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Description:
Such is the strength
of association between the Starling and Man that this species
is unmistakeable. While the head and body size of this species
is close to that of a Blackbird, the overall appearance is
of a more rakish, bustling bird, often noisy and flighty.
At distance, the adults appear black, but on closer viewing
the iridescent nature of the plumage becomes evident. Adults
in breeding plumage have a yellow bill. This is dark in the
winter, a time when the plumage is less iridescent but marked
with white spots. Young Starlings are dull brown in colour,
often with a pale throat.
It is possible
to tell the sex of two adults of a breeding pair of Starlings.
The male does have much more glossy plumage but an even more
obvious feature is that from mid-February onwards, British
and Irish breeding male Starlings will have a blue blush at
the base of their bill and in females this is pink. These
differences are not obvious on continental birds before they
migrate but the colour comes to their bills when they arrive
on the breeding grounds.
Ecology & Behaviour:
The Starlings
that visit your garden during the winter are not just your
local birds. Their numbers are supplemented by millions from
further east in Europe where the winters get too hard for
them to remain. These birds start to reach us in late September
and keep coming through the whole of October and into November.
One would expect these continental migrants to be shy of Man
but they are well-represented in the large roosts that occur
in urban areas. The return to the Continent starts at the
beginning of March and continues through to mid-April, by
which time our own birds may already be sitting on eggs.
Starlings are
not doing very well at the moment. We think that the birds
may have declined by over half over the last 25 years. This
seems to have come about because there is not the right sort
of food for the nestlings. The survival of full-grown birds
is as good as before and the breeding adults may lay as many
eggs as they used to.
Quite a few garden
birdwatchers loathe Starlings because of the way they seem
to descend on food in large numbers and eat everything in
a few minutes. This attitude is unfair. Starlings are very
gregarious birds. So feeding quickly in flocks is, after all,
what they have evolved to do. However, it is easy to see this
behaviour as greed, and the concerned garden bird feeder,
who has a limited budget, may have to ration the amount of
food the Starlings can get. The easiest way to do this is
to feed the small birds within an enclose which excludes the
Starlings.
Garden BirdWatch links
A 'Focus On' article on the Starling
appeared in issue 6 of the Bird
Table magazine. Garden BirdWatch participants can download
a copy of this article from the participant only pages.
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