Fish Crows love the water and are regular visitors to Lake Elberta.
The challenge is to distinguish them from their close relative, the American Crow. The two species are black as night and almost indistinguishable from one another except that the Fish Crow is smaller and its field marks are very subtle.
Ornithologist-artist-writer Roger Tory Peterson described Fish Crows as “slightly smaller, glossier, and more delicately proportioned” than the American Crow. The former is about 15-inches long; the latter measures around 17-inches. Both species have a wing-span of 36-inches.
Identifying the bird by sound is much easier than by sight. The Fish Crow’s call is more nasal and higher in pitch than the American Crow whose call is lower-pitched and huskier. Be warned, however, that the calls of young American Crows can easily be mistaken for Fish Crows.
“Fish Crows have a distinctive caw that is short, nasal and quite different-sounding from an American Crow,” according to Cornell University’s All About Birds website. “Their call is sometimes doubled-up with an inflection similar to someone saying uh-uh. They also make an even shorter, higher-pitched call when in large groups, when perched or in flight.”
Listen to recordings of Fish Crows, some recorded in Florida.
Knowledgeable birdwatchers highly recommend downloading the popular Merlin Bird App and the Audubon Bird App. These sophisticated apps allow the user to use their cell phones to more easily identify different species and access recordings of hundreds of species.
The Fish Crow is a member of the Corvidae family, which includes the American Crow, the Common Raven, the Northwestern Crow, and the Chihuahuan Raven. The Fish Crow is commonly found along coastlines, rivers, estuaries, and ponds. All crows are omnivorous (will eat anything), forage in flocks, and breed in small colonies.
Fish Crows are found year-round throughout Florida, east through Alabama to Louisiana and north in a broad-band along the coast into New England. They feed on crabs, insects, small fish, insects, bird and turtle eggs, small reptiles, carrion and garbage—virtually anything edible. Fish Crows often raid heron nests for eggs or nestlings.
This species normally builds its stick platform featuring a bowl-shaped nest in the crook of a tree. Fish Crows breed April through August and lay three to five eggs. The Latin for its species name, ossifragus, translates as “bone-breaker.”