The Shrike

The Shrike

 

Different varieties of shrikes are found in many countries.  Endemic to the USA is the Loggerhead Shrike...who bears acquaintance!  Amazing, disgusting, delightful...take your pick!

In spite of their having been labeled a “butcher” bird, today I found affection growing within me for a little 9-inch-long shrikes, as I discovered some not-by-accident reasons these robin-sized predatory songbirds behave as they do.  First, they were given bills that have a hook on their upper mandible, exactly as well-known predatory birds have been given.  But they do not have the strong feet and talons that larger birds of prey use as weapons.

  So, yes, the shrike can grab a grasshopper with that hooked beak, and with a strong bite can break its neck or bite through the backbone of small invertebrates like a mouse or lizard--dispatching them quickly.  However, often, instead of eating their prey immediately,
 not by accident the shrike grabs its prey and impales it on a thorn or the barb of a wire--which holds it firmly in place as he rips it into bite-size pieces.  Or he will use the sharp thorn to store it as one would hang up a piece of meat in a pantry, keeping it readily available for later ingestion in an easily convenient size.

But why put their stored items on display in this way?  One clue can be found where there are “lubber” grasshoppers, which carry toxins in their bodies.  Studies have shown that it takes only one to two days after the death of that grasshopper for the poison in its body to be rendered ineffective.  Obviously it is the genius of the shrike’s Creator who gave understanding at some level to the shrike so that not by accident they “hang the grasshopper up” and wait to consume their prey until the poison has been rendered useless and the stored cache is fit for consumption.

The loggerhead shrike is found year-round throughout the United States and its name comes from the size of its head being much larger proportionately to its body compared with other birds.  I thought the strip of black feathers, like a mask over its eyes and around its face, adds to the attractive appearance of this songbird that is already dressed in the near formal attire of black and white.  However, it was in learning of the courting dance of the monogamous male before his female that the shrike really showed me his special talents.

He will make sure he exhibits his well-stocked cache of stored food to her as evidence that he is prepared to provide for a family.  (At times, however, the male gets the female’s attention by also presenting colorful inedible items among the items of digestible food in his cache--and I wondered if it were possible that he understood that not everything about romantic appeal to another creature has to be practical!)  In addition, in his ritualized presentation dance, while demonstrating his resources, he also goes through the motions as though he was skewing an item of food onto a barbed wire and then he will actually feed her right then.  Not by accident--he demonstrates ability to provide, since in reality he must feed her later on during the actual nesting period.

Now the call of all songbirds isn’t always lovely.  A shrike sings out with chirps but also some grafting noises.  Obviously the Creator gives each of His creatures different gifts.  And not all birds dress in black and white quasi-formal attire like he does.  Not all go through elaborate ritual mating dances.  Not all have a hook at the end of their beaks!  But each, not by accident, has what it needs.  And each creature--whether it makes the grafting sound of a shrike, or has a melodious human voice, can find a way to thank our awesome God for His gifts--like the ability to know when food is edible, and when it is not!

And we can all praise Him finally for the gift of life!

"NOT BY ACCIDENT" (c) Juanita Kretschmar is used by permission and was first published in newsletters about A Key Encounter, a Key West, FL, Creation-based, educational tourist attraction. Go to www.akeyencounter.org for additional information,  To receive the free newsletter write: AKE, PO Box 177, Big Pine Key, FL 33043

 Picture BY from here and here

Related Articles

More From Genesis

You Shall Not Eat...the Hare

I had a biology lesson resulting from my walk today in the latter part of February.
You Shall Not Eat...the Hare

Ants

"Go to the ant, you sluggard! Consider her ways and be wise." Proverbs 6:6
Ants

Blue Marlin

Some creatures seem to have everything now! We wonder what God's original plan was for them;…
Blue Marlin

Donkeys

Donkeys are often misunderstood and dismissed as "stubborn." But for those who get to know…
Donkeys

Bluebirds

There are all sorts of ways of getting attention.
Bluebirds

Frigate Birds

The magnificent frigate bird is one of nature's most aerial of all birds.
Frigate Birds

Alligators

It's not by accident that even a mother alligator gives her babies watchful care during the…
Alligators

Northern Cardinal

A person would have to have a heart closed to beauty not to enjoy the sight of the gorgeous red…
Northern Cardinal

Manatees

"A mechanical creature, the manatee, at A KEY Encounter, waves very slowly as people pass by.
Manatees

Cats

Just four cats among 30+ species of felines have the ability to roar: the lion, tiger, leopard…
Cats

Hummingbirds

The hummingbird is the very smallest of all birds, with some species being just a bit over two…
Hummingbirds

Golden Plover and The Trunk Fish

The golden plover flies to the artic to mate and raise their baby birds. However, before their…
Golden Plover and The Trunk Fish

Tigers

It's really not by accident that the powerful tiger was chosen the world's "favorite animal"…
Tigers

God's Amazing Grass

In the Torah (Bible), we read “Then God said, ‘Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb that…
God's Amazing Grass

The Sea Slug

"O Lord, how manifold are thy works! In wisdom hast thou made them all: the earth is full of…
The Sea Slug

Publish the Menu module to "offcanvas" position. Here you can publish other modules as well.
Learn More.