European robin
The European robin (Erithacus rubecula) File:Loudspeaker.png song (info • help) is a small bird found in many parts of Europe. In English, this bird is usually just called a robin. In Britain, it is the most popular bird.[1]
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| Erithacus rubecula (Linnaeus, 1758)
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The robin is an insectivore: it eats insects.[2] It is a member of the order Passerine which makes it a perching bird. It has an orange-red breast and face, olive-brown wings and back, a white to light-brown belly. You can sometimes see a blue-grey fringe around the bottom part of the robin's red breast patch. European robins have brown legs and their tail is bluntly square. They have large, black eyes and a small black bill.
Some migrate, and some are resident. In the breeding season the red chest of the male gets a bit redder, and they are very territorial. No other male robin is allowed near, and they even fight other birds that come too close. The American and Australian robins are not closely related to this, the original bird to be named ‘robin’.
European Robin Media
European robin (Erithacus rubecula) juvenile, Great Dixter, Sussex
- Erithacus rubecula -Canary Islands, Spain -adult and juvenile-8.jpg
Adult and juvenile Gran Canaria robins
- European Robin (Erithacus rubecula) with mealworm.jpeg
A male European Robin (Erithacus rubecula) with a mealworm. This robin is feeding his second brood of the season.
European robin feeding on snowy ground
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European Robin (Erithacus rubecula) feeding. Location: South Norfolk, East Anglia, UK
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Very weak radio-frequency interference prevents migratory robins from orienting correctly to the Earth's magnetic field. Since this would not interfere with an iron compass, the experiments imply that the birds use a radical-pair mechanism.
Sources
- ↑ BBC News. Robin tops poll to find UK's 'national bird'
- ↑ (in German) Pätzold R (1995). Das Rotkehlchen Erithacus rubecula. Neue Brehm-Bücherei. Magdeburg/Heidelberg: Westarp Wissenschaften/Spektrum. ISBN 3-89432-423-6.