- Willow Flycatcher
Taxobox
name = Willow Flycatcher
status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
familia = Tyrannidae
genus = "Empidonax "
species = "E. traillii"
binomial = "Empidonax traillii"
binomial_authority = (Audubon,1828 )The Willow Flycatcher ("Empidonax traillii") is a small insect-eating
bird of thetyrant flycatcher family.Adults have brown-olive upperparts, darker on the wings and tail, with whitish underparts; they have an indistinct white eye ring, white wing bars and a small bill. The breast is washed with olive-grey. The upper part of the bill is grey; the lower part is orangish. At one time, this bird and the
Alder Flycatcher were considered to be a single species, Traill's Flycatcher.Their breeding habitat is
deciduous thickets, especiallywillow s and often near water, across theUnited States and southernCanada . They make a cup nest in a vertical fork in a shrub or tree.These birds migrate to
Mexico andCentral America , often selecting winter habitat near water.They wait on a perch near the top of a shrub and fly out to catch insects in flight, also sometimes picking
insect s from foliage while hovering. They may eat some berries.This bird's song is a sneezed "fitz-bew". The call is a dry "whit".
Listen
filename=Empidonax traillii.ogg
title="Empidonax traillii" call
description=Bird call of the Willow Flycatcher (Empidonax traillii)
format=Ogg This bird competes for habitat with the Alder Flycatcher where their ranges overlap. The southwestern subspecies of this bird, ("E. t. extimus") is declining due to habitat loss and is considered to be endangered.
The binomial commemorates the Scottish zoologist
Thomas Stewart Traill .References
* Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
External links
* http://www.usgs.nau.edu/swwf/ Southwestern Willow Flycatcher Site
* http://collections.ic.gc.ca/abnature/speciesatrisk/willow_flycatcher_abhome.htm Willow Flycatcher (Alberta)
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