Crows and ravens may look similar, but they have distinct differences. Ravens are larger with chunkier beaks, longer shaggy feathers on their necks, deeper croaks, and more acrobatic flight patterns.
Crows and ravens may look similar, but they have distinct differences. Ravens are larger with chunkier beaks, longer shaggy feathers on their necks, deeper croaks, and more acrobatic flight patterns.
I find it fascinating to think about the heat given off by thousands of crows in trees. We’ve probably all seen the shots from nature documentaries of emperor penguins huddled together for warmth, and ...
I’ve mentioned before I helped with the hawk counts at Bake Oven Knob beginning in 1975. A few years later, during a November flight of red-tailed hawks another spotter spied a raven in the group.
The last member of the corvid family found in East Lothian is the jay. Predominantly a woodland bird, it is shy and rarely seen, but can be easily identified by its pinkish brown body and the bright ...
Can a crow—or any bird—make decisions of this sort? Researchers studying crows, ravens, and other corvids (the family of songbirds that includes crows, jays, rooks, magpies, and others ...