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  1. Brewer's Blackbird. Common Grackle. Boat-tailed Grackle. Great-tailed Grackle. Browse Species in This Family. A bird to be seen in the full sun, the male Brewers Blackbird is a glossy, almost liquid combination of black, midnight blue, and metallic green.

  2. Brewer's blackbird ( Euphagus cyanocephalus) is a medium-sized New World blackbird. It is named after the ornithologist Thomas Mayo Brewer . Description. Adult males have black plumage with an iridescent purple head and neck and glossy bluish-green highlights on the rest of the body. The feet and legs are black and the eye is bright yellow.

  3. Look for Brewers Blackbirds in two places: meandering along open ground, eyes peeled for crumbs, seeds, and insects; and perched up high, particularly on utility lines and in groups in the tops of trees. Hear sounds and see videos of Brewer's Blackbird from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology's Macaulay Library archive

  4. Brewer's Blackbird - eBird. Adult male © Jonathan Eckerson eBird S56977526 Macaulay Library ML 174390361. Female. Male. + 4. Passeriformes. Icteridae. Brewer's Blackbird Euphagus cyanocephalus. Sign in to see your badges. Identification. POWERED BY MERLIN. Listen. + 7 more audio recordings.

  5. This is the common blackbird of open country in the West, often seen walking on the ground with short forward jerks of its head. It adapts well to habitats altered by humans, and in places it may walk about on suburban sidewalks or scavenge for crumbs around beachfront restaurants.

  6. Monotypic. Length 9". Identification. A slim blackbird lacking striking structural features. Male: basically black with bright yellow eyes. Strongly iridescent, with a bright blue or purplish...

  7. Brewers Blackbirds live across the western half of North America, from below sea level in southern California to more than 8,000 feet in the Rocky Mountains. They occur in a huge variety of natural habitats – grasslands, marshes, meadows, woodland, coastal scrub, chaparral, and sagebrush – as well as many human-created habitats.