate other birds, the Northern Mockingbird is the best known in North America for doing so. It not only imitates birds but also other animals and mechanical sounds such as car alarms. As convincing as these imitations are to humans, they often fail to convince other birds, such as the Florida Scrub-Jay.
The Northern Mockingbird's mimicry is likely to serve as a tool for increasing the size of its repertoire and thus its ability to attract females. The Mockingbird is limited to imitating short units of sound, which it repeats several times before moving on to a new sound. As a result, the Mockingbird sounds much better (to a human ear) imitating some species than others. Species with repetitive songs, such as the Carolina Wren are effectively copied, but species with long, complex songs, such as the Song Sparrow, cannot be effectively imitated by the Mockingbird.
The Northern Mockingbird, in addition to being a good mimic, is also one of the loudest and most constantly vocal of birds. It often sings through the night, especially unmated males, or when the moon is full. It sings year-round except sometimes for the late-summer moulting season. Individual males have repertoires of 50 to 200 songs; females sing as well, but more quietly and less often than males. Mockingbirds usually sing the loudest in the twilight of the early morning when the sun is on the horizon.
In addition to its well-known song, the Northern Mockingbird utilizes a variety of calls to communicate specific information. As with its song, these calls are among some of the louder sounds produced by birds of its size. Mockingbirds make a harsh, raspy noise when chasing other birds out of their territory. A similar but distinct call is used when defending against predators like a hawk or falcon. Other calls include a wheezing noise, a "chuck" note, and a very piercing series of notes "high low" repeated twice.
Mockingbird in US culture
★ This is the state bird of Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Texas, all southern states.
★ The "Mockingbird" is celebrated in a song of the same name by Barclay James Harvest, and in the title and central metaphor of the novel ''To Kill a Mockingbird'', by Harper Lee. In said novel, mockingbirds are portrayed as innocent and generous, and one of the major characters (Atticus) says that it is a sin to kill a mockingbird.
★ The traditional American lullaby "Mockingbird" has been recorded in numerous musical styles. The lyrics refer to the fact that Northern Mockingbirds were once popular as pets and begin:
:''Hush little baby, don't say a word,''
:''Mama's gonna buy you a mockingbird.''
:''And if that mockingbird don't sing,''
:''Mama's gonna buy you a diamond ring.''
★ Other songs: ''Mockin' Bird Hill'', ''Listen to the Mockingbird''
★ ''To Mock a Mockingbird'' is a book of logic puzzles by Raymond Smullyan based on combinatory logic.
★ The mascot of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga since 1996 is an anthropomorphized mockingbird, or "Moc", named Scrappy
★ In the PBS series Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, King Friday XIII made a pet of a wooden bird on a stick, who he called ''Mimus polyglottos''. This stick-bird moved up and down when it spoke to King Friday, but it spoke in musical chimes that only the members of the show could understand. King Friday would often sing a detailed song to his bird, with the repeated lyrics "''Mimus polyglottos'' is my pet.." and ending with "Have you met my pet yet?"
★ In American Poet, Walt Whitman's, poem ''Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking'', the second line reads " Out of the mocking-bird's throat, the musical shuttle,".
★ President Thomas Jefferson had a pet mockingbird named Dick.[1] [2]
References
1. Molecular systematics and biogeography of Antillean thrashers, tremblers, and mockingbirds (Aves: Mimidae), , Jeffrey S., Hunt, Auk, 2001
2. Systematic position of the Socorro mockingbird ''Mimodes graysoni'', , Brian R., Barber, Journal of Avian Biology, 2004
★ Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
External links
★ Northern Mockingbird from the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology
★ Northern Mockingbird videos on the Internet Bird Collection
★ Northern Mockingbird Information - South Dakota Birds and Birding
★ Northern Mockingbird - ''Mimus polyglottos'' - USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
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