Birds @ Wings

American Crow
Bald Eagle
Belted Kingfisher
Blue Jay

Canada Goose
Common Loon
Golden Eagle
Great Blue Heron
Great Horned Owl
Lewis' Woodpecker
Osprey
Pine Grosbeak
Red-tailed Hawk
Rufous Hummingbird
Steller's Jay
Swans
Warbling Verio
Western Meadowlark
Wood Duck

 

 

 

Warbling Vireo

 

Description

Vireos are, for the most part, among the more challenging birds to identify. Consummate "dickey birds", vireos are small and often fleeting, twittering around the tops of trees and hiding out in particularly difficult to find locations. The warbling Vireo is no exception. Its back is drab olive green. The breast is mostly white with some pale yellow along the sides. A gray eyebrow is the only real feature distinguishing it from other local vireos. Vireos are slightly larger than warblers with a thicker bill.

Habitat

Don t worry too much about having to identify a drab Warbling Vireo. Like a lot of songbirds, you hear them more often than you ll see it. They inhabit dense shrubby cover and young deciduous re-growth. Often these woods are along stream sides, although they are found higher up into the mountains where shrubby avalanche paths are a popular location.

All vireos are part of the larger group of birds known as "neotropical migrants." These birds nest in North America and migrate south to winter in Central and South America, often in tropical rainforest habitats. The Warbling Vireo winters from NW Mexico south to El Salvador.

Behaviour

What vireos lack in dazzling colour, most make up in song. Warbling Vireos earned their name from their vocal virtuosity. Long warbling phrases ending on a high note indicated this little songster is nearby.

An interesting behavioural trait is that the male does the majority of egg incubation, a rare example of Mr. Mom among songbirds. Even more strange is that he often sings while sitting on the nest. This is odd because such song could well attract nest predators. Perhaps this is why Warbling Vireos are particularly at risk to brown-headed cowbird nest parasitism. Cowbirds lay their eggs in other birds nest and leave the host parents to raise the cowbird young, often at the expense of their own. However, the males are quite bold around the nest, as is shown in this picture, taken locally near the forks of the White River.

Field Notes

Warbling Vireos begin to arrive in the Columbia Valley in early May, just in time for Wings Over the Rockies Bird Festival! Shrubby stream-side bushes are good places to look for this bird. There are many excursions planned for this years Festival to get you out and about and looking with eyes and ears for the Warbling Vireo




 

 
   
 

 

 

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Wings Over the Rockies

Pynelogs Cultural Centre
Box 2633, Invermere, BC, V0A 1K0
1720 4th Avenue, Invermere BC

Calgary phone number: (778) 588-6930
toll free: 1- (888) 342-9464 (WING)
Larry Halverson (250) 347 2207
email: wingsovertherockies@gmail.com
homepage: www.AdventureValley.com/wings