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Services > Pest Management
> Birds > European Starling



Latin Name:
Sturnus vulgaris
Appearance:
Starlings are pudgy birds about the size of robins. They vary in color from one
season to the next, displaying purple-green feathers with white markings and a yellow
bill in warm weather and darker feathers tipped in light brown with a blue-black
bill in cold weather.
Habit:
Livestock owners find starlings especially bothersome because they eat large quantities
of feed and contaminate even more with their droppings. The birds travel in flocks
of several thousand in the winter. They can eat more than a ton of feed while spoiling
two or three times that amount with their whitewash. Though plump, individual birds
can squeeze through a hole in a building as small as an inch in diameter.
Diet:
The birds prefer fruits and seeds, either wild or cultivated. They supplement their
diet during the spring breeding season with insects. They will eat virtually any
livestock feed that is not bound and covered.
Reproduction:
Starlings nest almost anywhere they can wedge a small nest, including commercial
buildings. Females lay as many as seven eggs, which hatch after less than two weeks
of incubation. Young starlings leave the nest within three weeks of birth.
Other:
Starlings were introduced in North America a century ago. Since then, they have
spread to virtually every state and province.
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