Subject: [Tweeters] Eyebrows Thrush
Date: Mon Oct 10 10:27:11 PDT 2022
From: Steve Hampton - stevechampton at gmail.com

I saw the pic posted on eBird earlier (
https://ebird.org/checklist/S120329442) . It was a young American Robin
with a big eyebrow. I assume the original poster received feedback from
friends or maybe an eBird reviewer and modified their report. It is an
instructive photo.

Actual Eyebrowed Thrush is more orange than red below, has faint
orange-brownish upperparts (not dark gray like robin), has an even bigger
eyebrow, and the white line under the eye connects to the bill gape,
imparting a very different facial expression. I think they might be a tad
smaller as well, especially in comparison with Am Robin. I've only seen
one, but I get the impression their upright stance is not as upright as Am
Robin, but a bit more horizontal.

But keep looking, it's October so anything is possible!







On Mon, Oct 10, 2022 at 9:58 AM Larry Schwitters <leschwitters at me.com>
wrote:


> Roger,

>

> No report on eBird now. One report with a photo from Southern California

> May 28, 2001. I saw six of them once on Shemya mid May and ID was obvious.

> But this is not spring and not far west Alaska.

>

> Who knows how eBird deals with an unlikely report like this.

>

> Larry Schwitters

>

> > On Oct 10, 2022, at 8:55 AM, Roger Moyer <rogermoyer1 at hotmail.com>

> wrote:

> >

> > Is the Eye-browed Thrush reported on Ebird in Cowlitz County legitimate?

> >

> > Roger

> > _______________________________________________

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> > Tweeters at u.washington.edu

> > http://mailman11.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/tweeters

>

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--
​Steve Hampton​
Port Townsend, WA (qatáy)