Audubon's Oriole: Large oriole with yellow-green upperparts, black hood extending onto upper breast, and lemon-yellow underparts. Wings are black with a single white bar and white-edged feathers. Tail is all black. Female is similar but duller. Juvenile resembles female but has olive tail, gray-brown wings and lacks the dark hood.
Audubon's Oriole: Occurs in the Rio Grande Valley of southernmost Texas. From southern Texas, range extends south along the Gulf of Mexico through the Mexican states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, San Luis Potosi, Veracruz, Hidalgo, and Queretaro. Preferred habitats include riparian thickets, scrub, forest undergrowth, and semiarid pine-oak woodlands.
"peut-pou-it"
The Audubon's Oriole is the only yellow oriole to have a black hood and a yellow back.
It was formerly known as the Black-headed Oriole, but this name was changed in 1983 to avoid confusion with an Old World group of species in the genus Oriolus, the true orioles.
It is a favored host of the nest-parasitic Bronzed Cowbird. In Texas, more than half of all nests have cowbird eggs in them.
A group of orioles are collectively known as a "pitch" and a "split" of orioles.
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Family
Orioles and Blackbirds (Icteridae)_blue
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Species
Icterus graduacauda
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Length8.5 - 9.5
Inches
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Wingspan14
Inches
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Audubon's Oriole: Large oriole with yellow-green upperparts, black hood extending onto upper breast, and lemon-yellow underparts. Wings are black with a single white bar and white-edged feathers. Tail is all black. Swift and direct flight with rapid wing beats low under the canopy.
● Song: "peut-pou-it"
● Foraging & Feeding: Audubon's Oriole: Eats insects and some fruits; frequently forages on the ground.
● Breeding & nesting: Audubon's Oriole: Three to five brown- or purple-speckled, black-scrawled, pale blue or gray eggs are laid in a woven nest made of fresh grass; nest hangs attached by top and side from small vertical terminal branch, 6 to 14 feet above the ground. Incubation ranges from 12 to 14 days and is carried out by the female.
● Similar species: Audubon's Oriole: Scott's Oriole has black, not yellow, back. Other U.S. orioles do not have a black hood.
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BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
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PopulationUncommon and local
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MigrationNonmigratory
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Weight0.8
Ounces
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