Caleb et al,
I agree with your general statement about the seasonal occurrence of shrikes in 
CO, but only for the northern plains.  I have spent four weeks in southeastern 
CO (Prowers, Bent, Baca, Las Animas) since early December and my tally is as 
follows: loggerhead shrike 6, northern shrike 0.  That is not so say northern 
shrikes do not occur down there in winter, they do.  They were tallied on the 
John Martin Reservoir CBC and have been seen in small numbers by others this 
winter.  I guess my point is it depends where you are and when.  Birds that 
usually winter south of Colorado are becoming more common in winter as the 
climate changes.  What is true for the winter of 2020-21 might not be so true 
for winter 2030-31.  I have been going to southeastern Colorado in all seasons 
for the last 47 years and would say south of the Arkansas River and east of 
I-25, a shrike seen in winter down there has much more than a 50% chance of 
being a loggerhead.  Ditto for the Grand Junction area.  On the Pawnee 
Grasslands, different story.  A few loggerheads have occurred there in winter 
over the years, and will be increasingly more likely in coming years (IMO), but 
the overwhelming odds at present favor northern.

And I agree Brian's photo shows a northern, the more expected species for its 
location and date.  Now the question is, what was it eating?  Is it preying on 
birds at feeders, small rodents, wintering nymph grasshoppers, all of the 
above, what?  Is it utilizing the technique of impaling, jamming big prey into 
branch crotches, or eating its prey without temporary storage altogether?

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins

________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Caleb A 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, January 23, 2021 6:59 PM
To: Colorado Birds <[email protected]>
Subject: [cobirds] Re: Identification for these adorable birds

Hi Brian!

The first photo looks to be a female American Goldfinch. Note that it's pale 
yellow-ish, has a small, dark "finch" bill, the clean, pale underparts, and the 
"tipped" tail with black and white. The second photo is a Northern Shrike. We 
get two shrike species in Colorado: Northern and Loggerhead Shrike. The one you 
photographed is a Northern Shrike. Note that the black line going through its 
eye gets very thin. Its sister shrike species would have a thicker "mask." 
Generally speaking, if you see a shrike in the winter, it's a Northern Shrike, 
and if you see a shrike in the summer, it's a Loggerhead Shrike. (During 
migratory seasons, you have to watch out for the explicit marks, because both 
species are present!)

Hope this helps you :)

The birds are happy, and so am I
~Caleb Alons, Larimer County

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