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red devil Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> TT describes a Jay, just wondering what the

> difference is between a Eurasian and British

> Jay...


There isn't one :-) There's now an internationally agreed standardisation of English-language names for birds. There are other jay species around the world, so ours is the Eurasian one.


Some of these international names are quite different from our ordinary ones: Pied Avocet, Northern Lapwing, Mew Gull (Common Gull), Common Murre (Guillemot) etc, but I just stick with our good old vernacular names. If you want to be really old English, you can call a Wheatear a 'White-arse', which is what it was called before the prudish Victorians cleaned it up :-)

TillieTrotter Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Listen, I'm not Bill Odie (sp), I saw a pair in my

> garden a few years back looked it up in my Bird

> Encylopedia and they turned out to be Eurasian

> Jays:-$


As I said, that's just the posh ornithological name for a regular old jay. And the potential confusion is why most ornithologists only use the Latin names, which in the case of the (Eurasian) Jay is Garrulus glandarius, which sounds very painful...

I saw a crow attack and kill a pigeon on the pavement the other day. I have never seen this before. The pigeon was disorientated as it had nearly been run over by a car. There was a brief struggle but the crow pinned the pigeon down and killed and started to eat it. Is this behaviour typical of crows?
but never seen a crow eat a pigeon Crows (well carrion crows) eat dead meat - hence their name - I suppose if they have been the cause of that meat being dead they wouldn't not eat it (they don't, obviously, operate on our rules about road-kill). A crow which despatched and ate a pigeon already injured comes as no surprise, but crows don't normally hunt large birds themselves. I have often seen crows picking at the carcases of foxes etc. by the wayside - obviously they haven't killed these, although I doubt if they are too picky about waiting for the fox to be declared dead before tucking in.

Beating it up is my guess,

because when they teach them to fly they stop feeding the youngsters and perch a couple of yards away with a tasty morsel in their beak,

whilst calling them constantly.

Hunger and greed takes over from the fear of flying then suddenly they are all off together.

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