Robins
in the
A
rich folklore surrounds the robin, which has always been seen as a friend to
people, and an emblem of charity and piety. So William Shakespeare described the
"ruddock with charitable bill" while William Wordsworth asked,
"Art
thou the bird whom Man loves best
The
pious bird with the scarlet breast
Our
little English Robin?"
Pious is poetical
license. Robins are aggressive and have
been known to defend their food territories to the death. Robins
sing throughout the year because each bird, male or female, will occupy its own
territory during the winter. In order to
defend their winter food territories, the females have to sing and display just
like males do. Then in spring the
females have to persuade the males to stop fighting them and start co-operating
with them in the raising of a family. To
do this, when they encroach into the males’ territory they behave like young
birds begging for food, thus stimulating the males to feed them rather than
fight them.
The sexes are very similar, if not identical. Some texts suggest that the brown forehead is
"V" shaped in females, and "U" shaped in males, though even
this is not always apparent.
The juvenile Robin has speckled buff-brown upper parts and underparts. They have no red feathers so that adult birds
do not attack them in territorial disputes. The speckled feathers are lost in a partial
moult when the bird is about two to three months old.
In winter, resident birds in the