Forest edge, Mountains
Monogamous, Solitary nester
Fairly common to common
White with small brown spots and blotches
3 - 4
11 - 12
Female
Leaves, stems, down, bits of fabric, and cocoon material with lining of mammal hair and feathers.
Migratory
Grace's Warbler: Medium flycatching warbler with gray upperparts and black streaks on back and crown. Underparts are white with dark streaks on sides and yellow on throat and breast. Yellow eyebrows turn white behind eyes. Wings are dark with two white bars. Tail is dark with white outer feathers.
Grace's Warbler: Breeds from southern Nevada, Utah, and Colorado southward along the mountains of the southwest. Spends winters south of the U.S.-Mexico border. Preferred habitats include coniferous or mixed forests.
Grace's Warbler: Three or four white eggs, with brown spots and splotches, are laid in a small cup nest made of rootlets and bark shreds, lined with hair or feathers, and built in a conifer, some 20 to 60 feet above the ground. Incubation ranges from 11 or 12 days and is carried out by the female.
Grace's Warbler: Eats mostly insects; forages in the upper canopy, gleaning food from leaves and branches of pines, hemlocks, and spruces. Occasionally catches flying insects in mid-air.
Sugar Water, Fruit, Nut Pieces
Grace's Warbler: Song consists of two slightly differing phrases "chew chew chew chew chew chew chee chee chee." Call is a soft, slurred "chip"; flight note is a very high, thin "sip."
Grace's Warbler: None in range.
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Family
Wood Warbler (Parulidae)_blue
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Species
Dendroica graciae
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Length4.75
Inches
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Wingspan7.75
Inches
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Grace's Warbler: Medium flycatching warbler with gray upperparts and black streaks on back and crown. Underparts are white with dark streaks on sides and yellow on throat and breast. Yellow eyebrows turn white behind eyes. Wings are dark with two white bars. Tail is dark with white outer feathers.
● Song: "chew chew chew chew chee chee chee", "chip", "sip"
● Foraging & Feeding: Grace's Warbler: Eats mostly insects; forages in the upper canopy, gleaning food from leaves and branches of pines, hemlocks, and spruces. Occasionally catches flying insects in mid-air.
● Breeding & nesting: Grace's Warbler: Three or four white eggs, with brown spots and splotches, are laid in a small cup nest made of rootlets and bark shreds, lined with hair or feathers, and built in a conifer, some 20 to 60 feet above the ground. Incubation ranges from 11 or 12 days and is carried out by the female.
● Similar species: Grace's Warbler: None in range.
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BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
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PopulationFairly common to common
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MigrationMigratory
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Weight0.3
Ounces
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