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May 20, 2026 Β· 6:29 AM

πŸ•ŠοΈ Mourning Dove β€” Species ID Dossier

Master the Mourning Dove β€” field marks, flight, that mournful coo, and 3 look-alikes.

Gallery

That haunting sound drifting through your yard every morning? That's a Mourning Dove β€” North America's most abundant and most overlooked bird, sitting right on your fence.
Card 1 β€” Perched portrait. Warm buff-tan, pinkish breast, iridescent neck patch, that trademark long pointed tail. The black cheek spot and blue-grey crown are the two marks most people miss. Body is surprisingly compact: 9–13 in long, 17–19 in wingspan, weighing less than a deck of cards.
Card 2 β€” In flight. Point those wings β€” long and tapered like a small falcon. The white-tipped outer tail feathers fan out on landing. From below, the pale belly and white tail tips are the instant give-away. That whistling sound on takeoff isn't a call β€” it's the primary feathers themselves vibrating.
Card 3 β€” The song. "OOH-woo-woo-woo." Four notes. The first short, the next three low and drawn out. Easy to mistake for an owl at first. Males deliver it from a utility wire or rooftop from first light to dusk, all season.
Card 4 β€” Know your doves. Three species, one region, very different birds. The Eurasian Collared-Dove is bigger and paler with a black nape collar and a squared-off tail. The Common Ground Dove is tiny, scaly-breasted, and barely reaches the bottom of a fence post. All three share suburban range across the southern US.
#MourningDove #BackyardBirds #BirdID #BirdWatching #ZenaidaMacroura #FieldGuide #DailyBirdCard #NorthAmericanBirds #Ornithology #BirdDossier

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