As I turned off an episode of Deadwood of the day (S02E11) last night, the absence of Al Swearengen's foul language revealed a robin singing its slightly mournful but impressive song somewhere outside my window, high notes, low notes, trills...at midnight. I drifted off to sleep, dreaming of the wild west, and when I woke, inexplicably at 0430 h (the words "Miss Isringhausen" on my tongue), the bird was still at it. Someone should clearly tell this bird about the dawn chorus, no?
Not a nightingale c PierreSelim/wikimedia commons |
Other birds are thought to alter their calls to adapt to cities, with great tits changing the pitch of theirs so that it travels better and stands out more among the milieu of city noises.
The robin's association with Christmas is actually slightly convoluted. Postmen in Victorian times were nicknamed Robin Redbreasts because their red tunics recalled the birds, people looked forward to the cards brought to them by the Robins at Christmas time, and rather than stick a picture of a postman on a christmas card, some wag stationer ran with the idea and made the robin a festive symbol.
Many Christmas cards depict groups of robins clustered together, downy feathers puffed out on a twig in a snowy garden, but such a scene would never happen, for robins are highly territorial birds. Males will fight to the death in defence of their breeding territories.
Found throughout Europe but for the far north, in the UK, the robin is the stuff of Christian folklore: one of the explanations for the red breast is that it was stained by the blood of Jesus Christ when a brown robin perched on the cross and sang to soothe him in his time of dying, all robins henceforth bore the mark. As an evolutionary biologist, this lamarckism strikes me as unlikely, but hard to test.