Toxostoma Bendirei Nest

Toxostoma Bendirei Nest by Sharon Beals

Contemporary
United States

Bird nests, even without knowing which birds constructed them, seem hardly possible. Creations of spider’s web, caterpillar cocoon, plant down, mud, found modern objects, human and animal hair, mosses, lichen, feathers and down, sticks and twigs–all are woven with beak and claw into a bird’s best effort to protect their next generation. Photographer Sharon Beals’s homage to the amazing avian builders. Photographed for her book, Nests: Fifty Nests and the Birds that Built Them. Chronicle Books, April 2011

The nests were photographed in four science collections: The California Academy of Sciences, The Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, The Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, the Cornell Museum of Vertebrates, and the American Museum of Natural History.

Subject Details:
Toxostoma bendirei
COLLECTOR: H. Brown
PREPARATION: Nest(s)
SEX: Unknown
PLACE: Tucson, Pima, Arizona, United States, North America
COLLECTION DATE: May 1887
COMMON NAME: Bendire’s Thrasher
TAXONOMY: Animalia Chordata Aves Passeriformes Mimidae
PUBLISHED NAME: Toxostoma bendirei
USNM NUMBER: B23636
SPECIMEN COUNT: 1

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