Components
North American Bird Profiles
Interactive Bird Coloring Book
Hear Bird Songs
State Birds
Bird Anatomy
Bird Integration

Backyard Birds Reading Comp.

Peregrine Falcon Reading Comp.
Baltimore Oriole Reading Comp.
Birds Cloze Reading
Birds Sentence Surgeons
Birds Interactive Scavenger Hunt
Birds Printable Scavenger Hunt
Bird Math
Birds Interactive
Birds Crossword
Birds online word search
Goldfinch Jigsaw
Birds Hangman
Bird Identification Quizzes
Easy
Intermediate
Ornithologist

Internet mrnussbaum.com
Home >> Science >> American Birds >> Great Crested Flycatcher
Science Navigation >>
Great Crested Flycatcher

Range Map - Birds of the Eastern Woodland Forest

Photo Credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/drewweber/

Description: Measuring about eight inches in length, the Great Crested Flycatcher has a brownish head (which may or may not appear crested), a gray face and throat, yellow underparts, brown wings with a bright rufous patch, and an olive-colored back. Males and females are similar. Unlike most flycatchers, the Great Crested Flycatcher nests in natural tree cavities and man-made nesting boxes. Its nests are often lined with snakeskins to scare away potential predators. Usually, the Great Crested Flycatcher stays high in the treetops. Its familiar "weeeep" call is often heard before the bird is seen.

Diet: The Great Crested Flycatcher eats insects and occasionally fruit.

Range: The Great Crested Flycatcher breeds in the eastern and central United States and southeastern and south central Canada. It winters in Mexico, the Caribbean islands, Central America, and northwestern South America.

Habitat: Deciduous and mixed woodlands, orchards, wooded parks.

Status: The Great Crested Flycatcher is common.

mrnussbaum.com copyright 2005-2006 by Greg Nussbaum. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy | Advertise on this site

 

 

 

 
1 1