turdus
{{Short description|Genus of birds}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| name = Turdus
| image = Turdus viscivorus Brych y coed.jpg
| image_caption = Mistle thrush (T. viscivorus), the type species of the genus
| taxon = Turdus
| subdivision_ranks = Species
| subdivision = See text
| type_species = Turdus viscivorus
}}
Turdus is a genus of medium-sized mostly insectivorous or omnivorous birds in the wider thrush family, Turdidae. The genus name Turdus is Latin for 'thrush'.
Most of the species are called thrushes; the term thrush is also used for many other birds in the family Turdidae, as well as for a few species belonging to other families. Some Old World species with fully or largely black plumage are called blackbirds, and one, the ring ouzel, still retains the Old English name ouzel, which, until the 17th century, was also used (as "black ouzel") for the common blackbird; it is cognate with the German name Amsel for the same species.{{cite book | last=Lockwood | first=William Burley | title=The Oxford Book of British Bird Names | publisher=Oxford University Press | publication-place=Oxford | date=1984 | isbn=0-19-214155-4 | page=112}} Some New World species are called robins, the best known of which is the American robin. Two other species have their own distinct names without "thrush", fieldfare and redwing, derived from behavioural characteristics and plumage features, respectively.
The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution, with species in Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.{{cite book | last=Clement | first=Peter | last2=Hathway | first2=Ren | title=Thrushes | publisher=A & C Black | publication-place=London | date=2000-11-30 | isbn=0-7136-3940-7 | page=}} Several species have colonised oceanic islands, and two European species have been introduced by man into Australia and New Zealand.
All the species are uniform in size and structure, with the great majority between 22–28 cm long; the smallest (Vanikoro island thrush) being 17–19 cm, and the largest (great thrush) being 28–33 cm. All have slender, medium-length bills. Plumage is far more variable; the only fully shared character is that the recently fledged juveniles are spotted on the breast and streaked on the back. Adult colours range from the "classical" thrush pattern of a plain brown back and a spotted breast (e.g. mistle thrush, song thrush), through all-brown (e.g. clay-colored thrush, black-billed thrush) or all-black (e.g. common blackbird, glossy-black thrush), pied (e.g. ring ouzel, white-collared blackbird), to orange- to red-breasted, either subtly (e.g. rufous-bellied thrush, grey-backed thrush) or boldly (e.g. American robin, red-throated thrush). Some show sexual dimorphism with the males brighter or more intensely coloured than the often browner females, while in others, the sexes are identical in plumage. All are omnivorous, with a mixed diet of invertebrates, fruit, and small seeds. The temperate northern hemisphere species are migratory to a greater or lesser extent to avoid the harsh freezing winters of northern Eurasia and North America, while the subtropical, tropical, and southern hemisphere species are generally nonmigratory. Many, or most, are noted for their melodious songs. Almost all occur in habitats with trees and shrubs, but many will also use open ground away from trees; some are highly adapted to rocky mountainous habitats, using steep slopes and rocks adeptly in predator avoidance. Many have adapted well to human presence and are common in urban and suburban gardens, while some are shy and avoid human presence, particularly where there is any history of bird hunting.
