10 Incredible Brown Birds

19Oct,2024

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BROWN THRASHER This songbird, known for its loud, repetitive calls, prefers hiding in dense brush and dense brush. Attracting them to your backyard with berry bushes and leaf litter.

WOOD THRUSH American birders can observe this migratory thrush in eastern US during spring and summer, singing a clear flute-like song in the forest with a brown back and speckled chest.

RED-TAILED HAWK Red-tailed hawks, dark ruddy-brown, predatory raptors in the US and Canada, eat rodents and small birds, perch on power lines and trees.

GREAT HORNED OWL The Great Horned Owl, found in North America and South America, is a versatile bird with mottled brown feathers that blend with tree bark and two tufts of feathers that give them a horned appearance.

EASTERN WHIP-POOR-WILL The brown bird, known for its summer sound and camouflage, is difficult to find in the eastern US due to its nightly song and limited activity between dusk and dawn.

SONG SPARROW North American shrub-dwelling sparrows, known for their insect-eating habits, perch in bushes and sing during breeding season. They can occasionally visit backyard feeders and enjoy bird baths.

HOUSE SPARROW House Sparrows, adapted to human disturbance, can cause nuisances in outdoor cafes and beaches. Not native to the US, they regularly visit feeders for seeds and occasionally kick native birds out of bird houses.

AMERICAN TREE SPARROW American Tree Sparrows, active songbirds in the US, spend spring and summer in northern Canada and Alaska. They feed on sunflower seeds and may visit feeders.

VEERY The Veery, a plump cinnamon-brown bird, is found in humid forests near beaver habitats in the northern US and southern Canada during spring and summer. They primarily eat insects and berries, not feeders.

OVENBIRD Ovenbirds, despite their warm brown plumage, make loud calls of "tea-cher, tea-cher, tea-cher" as they forage for insects on the forest floor.