MacGillivray's Warbler: Medium-sized warbler with olive-green upperparts and yellow underparts. White eye-ring is broken and slate gray hood extends to upper breast where it darkens to black. Female is similar but paler. Winter adult has paler hood and less distinct eye-ring.
MacGillivray's Warbler: Breeds from Alaska and the Yukon south to California and central New Mexico. Spends winters in the tropics. Preferred habitats include coniferous forest edges, burns, brushy cuts, or second-growth alder thickets and streamside growth.
"swee-eet, swee-eet, swee-eet, peachy, peachy, peachy"
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Family
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Species
Oporornis tolmiei
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Length5.25
Inches
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Wingspan8.25
Inches
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MacGillivray's Warbler: Medium-sized warbler with olive-green upperparts and yellow underparts. White eye-ring is broken and slate gray hood extends to upper breast where it darkens to black. It forages for insects on or close to the ground. As it hops, it often flicks its tail from side to side.
● Song: "swee-eet, swee-eet, swee-eet, peachy, peachy, peachy"
● Foraging & Feeding: MacGillivray's Warbler: Eats mostly insects; forages close to the ground in dense thickets.
● Breeding & nesting: MacGillivray's Warbler: Three to six brown marked, white to creamy white eggs are laid in a grassy cup nest built close to the ground in a bush or tall weeds. Eggs are incubated for 11 days by the female.
● Similar species: MacGillivray's Warbler: Mourning Warbler lacks broken eye-ring. Females and juveniles of the two species are difficult to tell apart and are best separated by range. Connecticut Warbler is larger and has complete eye-rings.
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BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
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PopulationFairly common
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MigrationMigratory
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Weight0.4
Ounces
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