While some species have been split out of Turdus, the thrushes formerly separated in the genera Cataponera, Cichlherminia, Nesocichla, Platycichla and Psophocichla by various authors have been restored to the present genus in recent years.{{cite web| editor1-last=Gill | editor1-first=Frank | editor1-link=Frank Gill (ornithologist) | editor2-last=Donsker | editor2-first=David | editor3-last=Rasmussen | editor3-first=Pamela | editor3-link=Pamela C. Rasmussen | date=August 2024 | title=Thrushes | work=IOC World Bird List Version 14.2 | url=http://www.worldbirdnames.org/bow/thrushes/ | publisher=International Ornithologists' Union | access-date=25 September 2024 }}
Taxonomy and systematics
The genus Turdus was formally named by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae.{{cite book | last=Linnaeus | first=Carl | author-link=Carl Linnaeus | year=1758 | title= Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis | volume=1| edition=10th | page=168 | publisher=Holmiae:Laurentii Salvii | language=la | url=https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/727075 }} The type species was subsequently designated as the mistle thrush.{{ cite book | editor1-last=Mayr | editor1-first=Ernst | editor1-link=Ernst Mayr | editor2-last=Paynter | editor2-first=Raymond A. Jr | year=1964 | title=Check-list of Birds of the World | volume=10 | publisher=Museum of Comparative Zoology | place=Cambridge, Massachusetts | page=177 | url=https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14486366 }} The name Turdus is the Latin word for a "thrush".{{cite book | last= Jobling | first= James A | year= 2010| title= The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names | url= https://archive.org/details/Helm_Dictionary_of_Scientific_Bird_Names_by_James_A._Jobling | publisher= Christopher Helm | location = London | isbn = 978-1-4081-2501-4 | page = [https://archive.org/details/Helm_Dictionary_of_Scientific_Bird_Names_by_James_A._Jobling/page/n293 293]}}
=Current species=
The genus contains 104 extant species of which two are recently extinct:
class="wikitable sortable" | |||
Image | Common Name | Scientific name | Distribution |
---|---|---|---|
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|Turdus litsitsirupa |Angola, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe | |||
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|Turdus simensis | Ethiopia, Eritrea | |||
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|Turdus mupinensis |China and far northern Vietnam | |||
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|Turdus philomelos |Europe, North Africa and the Middle East | |||
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|Turdus viscivorus |Europe and temperate Asia | |||
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|Turdus pelios |from Senegal and Gambia in the west to South Sudan, Ethiopia and Eritrea south to north-western Zambia and western Angola | |||
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|Turdus xanthorhynchus |Príncipe | |||
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|Turdus olivaceofuscus |São Tomé | |||
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|Turdus abyssinicus |Africa from South Sudan south to northern Mozambique | |||
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|Turdus helleri |Taita Hills in Kenya | |||
File:Turdus roehli.jpg
|Turdus roehli |Tanzania | |||
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|Turdus olivaceus |Tanzania and Zimbabwe in the north to the Cape of Good Hope | |||
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|Turdus libonyana |Angola, Botswana, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe | |||
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|Turdus bewsheri |Comoros Islands | |||
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|Turdus tephronotus |Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, and Tanzania | |||
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|Turdus smithi |South Africa, where it is present in Little Namaqualand, the Karoo and Northern Cape, Free State, Gauteng, Limpopo, Mpumalanga and parts of the North West Province | |||
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|Somali thrush or Somali blackbird |Turdus ludoviciae |Somalia | |||
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|Turdus mandarinus |south, central and east China | |||
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|Turdus iliacus |Europe and Asia, from Iceland south to northernmost Scotland, and east through Scandinavia, the Baltic States, northern Poland and Belarus, and through most of Russia to about 165°E in Chukotka Autonomous Okrug | |||
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|Turdus merula |temperate Eurasia, North Africa, the Canary Islands, and South Asia | |||
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|Turdus menachensis |Middle East | |||
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|Taiwan thrush{{Cite web|title=Species Updates – IOC World Bird List|url=https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/updates/species-updates/|access-date=2021-05-27}} |Turdus niveiceps |Taiwan | |||
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|Turdus boulboul |south-eastern Asia from the Himalayas to northern Vietnam | |||
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|Turdus simillimus |India and Sri Lanka | |||
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|Turdus unicolor |Himalayas, and peninsular India | |||
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|Turdus dissimilis |south-western China | |||
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|Turdus cardis |central China and Japan and northern Laos and Vietnam | |||
