But
Common Grackles, like this
first-of-the-season adult male banded on 10/13, with their oil
sheen-like iridescence and
bright white eyes certainly have a very
striking (yes, even beautiful) appearance. In older field guides,
the
Common Grackle was separated into two species--Bronzed and
Purple--which now are recognized only as weakly differentiated
geographic variants. "Purple" grackles were considered to have a
more easterly distribution
on the Atlantic slope east of the Appalachian Mountains, but
intergrades between it and the more westerly distributed "Bronzed"
grackle are common in the western Appalachians where Powdermill is
situated. The bird
pictured below would be best classified as an intergrade, sometimes
referred
to as yet another form, "Ridgeway's"
Grackle, based (this according to my well worn, black-ink signed copy
of
Roger Tory Peterson's A Field Guide to the
Birds [1947 copyright, 38th
printing]) on the "broken iridescent bars on the back".