The rusty blackbird is a medium-sized New World blackbird, closely related to grackles. It is a bird that prefers wet forested areas, breeding in the boreal forest and muskeg across northern Canada, and migrating southeast to the United States during winter.
Rusty blackbird
Male, alternate plumage.
Icterids or New World blackbirds make up a family, the Icteridae, of small to medium-sized, often colorful, New World passerine birds. The family contains 108 species and is divided into 30 genera. Most species have black as a predominant plumage color, often enlivened by yellow, orange, or red. The species in the family vary widely in size, shape, behavior, and coloration. The name, meaning "jaundiced ones" comes from the Ancient Greek ikteros via the Latin ictericus. This group includes the New World blackbirds, New World orioles, the bobolink, meadowlarks, grackles, cowbirds, oropendolas, and caciques.
Icterid
Breeding male Brewer's blackbird apparently gaping (see text) in soil
Image: Yellow Headed Blackbird "Posing" for the Camera (22727158809)
Image: Bobolink at Lake Woodruff (Dolichonyx oryzivorus) Flickr Andrea Westmoreland