Randy:

Omnivore birds such as Great-tailed Grackles, American Crows, etc. can leave
puncture wounds.  A year or so ago I watched a Great-tailed Grackle grabbing
a very young House Sparrow or Purple Martin by the wing and then slamming it
onto the street.  It is reasonable that an American Crow or Blue Jay would
use the same sort of tactic to kill a prey item.  

Later!

Steve

Stevan Hawkins
San Antonio TX



-----Original Message-----
From: Minnesota Birds [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Frederickson Randy
Sent: Saturday, March 02, 2013 8:57 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [mou-net] Killer cardinals?

Came across an interesting scene in the neighbors driveway yesterday.  A
male cardinal that had just expired, small feathers scattered in the
immediate area, he had a beak full of breast feathers still in his mouth.
The posture and snow evidence was such as to indicate he was alone and still
somewhat functional when he died.  No broken bones or visible trauma.  My
first thought was he maybe got hit and pinned in the grill of their car and
fell loose when they got home, but the feathers in the beak more strongly
suggest a cardinal battle, which would be ironic since I never saw more than
one pair of cardinals all winter in my neighborhood.  Though I have a
sharpie hunting my feeders the past few days, they always take their whole
victims with them and won't leave dinner behind, and the cardinal did not
looked plucked.
I've certainly seen some nasty bird battles over the years, but never
cardinals and never heard of passerines battling to the death.  If you have
seen such an episode, please share it with me.

Randy Frederickson
Willmar Middle School
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