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|Turdus hortulorum |north-eastern China and Russia Far East and winters in southern China and northern Vietnam | |||
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|Turdus obscurus |Siberia south to China and Southeast Asia | |||
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|Turdus pallidus |south-east Siberia, north-east China and Korea and may breed in Japan | |||
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|Turdus feae |north-east China and migrating to subtropical or tropical moist montane forest in India, and Indochina | |||
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|Turdus chrysolaus |Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands, Japan, Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, Hainan and the northern Philippines | |||
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|Turdus celaenops |Izu and Ryukyu Islands of Japan | |||
|Mindoro island thrush
|Turdus mindorensis (split from T. poliocephalus) |montane Mindoro (northwest Philippines) | |||
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|Turdus thomassoni (split from T. poliocephalus) |montane Luzon (north Philippines) | |||
|Mindanao island thrush
|Turdus nigrorum (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|Wallacean island thrush
|Turdus schlegelii (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|Christmas island thrush
|Turdus erythropleurus (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
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|Turdus javanicus (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|Moluccan island thrush
|Turdus deningeri (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|Papuan island thrush
|Turdus papuensis (split from T. poliocephalus) |montane New Guinea and Goodenough Island (D'Entrecasteaux Islands) | |||
|Bismarck island thrush
|Turdus heinrothi (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|Bougainville island thrush
|Turdus bougainvillei (split from T. poliocephalus) |montane Bougainville Island (north Solomon Islands) | |||
|Solomons island thrush
|Turdus kulambangrae (split from T. poliocephalus) |montane Kolombangara and Guadalcanal (Solomon Islands) | |||
|Vanikoro island thrush
|Turdus vanikorensis (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
|White-headed island thrush
|Turdus pritzbueri (split from T. poliocephalus) |south Vanuatu | |||
|New Caledonian island thrush
|Turdus xanthopus (split from T. poliocephalus) |New Caledonia and satellites | |||
| † Tasman Sea island thrush
|Turdus poliocephalus |Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island (east of Australia) (extinct) | |||
|Samoan island thrush
|Turdus samoensis (split from T. poliocephalus) | |||
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|Turdus ruficeps (split from T. poliocephalus) |Fiji | |||
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|Turdus maximus |Himalayas from northern Pakistan to south-eastern Tibet | |||
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|Turdus kessleri |central China | |||
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|Turdus pilaris |Norway, Sweden, Finland, Belgium, Eastern France, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland and Siberia as far east as Transbaikal, the Aldan River, the Tian Shan Mountains in North West China, Anatolia, Israel, Iran and Northwest India, and occasionally north-east India. It is a vagrant to Iceland, Greenland, Spitsbergen, the Canary Islands, the Balearic Islands, Madeira, Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, Malta and Cyprus. It is a very rare breeder in the British Isles, but winters in large numbers in the United Kingdom, Southern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. | |||
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|Turdus torquatus |western and central Europe and also in the Caucasus and in the Scandinavian mountains | |||
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|Turdus atrogularis |east of Europe to Western Siberia and north-west Mongolia | |||
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|Turdus ruficollis |Asia | |||
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|Turdus eunomus |south to south-east Asia, principally in China and neighbouring countries | |||
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|Turdus naumanni |South Asia to Southeast Asia | |||
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|Turdus rubrocanus |western Himalayas and central to south-western China; it winters in Eastern Himalaya and northern Southeast Asia | |||
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|Turdus albocinctus |Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Myanmar, Nepal and Pakistan | |||
File:Sulawesi Thrush - Sulawesi MG 5140 (17234338791).jpg
|Turdus turdoides |Sulawesi Island in Indonesia | |||
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|Turdus migratorius |North America, from Alaska and Canada southward to northern Florida and Mexico | |||
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|Turdus infuscatus |El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico | |||
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|Turdus rufitorques |Central America, south of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, occurring in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Chiapas state in Mexico | |||
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|Turdus nigrescens |Costa Rica and western Panama | |||
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|Turdus plumbeus |The Bahamas, Cayman Brac, Cuba, Dominica, Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti), Puerto Rico | |||
|Grand Cayman thrush
