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  2. Starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starling

    The starlings are generally a highly social family. Most species associate in flocks of varying sizes throughout the year. Murmuration is the flocking of starlings, including the swarm behaviour of their large flight formations. [8] These flocks may include other species of starlings and sometimes species from other families.

  3. Common starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_starling

    Common starlings take advantage of agricultural fields, livestock facilities, and other human related sources of food and nest sites. Starlings often assault crops such as grapes, olives, and cherries by consuming excessive amounts of crops in large flock sizes and in new grain fields, starlings pull up young plants and eat the seeds. [122]

  4. Sturnus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturnus

    The Sturnus starlings are terrestrial species; they walk rather than hop, and have modifications to the skull and its muscles for open-bill probing. The latter adaptation has facilitated the spread of this genus from humid tropical southern Asia to cooler regions of Europe and Asia. Starlings nest in holes in trees or buildings.

  5. Greater blue-eared starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_blue-eared_starling

    Like other starlings, the greater blue-eared starling is an omnivore, taking a wide range of invertebrates, seeds, and berries, especially figs, but is diet is mainly insects taken from the ground. It will perch on livestock, feeding on insects disturbed by the animals and occasionally removing ectoparasites .

  6. Tristram's starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristram's_starling

    Although starlings are a tropical family by origin, Tristram's starling is well adapted to living in a desert environment: it loses relatively little water to evaporation and produces less heat than expected for its base metabolic rate. Its dark plumage may help it survive in the desert winter, when temperatures are low but the Sun's radiation ...

  7. Red-winged starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-winged_starling

    The red-winged starling (Onychognathus morio) is a bird of the starling family Sturnidae native to eastern Africa from Ethiopia to the Cape in South Africa.An omnivorous, generalist species, it prefers cliffs and mountainous areas for nesting, and has moved into cities and towns due to similarity to its original habitat.

  8. Stunning photographs capture starlings migrating ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/stunning-photographs-capture...

    Photographer Søren Solkær captures mesmerizing snapshots of starling murmurations, from Ireland to Italy.

  9. Chestnut-cheeked starling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chestnut-cheeked_starling

    The chestnut-cheeked starling (Agropsar philippensis) is a species of starling in the family Sturnidae.It breeds in Japan and the Russian islands of Sakhalin and Kuriles; [2] it winters in Taiwan, the Philippines and northern Borneo.