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Quogue Wildlife Refuge

Quogue Wildlife Refuge

Trail Update:

You may encounter periodic trail closures due to the impact of the Southern Pine Beetle at the Refuge.

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  • About
    • The Refuge
    • Board of Directors
    • Meet the Staff
    • QWR History
    • Jobs, Internships, & Volunteer Opportunities
  • Plan Your Visit
    • Hours & Directions
    • Nature Center & Trails
    • Our Resident Animals
    • Butterfly Garden & Greenhouse
    • Fairy Dell Boardwalk
  • Events
    • Event Calendar
    • Weddings & Private Events
    • 18th Annual Wild Night for Wildlife
  • Education
    • Educational Programs
    • Summer Camps
    • Green Birthdays & Private Experiences
    • Go Native for Wildlife
    • QWR Nature Videos
  • Support our Work
    • Investing in the Future
    • Annual Appeal
    • Memberships & Donations
    • Memorial & Honorary Donations
    • Planned Giving
    • Adopt an Animal
    • Bricks, Benches & Bee Hives
    • Our Wish List Registry
  • QWR News
  • Resources
    • Wildlife Resources
    • Photo/Facility Use
    • Sam the Bald Eagle

Creature Feature: Wood Thrush (Hylocichla mustelina)

September 5, 2021

The wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina) is a songbird that is slightly smaller than the well-known robin, with rich reddish-brown feathers and a spotted belly. It has a bold white eye ring around its large eyes. Although it may be hard to see the wood thrush in the forest interior where it prefers to live, you can listen for its melodious song on your next hike.

Words really can’t describe the beautiful song of the wood thrush – some say it is a flute-like “ee-oh-lay.” The famous 19th century naturalist, Henry David Thoreau, wrote in 1853 that the wood thrush “…is the only bird whose note affects me like music. It lifts and exhilarates me. It is inspiring. It changes all hours to an eternal morning.” Males will answer one another’s calls, but instead of singing the same song to each other like other species do, they will almost always sing a new song to their competition. Males can amazingly sing over 50 unique songs!

As a strict forest dweller, this is a bird that won’t be visiting your backyard bird feeder. The wood thrush scratches at the forest floor and searches through leaf-litter for a delicious meal of beetles, caterpillars, ants, spiders and millipedes. It will also supplement its diet with small berries and other fruits growing in the forest. You may hear it at nearby preserves or woodlots, or on a visit to the Refuge! And if you “leave the leaves” this fall, you might just see one foraging in your yard. 

Unfortunately, the wood thrush population is on the decline. One very large contributor to the population decline is habitat fragmentation in breeding and wintering grounds. When forest habitats are fragmented, they are separated into smaller patches by neighborhoods, industrial development, and roads. Many species are negatively impacted by this sporadic distribution of habitat. In the case of the wood thrush, some scientific studies have shown that it can lead to poorer diet and nest predation. The wood thrush is also vulnerable to nest parasitism. Instead of building its own nest, the brown-headed cowbird will lay eggs in other songbird nests for the unsuspecting parents to raise. According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, almost every wood thrush nest contains at least one brown-headed cowbird egg in Midwest woodlands. Once hatched, the larger cowbird can outcompete the smaller thrush chicks for food. Although this is a natural interaction, forest fragmentation may lead to more nest parasitism, especially when a wood thrush nest is on the edge of its habitat. Wood thrushes are long distance migrants, spending their winters in Central American lowland tropical forests. Therefore, wide-reaching conservation efforts are imperative for the preservation of this species. Keep an eye and an ear out for wood thrushes as they migrate through Long Island this Fall!

By Cara Fernandes

  • Male and female Cowbird
  • Wood Thrush
  • Thrush eggs (blue) and cowbird egg (spotted white)

Contact

3 Old Country Road
P.O. Box 492
Quogue, NY 11959
631-653-4771
info@quoguewildliferefuge.org

Visit

The Refuge trails and Outdoor Wildlife Complex are open every day from sunrise to sunset free of charge. Dogs and bicycles are not permitted on the Refuge grounds.

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