Tricolored Blackbird

Agelaius tricolor Audubon

 

 

 

Field Guide IDs:
NG-436; G-298; AW-pl 615; AM(III)-292


Nest
Location
Nest
Type
Eggs &
Mating System
Dev. &
Parental Care
Primary &
2ndary Diet
..
Foraging
Strategy
REEDS
F
I: 11-13 DAYS
ALTRICIAL
SHRUB
0.5- 5 feet
(To 12 feet)
F
3-4
(2-6)
POLYGYN
F: 11-14 DAYS
F-M
SEEDS
SNAILS
FOLIAGE
.....GLEAN

BREEDING:

Freshwater marshes, croplands. 2 broods.

DISPLAYS:

Similar to Red-winged Blackbird, but lacks flight display.

NEST:

Near or over water, also in agricultural crops. Woven of sedges, grass, forbs, lined with fine grass. Built in 4 days.

EGGS:

Pale green, marked with browns, black. 1.1" (28 mm).

DIET:

Includes clams; grass and forb seeds, grain. Proportion of seeds and grain much higher in nonbreeding season. Young fed 90% insects, snails, clams.

CONSERVATION:

Winters in CA breeding range and adjacent agricultural areas, s to nw Mexico. Lives in enormous flocks that occ damage grain crops, esp in fields near large breeding colonies. Control measures usu entail baiting fields with poisoned grain.

NOTES:

Highly gregarious in all seasons. Colonies formerly numbered up to 200,000+ nests, now to 20,000, still the highest nest density of any marsh-nesting blackbird. Feeds in flocks even when breeding.

STANFORD. NOTES:

ESSAYS:

Variation in Clutch Sizes; Polygyny; Badges; Coloniality; Sibling Species.

REFERENCES:

Orians, 1985; Orians and Christman, 1968; Payne, 1969; Skorupa et al., 1980.

Except for Stanford Notes, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988).