Shrikes Have an Absolutely Brutal Way of Killing Large Prey

Famous for impaling their victims, these songbirds first use a special maneuver to break the necks of small rodents.

It鈥檚 no secret that shrikes聽are聽formidable predators. The grayscale聽songbirds of the open country might聽look as harmless as mockingbirds, but these black-masked 鈥渂utcherbirds,鈥 as they鈥檙e known, pack more fierceness ounce for ounce聽than any other bird in the country.

The nine-inch carnivores catch and kill a wide variety of聽prey鈥攇rasshoppers, crickets, beetles, lizards, mice, frogs, and small birds鈥攖hat聽can often be as聽big聽as they are; one was once observed聽聽after "a noisy struggle lasting less than a minute, by which time the cardinal was dead."

On top of that, their lifeless quarry can be seen gruesomely聽impaled on sharp objects like twigs and barbed wire throughout the southern United States and northern Canada, where Loggerhead聽Shrikes and Northern Shrikes range, respectively. (The Loggerhead population has declined by more than 80 percent since the 1960s, possibly聽due to pesticides killing their insect prey.)聽This聽macabre behavior, which is not a Game of Thrones-esque聽warning to other birds聽but a form of food storage,聽聽the Loggerhead Shrike 鈥渂y far the most metal of birds.鈥澛燭he editorial staff of聽探花精选聽are inclined to agree.

But while ornithologists have long known that shrikes impale their prey, no one knew for certain how these聽songbirds managed to catch and kill relatively large vertebrates.聽 of high-speed video footage finally reveals the answer: They grasp mice by the neck with their pointed beak, pinch the spinal cord to induce paralysis, and then vigorously shake their prey with enough force to break its neck. Okay, then.

The shrike's聽hunting strategy is often compared to that of raptors like eagles, hawks, and falcons: They鈥檒l sit on an elevated perch,聽scan the ground below, and pounce on any spotted prey. But this聽new research, which focused聽specifically on Loggerhead Shrikes, shows that the two have vastly different kill methods. Raptors have powerful wings to carry heavy loads聽and sharp, strong talons to聽catch prey, as well as to manipulate and tear flesh apart. Shrikes, though, are stuck with dinky passerine feet鈥攇ood for little except delicately perching on branches. This聽lack of leg musculature and weaponry needed to withstand a struggle聽means the songbirds have to kill quickly.聽

As the new study reveals, once聽shrikes聽induce聽paralysis with a precise bite to the neck, they聽roll their heads rapidly to vigorously shake their immobilized聽food. According to the researchers, this back-and-forth whipping motion generates聽accelerations of up to six g-forces鈥攔oughly the same amount of force felt by passengers on high-g rollercoasters, or the whiplash experienced by victims of low-speed, rear-end car crashes. This is more than enough force to snap the vertebrae of a large rat or break聽a mouse鈥檚 neck, and it鈥檚 all generated by the roll of a Loggerhead Shrike鈥檚 head.

A headbanging, prey-impaling death-bird? You can't get much more metal than that.聽聽

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