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  2. Japanese robin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_robin

    When the female is ready, she lays about 3-5 eggs of greenish color, one egg per day, and incubates them for roughly 2 weeks. Once born, the young chicks are nurtured for a month, or 31 days, before they leave the nest and become independent. The robin does not mate for life and only finds a partner during the spring mating season.

  3. Red-billed leiothrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-billed_leiothrix

    The eggs of the leiothrix are found in clutches of two to four eggs with an average of three. [10] They are broad and blunt in shape with some gloss on the outside and they also have a pale blue colour and red like brown spots that encircle the larger end of the eggs. The newly hatched birds have bright red skin and a rich orange red gape. [10]

  4. American robin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_robin

    The American robin rejects cowbird eggs, so brood parasitism by the brown-headed cowbird is rare, and the parasite's chick does not often survive to fledging. [41] In a study of 105 juvenile robins, 77.1% were infected with endoparasites , Syngamus sp. being the most commonly encountered, in 57.1% of the birds.

  5. Red-capped robin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-capped_Robin

    The smallest of the red robins, the red-capped robin is 10.5–12.5 cm (4.1–4.9 in) long with a wingspan of 15–19.5 cm (5.9–7.7 in), and weighs around 7–9 g (0.25–0.31 oz). Males and females are of similar size. It has longer legs than the other robins of the genus Petroica. The male has a distinctive scarlet cap and breast.

  6. Cape robin-chat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_robin-chat

    The Cape robin-chat (Dessonornis caffer) is a small passerine bird of the Old World flycatcher family Muscicapidae. It has a disjunct range from South Sudan to South Africa. [3] The locally familiar and confiding species [6] has colonized and benefited from a range of man-altered habitats, including city suburbs and farmstead woodlots. [7]

  7. Red-capped robin-chat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-capped_Robin-Chat

    It is known to hybridise with the chorister robin-chat (C. dichroa). [8] The clutch varies between 2 and 4 eggs, and the female incubates the clutch on her own, the eggs hatch after around 2 weeks and the female broods the young, on and off, for the first week after hatching> The young fledge after 11 or 12 days, although 17 days has been recorded.

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  9. Indian robin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_robin

    The markings are denser at the larger end of the egg, where they form an irregular cap. Some eggs are blotched with dark reddish-brown at the large end. They are about 0.76–0.84 inches (1.9–2.1 cm) long and 0.55–0.62 inches (1.4–1.6 cm) wide. [28] Three to four eggs is the usual clutch. [36]

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