Starling

The elusive and skittish Starling is a gregarious bird.

Species introduction

At a glance
Latin name: 
Sturnus vulgaris
Family: 
Starlings
Family Latin name: 
STURNIDAE
Category: 
Birds

Species description

Species description

The Starling is a resident breeding bird in Britain and is with us all year round. Although they number perhaps 1.8 million breeding pairs - and are one of Britain's commonest birds - their status in Britain is RED, reflecting huge loss in numbers attributable to a variety of factors including habitat loss and modern farming practices.

Their diet is varied, encompassing insects (especially crane fly larvae), fruit and seeds. You can often see starlings on the ground amongst cattle, feeding on grubs, flies and larvae.

They are smaller than Blackbirds and have a glossy iridescent sheen to their feathers, which often appear tinged with purple, blue or green. Their voice is complex, and they are known as great imitators - of both people and car alarms!

Starlings enjoy the grain we place in the bird-feeders in the Cemetery.

Species photographs

Larger photograph(s) (click to magnify)

Details

Species family information

Starlings are small to medium-sized gregarious birds found across Europe, North America, Asia and the Pacific. They are omnivores that have often developed a preference for living in or near human population centres. They are an adaptable group of birds, dazzlingly acrobatic in the air, nimble of foot on the ground, and famous for assembling in huge mumurations, swooping and whirling in the sky before gathering in densely-packed roosts for the night.

Category information

The earliest feathered dinosaur fossils date from the early Cretaceous, but the ancestry of birds goes further back to Jurassic theropod dinosaurs, which shared a common ancestor with the crocodilians. Well known theropod groups include the tyrannosaurs, allosaurs, and other carnivores. Of surviving bird groups, the most ancient are the ratites (ostriches, rheas, tinamous, moas, kiwis, cassowaries, and emus), followed in evolutionary order by the waterfowl (ducks, geese and swans) and then the land fowl (chickens, turkeys, pheasants and their kin). Heene cemetery’s most ancient bird visitors are the woodpigeons. Strictly, therefore, we ought to refer to birds as dinosaurs, for they are direct descendants. The RSPB would be more accurately restyled as the RSPD. Where known, the conservation status of each bird is given as red, amber, or green, according to its survival potential based on 2016 populations and recent population trends.

Birds are warm-blooded, and have feathers, toothless, beaked jaws, and a strong, lightweight skeleton. They lay hard-shelled eggs. Their hearts have four chambers, and their metabolic rate is high. Although most are adapted for flight, many can also run, jump, swim and dive. Flightless birds retain vestigial wings. Brown, green, and grey are the commonest bird colours, for camouflage.

Protections