Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
May I start this thread with, I know nothing about birds.
27 Answers
I live in a semi rural area. Houses and road at the front, fields at the back. We see sparrows, starlings, green finch, gold finch, robins and blackbirds. Many more but I don't know their names. This year the only birds are magpies. I know they are predatory birds. Have they eaten, frighten the other birds away, or is there another explanation. Every year we have had sparrows and blackbirds nesting, but not this year.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I live out in the country too Jeza and over the30+ years We've been here there
has been a sad decline. Don't see as many sparrows. Haven't seen a song thrush or any finches for several years. The starlings are the most prolific. We too have more magpies, but they are only partly to blame for the songbirds
decline. there is the neighbourhood cat and disease also. There are also more
wood pigeons and collared doves and there is only so much food about. Mrs B has just informed me that there are more wood pigeons in town now along with the feral pigeons.
has been a sad decline. Don't see as many sparrows. Haven't seen a song thrush or any finches for several years. The starlings are the most prolific. We too have more magpies, but they are only partly to blame for the songbirds
decline. there is the neighbourhood cat and disease also. There are also more
wood pigeons and collared doves and there is only so much food about. Mrs B has just informed me that there are more wood pigeons in town now along with the feral pigeons.
Magpies don't spend their entire lives killing songbirds. They mostly eat insects. Blackbirds, robins, nightingales, blue tits and starlings are all 'predatory' too. Last year around us jays were the most common bird to be seen, this year hardly any. All wild creatures have good years and bad years in complicated intermeshing cycles. You houldn't blame magpies, it is too simplistic to do so.
Don't waste your time grieving over magpies; they are evil little sods.
I once came home to find an injured magpie lying on my drive, surrounded by two others. At first glance I thought that they were trying to help their injured friend, but on closer examination I realised that they were pecking it to death.
I once came home to find an injured magpie lying on my drive, surrounded by two others. At first glance I thought that they were trying to help their injured friend, but on closer examination I realised that they were pecking it to death.
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