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Diseased Bird: Hopscotch, the Grackle with One Leg

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13 comments on “Diseased Bird: Hopscotch, the Grackle with One Leg

  1. Cute little girl! I am happy she is doing so well. I think great tail grackles are so beautiful, both males and females; and I love all the different sounds that they make–very interesting and under-appreciated birds, I think.

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    • I love the grackle that comes by my feeder most days. He only has one eye. I named him Henry. I always look out for him. He’s so interesting to look at. He’s a loner and I always try to leave him his favorite treats.

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  2. I’ve always been curious about this because I’ve seen it often over the years, and seeing another one-legged grackle today led me on the search that presented your post. My dad theorized that this is a genetic deformity that keeps getting passed along because it doesn’t seem to be related to any deficiency. Since birds have no vanity, and there doesn’t seem to be anything “wrong” with the birds that have only one leg, then the gene keeps getting passed on. I feel like I’ve seen it more often lately which leaves me to wonder if birds like this are increasing in number, and could eventually make up the entire population. Could the grackle some day be known as the one-legged grackle because through the prevalence of a deformity they then no longer grow both legs? I hope some ornithologist out there is researching this. 🙂

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    • Holly Grant, Project Assistant on

      Hi Mike, The majority of the time, a missing leg is simply due to a successful encounter with a predator, or an accident (getting a leg stuck somewhere). These instances are far more common then genetic mutations. As long as the birds are eating and able to fly normally, you’re right, it shouldn’t affect them too much. If a genetic deformity were to be the cause something like this, it would mean quite a lot of conditions would have to be just right in order for it to be something that could spread across the entire population (i.e. the gene would need to be dominant, there would need to be thousands and thousands of generations, the trait would need to be advantageous to spread widely – otherwise there’s no impetus for it to be passed on, etc.) and each of those conditions has the odds stacked against them.

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  3. I see a bunch that are only missing a foot (claw?).
    I figured they were probably lost due to fights with the other birds over food. Perhaps they get bitten and it gets infected and then they later bite it off themselves to survive the infection. I haven’t seen it happen like this, but the way they fight each other over food it makes sense to me.
    Also most of the ones missing a foot don’t have many or any tail feathers, probably from the other birds picking on them to eliminate the competition for food.

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  4. Valerie Anne Cayce on

    I see a black blue headed grackle hopping on one leg the other obviously hurt. He seems fine. Eats and flys.

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  5. I watched one bite his leg off so I believe it’s self inflicted. Is there a medical issue happening? I’ve seen three this way in one day in the same area.

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  6. I am currently feeding a one legged grackle. He/she seems to get around fine. I’m glad I found this page. It was worrying me. How do you tell if it’s female or male….suppose I could google lol.

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    • Males have those beautiful black with iridescent purple feathers, females are more brown (but also beautiful!). Males are also noticeably bigger and a bit more bulky looking.

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  7. I have a male with one leg. All the other but a few grackles, seemed to have left the area now. I live in Northern Michigan.
    This is the first one I have seen with one leg. He’s been here all summer. I’m wondering if he got left behind because of this deformity or whatever it may be called. He does struggle keeping his balance.

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  8. I live in Huntsville Al. And I’ve been filming a one legged black bird and it seems to get around fine. It always eats at the same place at the table. So I can’t get a very good picture of it.

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