Red-legged Thrush at Garden of the Groves in Grand Bahama. Just look at that eye!!

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Red-legged Thrush at Garden of the Groves in Grand Bahama. Just look at that eye!!
Red-legged thrush (Turdus plumbeus)
Part of a collection of watercolors by "M. Rabié" for St. Domingue Oiseaux. Dated 1766.
Internet Archive
January 31, 2016 - Red-legged Thrush (Turdus plumbeus)
Requested by: @confettiferret
Found in the Caribbean, these thrushes are sometimes compared to American Robins or Gray Catbirds by North American observers. They eat fruits, seeds, invertebrates, and small vertebrates, including tree frogs. Their nests are constructed from grass, twigs, moss, leaves, and other materials and both parents probably participate in incubation and chick care. The six subspecies differ in the patterns on their throats and other plumage, as well as the color of their bills.
Red-legged Thrush (Turdus plumbeus)
Red-legged Thrush is a non-migratory Caribbean species found mostly in the Greater Antilles and Bahamas, but also on Dominica, in the Lesser Antilles. It consists of several, well differentiated subspecies, most of which originally were described as full species. Common features are bluish gray upperparts; variegated tail usually with white tail corners; throat with varying amounts of black and white; tarsi that are red or at least orange-yellow; bill usually red (but may be black); and usually a red eye ring. Red-legged Thrush has a tendency to turn its tail somewhat upwards at least part of the time, and likes to walk or run, but will fly away if disturbed. It is found in different forested habitat with some differences in preference among the islands, but tolerates disturbed areas such as partial cutting or second growth. Red-legged Thrush has wide ranging food preferences including fruits and seeds as well as invertebrates and small vertebrates. This adaptability seems to include both adult and nestling food. Nesting season seems to vary geographically, and litter size is usually 2-3. North American observers seeing Red-legged Thrush have been reminded of either American Robin (Turdus migratorius) or Gray Catbird (Dumetella carolinensis).
(read more at Neotropical Birds)