Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Townsend's warbler

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Genus
  
Setophaga

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Family
  
Parulidae

Scientific name
  
Setophaga townsendi

Higher classification
  
Setophaga

Order
  
Passerine

Townsend's warbler d2fbmjy3x0sduacloudfrontnetsitesdefaultfiles

Similar
  
New World warbler, Bird, Black‑throated gray warbler, Hermit warbler, MacGillivray's warbler

Townsend s warbler song


Townsend's warbler (Setophaga townsendi) is a small songbird of the New World warbler family.

Contents

Townsend s warblers on johnson creek


Description

Townsend's warbler Townsend39s Warbler Audubon Field Guide

These birds have a yellow face with a black stripe across their cheeks extending into an ear patch, a thin pointed bill, two white wing bars, olive upperparts with black streaks on their backs and flanks, and a white belly. Adult males have a black cap, black throat and yellow lower breast; females have a dark cap and a yellow throat. Immature birds are similar to females with a dark green cap and cheeks.

Life history

Townsend's warbler Townsend39s Warbler Audubon Field Guide

Their breeding habitats are coniferous forests with large trees on the northwestern coast of North America. Their nests are shallow cups built with grass and lined with moss. These nests are usually placed atop a branch in a conifer. The female lays 4 to 5 brown-speckled white eggs.

This bird is closely related to the hermit warbler, and the two species interbreed where their ranges overlap.

Townsend's warbler Townsend39s Warbler Identification All About Birds Cornell Lab of

Birds from the Queen Charlotte Islands migrate short distances further south on the Pacific coast. Other birds winter in Mexico, Central America, and the south-western United States.

Townsend's warbler Townsend39s Warbler Song YouTube

They forage actively in the higher branches, sometimes hovering or catching insects in flight. They mainly eat insects and spiders and seeds. Outside of the nesting season, these birds forage in mixed flocks. In winter, they also eat berries and plant nectar.

The song of the male bird is a buzzed zee-zee-zee-bzz-zee, somewhat similar to that of its eastern relative, the black-throated green warbler. The call is a sharp tup.

This bird was named after the American ornithologist, John Kirk Townsend. Although Townsend is also credited with first describing this bird, he used a name chosen by Thomas Nuttall, who was travelling with him, and so sidestepped the convention against naming a species after oneself.

References

Townsend's warbler Wikipedia