This audio story is brought to you by , a partner of The ÃÛèÖAPP. BirdNote episodes air daily on public radio stations nationwide.
Transcript:
This is BirdNote.
A robin tugging an earthworm from the ground is a symbol of spring. But that worm it’s eating hasn’t always been here.
When glaciers pushed south into what is now the U.S. around 20,000 years ago, they scraped off the soil layer and spelled the end of native earthworms except in the southern states. So that earthworm plucked by the robin is probably a relatively new arrival, most likely a species Europeans conveyed to the Americas in plant soil or in the ballast of ships.
So if not earthworms, what were robins feeding their chicks before Europeans arrived? Well, probably some of the more than a hundred kinds of insects and other invertebrates, as well as berries, that robins are known to eat.
Robins prefer to forage in short grass to avoid potential predators. But after the last ice sheets melted back, where was the short grass they liked? One speculation is that prehistoric bison, horses and mammoths grazed heavily in places, creating robin-friendly landscapes.
Just as robins now share pastures with cows, perhaps 15,000 years ago they hopped among giant bison or woolly mammoths.
It’s fun to picture, at least.
For BirdNote, I’m Mary McCann.
***
Credits:
Written by Bob Sundstrom
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Sallie Bodie
Editor: Ashley Ahearn
Associate Producer: Ellen Blackstone
Producer: Mark Bramhill
Bird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Recorded by Wil Hershberger, Geoffrey A. Keller, and Bruce Rideout
BirdNote’s theme was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
© 2020 BirdNote May 2020 Narrator: Mary McCann
ID# AMRO-17-2020-05-05