Black and White Warbler |
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Scientific Name: Mniotilta varia
Family: Parulidae, Wood Warblers
Description: 5" (13 cm). Black and white stripes, including crown. Male has black throat; female's throat white. Creeps on tree trunks.
Habitat: Primary and secondary forests, chiefly deciduous. During migration, parks, gardens, and lawn areas with trees and shrubs.
Nesting: 4 or 5 purple-spotted white eggs in a ground nest composed of leaves, grass, and rootlets, and lined with hair and fern down. Nest is set at the base of a tree, stump, or rock.
Range: Breeds from southern Mackenzie, northern Alberta, and central Manitoba east to Newfoundland, and south to southern United States east of Rockies. Winters from southern parts of Gulf Coast states southward.
Voice: A thin, high-pitched, monotonous weesy-weesy-weesy-weesy, like a squeaky wheelbarrow.
Discussion: This conspicuous warbler arrives in the North early
in spring, usually by mid- to late April. It is known for its habit of
creeping around tree trunks and along larger branches in search of insect
food in crevices in or under the bark; hence its old name, "Black-and-white
Creeper." Unlike the Brown Creeper, which only moves up a tree, this species
can climb in any direction.
Most Images and all information was taken from enature.com