I still can't quite believe what I heard this morning, and I have to share it 
with someone:

This morning I opened the door to my chicken coop and found the girls inside 
riveted to an astonishing show. One of the coop windows broke recently;  I 
stapled plastic sheeting on the inside of the frame, and stuck  an old campaign 
yard sign on the outside, for security and added insulation. The sign isn't 
quite as wide as the frame, though - there's a gap about 3" wide. Two starlings 
had come in through the gap, and were having a ferocious battle in the space 
between the sign and the plastic sheeting. And here's what had the girls and me 
spellbound: the battle appeared to be as much about skill in mimicry as it did 
about physical strength.

When I hear starlings riffing in the treetops or rooftops, it's usually a 
mixture of mimicry and weird alien-radio-transmission whirrs, clicks, and 
whistles, and the mimicry is often clearly in the practice stage - the birds 
will repeat  and modify phrases. These two fighting birds were vocalizing  
constantly, and it was almost pure mimicry. Moreover, there was very little 
repetition, or variations on phrases - they were throwing down one new sound 
after another. I'm not great at bird songs, but I do know the yard birds, and I 
heard chickadee, cardinal, blue jay, titmouse, catbird, Carolina wren, 
red-tailed hawk, crow, raven, herring gull,  toad, many different chicken 
calls, our farm geese, the horses across the street, several different dogs, 
the tractor, and our neighbor's chainsaw. I've never heard such a virtuosic 
display from starlings before, ever. And this was all as they thrashed and 
kicked and pecked at each other.  The performance went on for several minutes 
before one of the birds scrambled out through the gap and fled, pursued by the 
other.

-Liz Brown

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