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Common Raven Corvus corax

       

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Common Raven
© Gerald & Buff Corsi/Focus on Nature, Inc.

© Lang Elliot/Naturesound.com (audio)

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Alternate name: Northern Raven

Family: Corvidae, Crows, Magpies, Jays view all from this family

Description 21-27" (53-69 cm). Similar to the American Crow but larger, with heavier bill and wedge-shaped tail. At rest, throat appears shaggy because of long, lance-shaped feathers. Often soars like a hawk. See Chihuahuan Raven.

Habitat Coniferous forests and rocky coasts; in West also in deserts and arid mountains.

Nesting 4-7 dull green eggs, spotted with brown, in a large mass of sticks containing a cup lined with fur, moss, and lichens, and placed on a cliff or in the top of a conifer.

Range Resident from Aleutians, northern Alaska and northern Canada south throughout western United States and to Minnesota, Great Lakes, and northern New England; in Appalachians to northwestern Georgia. Also in Eurasia and North Africa.

Voice   Deep, varied, guttural croaking; a hollow wonk-wonk.

Discussion In most of its range, the Common Raven is common only in wilderness areas; despite its large size and demonstrated intelligence, it is very sensitive to human persecution and was long ago driven out of settled areas by shooting and poisoning. Yet ravens are primarily scavengers, and around towns in the North they compete with gulls for garbage. They also raid seabird colonies, consuming many eggs and young. They regularly ride on rising air currents and frequently indulge in aerial displays, with mock fighting, tumbling, and other forms of acrobatics.

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