Western Wood Pewee
They have two wing bars and a dark bill with yellow at the base of the lower mandible.
Western wood pewee. After these short flights it often but not always returns to the same perch. The Western Wood-Pewee is a small nondescript gray bird with two lighter wing-bars and no eye-ring. The bird also sings at dawn and dusk including late in the evening when most other songbirds are quiet.
The western wood pewee Contopus sordidulus is a small tyrant flycatcherAdults are gray-olive on the upperparts with light underparts washed with olive on the breast. Nondescript plumage with dull wingbars. However they ordinarily dwell in a different habitat than that which Black Phoebes prefer.
Western Wood-Pewees use a variety of habitats including open coniferous forests wooded streams and forest edges. They sit tall when perched showing off their partially buttoned gray vest while singing a burry and nasal version of their. Small and plain but often very common this flycatcher of western woodlands is best known by its voice.
It has a whitish throat dark bill and slight crest. The nest is a deep cup placed toward the tip of a high branch and it is made of lichens and plant fibers tied together with spider webbing. It catches insects in flight.
Drab grayish flycatcher found in forested areas and edges. Western Wood-pewee - Contopus sordidulusThe Western Wood-Pewee is a very plain gray bird with few distinguishing marks and is often only safely identified from similar Flycatchers by its voice and range. Relative abundance is the estimated number of individuals detected by an eBirder during a.
To find out where the song is coming from look up into the canopy and pay special attention to bare branches where this small upright flycatcher often perches. Open woodlands throughout the West come alive when Western Wood-Pewees return for the summer. Note the song which is a buzzy descending.