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Give the most detailed answer you can please!

2006-10-29 03:21:12 · 7 answers · asked by beagleowner2 3 in Pets Birds

7 answers

on is black (the crow) and the other is black and white (the raven)
and they both have a different sound

2006-10-30 12:03:17 · answer #1 · answered by madpl 2 · 1 3

Crows and ravens, although in the same genus (Corvus) are different birds. (Think of leopards and tigers; both are in the genus Panthera, and are obviously related, but they are quite distinct animals.) The words "crow" and "raven" themselves have little or no real taxonomic meaning. That is, the Australian "ravens" are more closely related to the Australian "crows" than they are to the Common Raven (Corvus corax). In general, the biggest black species, usually with shaggy throat feathers, are called ravens and the smaller species are considered crows.

Common Ravens can be told from American Crows by a couple of things. The size difference, which is huge, is only useful with something else around to compare them with. Ravens are as big as Red-tailed Hawks, and crows are, well, crow sized. The wedge-shaped tail of the raven is a good character, if you can see it well. Crows sometimes show an apparent wedge shape to the tail, but almost never when it is fanned as the bird soars or banks (except for a brief time during molt in the summer).

More subtle characters include: ravens soar more than crows. If you see a "crow" soaring for more than a few seconds, check it a second time. Crows never do the somersault in flight that Common Ravens often do. Ravens are longer necked in flight than crows. The larger bill of the raven can be seen in flight, but it is actually less apparent than the long neck. Raven wings are shaped differently than are crow wings, with longer primaries ("fingers") with more slotting between them. As my neighbor said, "Ravens are the ones whose wings you can see through." The longer primaries make the wings look more bent at the wrist than a crow as the bird flies, and the "hand" portion can look nearly pointed.

If seen perched in a good look, the huge bill and shaggy throat of a raven are diagnostic. The upper and lower edges of the bill are parallel for most of their length (3/4?) in ravens, while in crows the downward curve starts somewhere around 2/3 of the way out for males, and about halfway for females.

American Crows make the familiar "caw-caw," but also have a large repertoire of rattles, clicks, and even clear bell-like notes. However, they never give anything resembling the most common calls of Common Ravens. The most familiar call of a raven is a deep, reverberating croaking or "gronk-gronk." Only occasionally will a raven make a call similar to a crow's "caw" but even then it is so deep as to be fairly easily distinguished from a real crow. Ravens also make a huge variety of different notes. It has been said (attributed to native Americans) that if you hear something in the forest that you cannot identify (assuming you know all the common forest sounds), it is a raven.

2006-10-29 11:35:00 · answer #2 · answered by stonemizuhi 1 · 2 0

Size, as a raven is larger than a crow

2006-10-29 11:23:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Crows account for entire family of birds- CORDIVAE- that includes that raven species .That includes the raven species.That is all ravens are crowns but crowns can be ravens jays or magpies-The issue gets a little confusing because people . how trypically the term is use.They are two black birds have many similarities there are different in their appearance - behavior and habitat.

2006-10-29 11:38:34 · answer #4 · answered by sugarlove_one 4 · 1 1

A raven is a different bird altogether. Bigger bird, more pronounced "Roman" nose kind of beak. Other than that, they look the same.

2006-10-30 12:49:00 · answer #5 · answered by fairly smart 7 · 2 0

crows are very loud and bigger then ravens and ravens are shiny and a litle bit quieter

2006-10-29 11:29:15 · answer #6 · answered by [deleted] myself 1 · 0 1

nothing much just there tasles and behaviour

2006-10-30 01:07:48 · answer #7 · answered by hayley b 1 · 0 1

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