Tue. Apr 21st, 2026

In a Rare Act of Avian Kindness, a Mistle Thrush Adopts an Orphaned Blackbird Chick

Birds of a feather donโ€™t always flock together โ€” sometimes, they show extraordinary compassion across species lines.

Thatโ€™s what wildlife photographer Andrew Fusek-Peters witnessed in North Shropshire, England, when he captured a remarkable moment: a mistle thrush feeding an orphaned blackbird chick alongside her own fledglings.

In a series of touching close-up photos, the devoted thrush is seen offering a worm to one of her chicks โ€” and then turning to the young blackbird, patiently waiting with beak wide open. The blackbird gobbled the gift eagerly, revealing a quiet, rare act of interspecies care.

โ€œItโ€™s such a rare thing to see, let alone photograph,โ€ said Fusek-Peters, 59. โ€œIโ€™ve not known of a mistle thrush and a blackbird doing this before.โ€

While cases of birds feeding young from other species are known in the wild, theyโ€™re exceptionally rare to witness โ€” and even more so to capture on camera.

Fusek-Peters believes the blackbird chick was likely orphaned, either abandoned or left alone after the death of its mother. But it was its instinctive behavior โ€” sitting nearby with beak open โ€” that may have triggered the mistle thrushโ€™s nurturing response.

โ€œWhen fledglings leave the nest, their parents continue to feed them. If another young bird displays the same begging behavior, it can trigger that instinct in nearby adults,โ€ he explained.

Even experienced in wildlife photography, Fusek-Peters was deeply moved by the moment.

โ€œI canโ€™t get over how unbelievably rare this is to capture,โ€ he said. โ€œIt was such a special moment โ€” a reminder of the empathy and instinct that exists in the natural world.โ€

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