home
To use this site, you need
Adobe Flash Player
Screen: 1024 x 768
Read Terms of Service
To have fun!
games social studies science language site map parent about premium
Professor Nussbaum - Hermit Thrush
Navigation
Birds Main
Interactive Birds Book
Bird Profiles
Bird Anatomy
Bird Songs
State Birds
Bird Activities
Ivory-billed Woodpecker
Palemale and Lola
Audubon Gallery
Vultures and Condors
Penguins
Arctic Birds
Shore Birds
Grasslands Birds
Birds of the Swamp/Marsh
Lake Birds
Birds of the Eastern Deciduous Forest
Winter Birds
Birds of the Boreal Forest
Bird Coloring
Bird Videos

Photo Credit - Powder Mil Nature Reserve

Range Map | Song

Description: The Hermit Thrush, widely regarded as nature's finest songster, measures about seven inches in length. It is brown above and white below with soft black spots on its throat and breast. Its tail is more reddish-brown. It has long pink legs and a faint white eye ring. Males and females are similar. It is the only member of the thrush family that winters in the United States.

Diet: The Hermit Thrush forages on the forest floor for insects. In the winter, it eats both insects and berries. It may even come to feeders.

Range: The wide-ranging Hermit Thrush breeds from western Alaska south throughout the mountainous regions of the west, northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan, and throughout New England and the Appalachian Mountain regions of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia. The Hermit Thrush may be found throughout the continental United States during migration and in the winter. It winters as far south as central America.

Habitat: The ground-dwelling Hermit Thrush prefers dense coniferous or mixed forests, hence the name "Hermit"

Nesting: Females lay 2-5 eggs and incubate them for about two weeks. Nests are usually on the ground or in a small tree. The Hermit Thrush is more likely to nest in trees in the western portion of their range.

Status: The Hermit Thrush is common.

 

About | Contact | Site Map | Parents & Teachers | Mr. Nussbaum | Advertising | Software & Purchases | Search | Professor N. Gazette | Newsletter | Search
Copyright Greg Nussbaum 2009-2015. All Rights Reserved