
Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus)
About 9-1/2 inches long, the red-wing breeds in most of North America; it winters in the southern half of
The prairies of the upper Mississippi Valley , with their numerous sloughs and ponds, furnish ideal nesting places for red-wings, and this region has become the great breeding ground for the species, pouring forth the vast flocks that sometimes play havoc with grain fields. Red-wings are gregarious, living in flocks and breeding in communities. Their food is about one-fourth insects and three-fourths vegetable.
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