A group of magpies is called a tiding, tribe, charm, gulp, flock, or murder
Flock
Murder
Magophobia
I frequently have groups of magpies in my garden. I have seen up to nine birds at one time and 5 or 6 is a regular occurrence.The most I have seen at any one time is 15 and they were sitting in a tree along the nature trail near to where I live. I didn't get them all in the photograph though.Answer 2:They're sometimes in groups, yes. Magpies have a mate for life and it's not uncommon to see a magpie with another one, though it's not uncommon in this area (i.e., Alberta, Canada, unlike the answerer from the UK up there) to find a lone magpie either. Quite often, unlike the first answerer above, I see more lone magpies or just a couple over half a dozen at a time.But they're worse when in groups, especially when the young are ready to leave the nest, or if a group of magpies decide to cause chaos for dogs, cats or poultry. That's when it's time to bring the gun out to either scare them off or take one down and let them know they're not welcome here!
magpies, geordies, toon army, black and white army, the toon. - Nufc4Life
They are birds from the Corvid group, jays, crows, ravens and magpies.
No. They are part of the Passerine group (mostly songbirds), and the family Corvidae.
These are all types of Australian native birds.
Male magpies are called cocks
The Magpies was created in 1964.
The plural form for the noun magpie is magpies; the plural possessive is magpies'.
No, magpies do not eat pallets
magpies steals shiny objects
No animal preys on magpies. Dead magpies would be eaten by maggots, beetles, and other decomposers.