|†Turdus ravidus |Grand Cayman (extinct since 1938) | |||
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|Turdus aurantius |Jamaica | |||
File:Turdus lherminieri of Guadeloupe.jpg
|Turdus lherminieri |Dominica, Guadeloupe, Montserrat, and Saint Lucia | |||
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|Turdus plebejus |southern Mexico to western Panama | |||
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|Turdus leucops |Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela | |||
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|Turdus jamaicensis |Jamaica | |||
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|Turdus swalesi |Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti) | |||
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|Turdus fulviventris |western Venezuela, western Colombia, Ecuador, northern Peru and north-western Bolivia | |||
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|Turdus reevei |Ecuador and Peru | |||
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|Turdus chiguanco |Ecuador and the Altiplano | |||
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|Turdus nigriceps |north-west Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru | |||
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|Turdus serranus |northern Venezuela to north-western Argentina | |||
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|Turdus olivater |Venezuela and Colombia | |||
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|Turdus fuscater |Andes in western and northern Venezuela as far as Lara and Trujillo, the Andes of Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and finally, northwest Bolivia | |||
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|Turdus falcklandii |south Argentina and south and central Chile | |||
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|Turdus lawrencii |Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela | |||
|Pantepui thrush
|Turdus murinus |foothills of south Venezuela and Guyana | |||
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|Turdus subalaris |north-east Argentina, eastern Paraguay and southern Brazil | |||
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|Turdus amaurochalinus |central and eastern South America | |||
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|Turdus eremita |British overseas territories of the isolated Tristan da Cunha archipelago | |||
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|Turdus maranonicus |southern Ecuador and northern Peru | |||
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|Turdus ignobilis |western Amazonia and on the Guianan Shield, occurring in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela, and Bolivia | |||
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|Turdus arthuri |lowlands of south-eastern Venezuela, Guyana and Suriname, east Colombia and west-central Amazonian Brazil | |||
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|Turdus flavipes |northern Colombia, Venezuela, far northern Brazil, Trinidad, and Tobago, as well as parts of the Pakaraima Mountains in western Guyana, eastern Brazil, eastern Paraguay, and far northeastern Argentina | |||
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|Turdus assimilis |Central America | |||
|Dagua thrush
|Turdus daguae |Panama to north-western Ecuador | |||
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|Turdus albicollis |eastern Brazil, far northern Uruguay, eastern Paraguay and far north-eastern Argentina | |||
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|Turdus rufopalliatus |south-eastern Sonora to the south-eastern corner of Oaxaca along the coast and in the Río Balsas drainage, with isolated populations in Mexico City and Oaxaca City | |||
File:Turdus obsoletus.jpg
|Turdus obsoletus |Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Panama, and Peru | |||
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|Turdus leucomelas |eastern and northern South America | |||
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|Turdus fumigatus |South America | |||
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|Turdus hauxwelli |Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela | |||
120px | Rufous-bellied thrush | Turdus rufiventris | southeast Brazil from Maranhão south to Rio Grande do Sul states, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay and northern regions of Argentina |
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|Turdus grayi |South Texas (where it is rapidly expanding its range) to northern Colombia | |||
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|Turdus nudigenis |South America from Colombia and Venezuela south and east to northern Brazil, and in Trinidad and Tobago | |||
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|Turdus maculirostris |western Ecuador and far north-western Peru | |||
File:Turdus sanchezorum.jpg | Várzea thrush | Turdus sanchezorum | western Amazon |
|Unicolored thrush
|Turdus haplochrous |Bolivia |
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- {{ cite journal | last1=Voelker | first1=G. | last2=Rohwer | first2=S. | last3=Bowie | first3=R.C.K. | last4=Outlaw | first4=D.C. | year=2007 | title=Molecular systematics of a speciose, cosmopolitan songbird genus: defining the limits of, and relationships among, the Turdus thrushes | journal=Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | volume=42 | issue=2 | pages=422–434 | doi=10.1016/j.ympev.2006.07.016 | pmid=16971142| bibcode=2007MolPE..42..422V }}
External links
{{Commons category|Turdus}}
- [http://ibc.lynxeds.com/family/thrushes-turdidae Videos, photos and sounds] - The Internet Bird Collection
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