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We associate robins with spring, which is when this photo was taken. But there are reasons you’ll see them the rest of the year, too. (John Kelly/The Washington Post) Perspective by John Kelly ...
American robins (Turdus migratorius) set off on their migrations 12 days earlier than they did in 1994 due to warmer, dryer winters, say scientists. Ecologists writing in Environmental Research ...
American robins eat staghorn sumac seeds. They like the same sorts of habitats we do: lots of grass and a few trees and shrubs. The expansion of the suburban landscape has increased their numbers.
The arrival of robins is a sure sign that spring is on its way in Michigan, right? Yes and no. It's a little complicated, according to Andrew Farnsworth, a visiting scientist at the Cornell Lab of ...
But despite the familiar songbird’s reputation for being the first bird to return each spring, most robins are year-round residents of the Inland Northwest. Even if you didn’t see them this ...
American robins are common songbirds that are easily recognizable by their orange breasts. Robins are skilled hunters that use their keen eyesight and hearing to locate earthworms on the ground.
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