White-Breasted Nuthatch |
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Scientific Name: Sitta carolinensis
Family: Sittidae, Nuthatches
Description: 5-6" (13-15 cm). Sparrow-sized. Blue-gray above, white underparts and face, black crown. Usually seen creeping on tree trunks, head downward.
Habitat Deciduous and mixed forests.
Nesting: 5 or 6 white eggs, lightly speckled with red-brown, in a cup of twigs and grass lined with feathers and hair in a natural cavity, bird box, or hole excavated by the birds.
Range: Largely resident from British Columbia, Ontario, and Nova Scotia south to southern California, Arizona, Gulf Coast, and central Florida. Absent from most of Great Plains.
Voice: A nasal yank-yank. Song a series of low whistled notes.
Discussion: The habit of creeping headfirst down a tree trunk,
then stopping and looking around with head held out at a 90-degree angle,
is characteristic of nuthatches. The White-breasted is an inquisitive,
acrobatic bird, pausing occasionally to hang and hammer at a crack. Essentially
nonmigratory, during the fall it stores food for winter in crevices behind
loose tree bark. Pairs seem to remain together year-round, for the species
may be found in twos even in the dead of winter. Although they often join
mixed flocks of chickadees, woodpeckers, and kinglets roaming the winter
woods, they tend to remain in their territories. They are familiar visitors
to bird feeders.
Most Images and all information was taken from enature.com