polution
Most of the United States, Mexico, parts of Canada.
my mom
It is probably a Great grey shrike. Or a Loggerhead Shrike: http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Loggerhead_Shrike.html
Lanius ludovicianus Loggerhead Shrike Is known as the butcher bird because it impales its prey on thorns or barbed wire fences and eats it like "a bug on a stick".The Shrike has a hooked beak that is uses to tear meat off its kill and will even catch and eat small rodents. It has no talons to hold its prey which is why it has adopted this method of eating.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Lanius ludovicianus.
The scientific name for the Loggerhead shrike is Lanius ludovicianus. It belongs to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Chordata, class Aves, order Passeriformes, family Laniidae, and genus Lanius.
Some shrike species such as the loggerhead shrike or the fiscal shrike are variously known as the impaler bird. It is also known as the 'butcher bird', but it should not be confused with Australia's butcher bird. The loggerhead shrike has a sharp, hooked beak. It gained its nickname because of the way it uses its hooked beak to break the spines of its victims, which range from insects, lizards and rodents to even other birds. It then impales them on sharp spiky thorns or barbed wire to hold them while it disembodies or dismembers them. Larger prey may be left to decay, as this softens the flesh.
dumbness, suckers!
There are two songbirds known to eat mice and they are from the same species. They are the Northern Shrike & Loggerhead Shrike. They eat mostly insects. I have never seen either bird but they have a long beak that has a slight curve on the tip. The loggerhead version has a slightly larger head. Their photographs remind me of the color of mockingbirds. They are not very common and I believe there is an alarm concerning their dwindling numbers. They have a sinister habit of impaling their victims on thorns of plants, as they feast.
Killer Shrike was created in 1977.
Magpie Shrike was created in 1831.