Pictures and information on Curvebilled Thrasher


NW Bird Blog Curvebilled Thrasher

Distribution and contact zone: Range of two populations of Curve-billed Thrasher. Sonoran population shown in red, Chihuahuan in blue, and area of intergradation in green. Red markers show vagrant records of Sonoran. Records north and east of mapped range (not shown; to Manitoba, Minnesota, Wisconsin, etc.) may be all Chihuahuan.


Curved Billed Thrasher Bird photo, My best friend, My photos

The curve-billed thrasher ( Toxostoma curvirostre) is a medium-sized mimid native to most of Mexico and to the deserts of southwestern United States. It is a non-migratory species, and throughout most of its range it is the most common desert thrasher. [2]


CurveBilled Thrasher National Geographic

About the Curve-Billed Thrasher The Curve-billed Thrasher is native to the southwestern United States and New Mexico and is a part of the Mimidae family of birds, which includes other species such as mockingbirds and catbirds. Their menacing, black bill is used to search for insects and seeds, fruits, berries, and cactus flowers.


Curvebilled Thrasher Tucson, Arizona. Photos by Ron Niebrugge

Curve-billed thrasher In lowlands of the Southwest, from Arizona to Texas, one of the most familiar bird voices sings a loud whit-wheet! —the call of the curve-billed thrasher. A pale gray-brown bird without strong markings, it's best known by its stout, curved black bill and its staring orange eyes.


Unique Characteristics of the CurveBilled Thrasher PetHelpful

Strong legs and a long, decurved bill give Curve-billed Thrashers the perfect tools for hunting insects in the punishing deserts, canyons, and brushlands that are its home. That long bill also keeps long-legged insect prey at a safe distance and comes in handy for foraging and nesting among spiny plants, especially cacti.


Curvebilled Thrasher Photograph by Jeff Goulden

The Curve-billed Thrasher habitat is in the arid lands, where it survives among the sparse vegetation and its hot temperatures. This mostly light-grey coloured bird can easily be overlooked and not seen. It is remarkable to see this thrasher singing and perched on a cactus, impervious to its thorns and so well adapted to its environment.


Curvebilled Thrasher Songs and Calls Larkwire

The Curve-billed Thrasher is a common resident of semi-open areas dominated by thorny shrubs, mesquite, cactus and yucca. Densities of 90 birds per 100 ha (247 acres) and 76 nests in 99 ha have been recorded in southern Texas (Fischer 1980, 1981). Curve-bills adapt well to humans and often forage in gardens, visit feeders, and nest near rural.


Curve Billed Thrasher in Palo Verde Tree Photograph by Jackie Follett

Strong legs and a long, decurved bill give Curve-billed Thrashers the perfect tools for hunting insects in the punishing deserts, canyons, and brushlands that are its home. That long bill also keeps long-legged insect prey at a safe distance and comes in handy for foraging and nesting among spiny plants, especially cacti.


NW Bird Blog Curvebilled Thrasher

As their name suggests, they have characteristically decurved bills. Interestingly, their bills are not the most curved out of all the members of the Thrasher family. W.n Swainson, the naturalist who first published information about the species, coined their name before the existence of other Thrashers with curved bills were popularly known.


Walking Arizona Curvebilled Thrasher

Strong legs and a long, decurved bill give Curve-billed Thrashers the perfect tools for hunting insects in the punishing deserts, canyons, and brushlands that are its home. That long bill also keeps long-legged insect prey at a safe distance and comes in handy for foraging and nesting among spiny plants, especially cacti.


Pictures and information on Curvebilled Thrasher

The curve-billed thrasher, which forages on the ground beneath shrubs and cacti, is about a foot in length and generally grayish brown in color. It has robust legs, feet and bill - typical of ground-foraging birds - which it uses to shuffle through plant litter and dig into the soil in its search for seeds and insects.


Pictures and information on Curvebilled Thrasher

The curve-billed thrasher ( Toxostoma curvirostre ) is a medium-sized mimid native to most of Mexico and to the deserts of southwestern United States. It is a non-migratory species, and throughout most of its range it is the most common desert thrasher. Several subspecies have been classified since 1827, though there is no consensus on the number.


Curvebilled Thrasher Bird Watching Academy

Curve-billed Thrasher: English (United States) Curve-billed Thrasher: French: Moqueur à bec courbe: French (France) Moqueur à bec courbe: German: Krummschnabel-Spottdrossel: Icelandic: Bogþrasi: Japanese:


Curvebilled Thrasher Passerine Bird Call

Curve-billed Thrasher - eBird Long-tailed with decurved bill and fairly faint round spots on breast and belly. Grayish-brown overall with paler throat and orangey undertail. Eye color varies from yellow to orange. Lurks around cactus and desert shrubs. Most common thrasher in suburban yards and parks in the southwest U.S. and Mexico.


Curvebilled Thrasher eBird

Curve-billed Thrasher Toxostoma curvirostre Length: 11 in. (28 cm ) A common garden bird in desert cities and suburbs, this thrasher also inhabits remote and dry desert areas. It tosses leaves and dry vegetation on the ground far to the side with its long, sickle-shaped bill and uncovers the spiders, snails, insects it likes to eat.


Curvebilled thrasher, Toxostoma curvirostre photo, Amado, Arizona

Strong legs and a long, decurved bill give Curve-billed Thrashers the perfect tools for hunting insects in the punishing deserts, canyons, and brushlands that are its home. That long bill also keeps long-legged insect prey at a safe distance and comes in handy for foraging and nesting among spiny plants, especially cacti.

Scroll to Top