Bushes and shrubs
Monogamous, Solitary nester
Fairly common
Blue green
1 - 4
13 - 14
Both sexes
Twigs, shredded bark and grass., Lined with finer vegetation.
Nonmigratory
Crissal Thrasher: Large thrasher with gray-brown upperparts and unstreaked, gray underparts. The throat is white with dark moustache stripe, eyes are yellow, and black bill is long and strongly decurved. Tail is very long with chestnut-brown undertail coverts. Legs and feet are black.
Crissal Thrasher: Resident from southern Nevada and southeastern California to western Texas and central Mexico. Preferred habitats include in dense, low scrubby vegetation, such as desert and foothill scrub and riparian brush.
Crissal Thrasher: One to four blue green eggs are laid in a nest made of twigs, lined with finer vegetation, and built in the middle of a dense shrub. Eggs are incubated for 14 days by both parents.
Crissal Thrasher: Eats insects, spiders, seeds, and berries; forages on the ground, tossing leaves and vegetation with its bill.
Suet, Sunflower Seed, Nuts
Crissal Thrasher: Song is varied and musical, often with phrases repeated 2 or 3 times. Call is a repeated "chideery", a rich, warbled "cheeoo-ree-eep", or a "toit-toit-toit."
Crissal Thrasher: Le Conte's Thrasher is paler, has dark eyes, and only a wash of rust-brown undertail. Curve-billed Thrasher is paler, has faint spots on breast, orange eyes, and only a wash of rust-brown undertail. California Thrasher has dull buff belly and undertail, dark eyes, and is browner overall.
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Family
Mockingbirds and Thrashers (Mimidae)_blue
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Species
Toxostoma crissale
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Length10.5 - 12.5
Inches
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Wingspan13.5
Inches
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Crissal Thrasher: Large thrasher with gray-brown upperparts and unstreaked, gray underparts. The throat is white with dark moustache stripe, eyes are yellow, and black bill is long and strongly decurved. Tail is very long with chestnut-brown undertail coverts. Legs and feet are black.
● Song: "chideery", "cheeoo-ree-eep", or a "toit-toit-toit"
● Foraging & Feeding: Crissal Thrasher: Eats insects, spiders, seeds, and berries; forages on the ground, tossing leaves and vegetation with its bill.
● Breeding & nesting: Crissal Thrasher: One to four blue green eggs are laid in a nest made of twigs, lined with finer vegetation, and built in the middle of a dense shrub. Eggs are incubated for 14 days by both parents.
● Similar species: Crissal Thrasher: Le Conte's Thrasher is paler, has dark eyes, and only a wash of rust-brown undertail. Curve-billed Thrasher is paler, has faint spots on breast, orange eyes, and only a wash of rust-brown undertail. California Thrasher has dull buff belly and undertail, dark eyes, and is browner overall.
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BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
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PopulationFairly common
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MigrationNonmigratory
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Weight2.2
Ounces
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