Skip Navigation

Go
Species Search:
FieldGuidesthreatened and/or endangered search resultsthreatened and/or endangered

Brown Creeper Certhia americana

       

enlarge +

Brown Creeper
© Rob Curtis/The Early Birder

© Lang Elliot/Naturesound.com (audio)

All Images

 

Get Our Newsletters

 

Advanced Search

Family: Certhiidae, Creepers view all from this family

Description 5-5 3/4" (13-15 cm). Smaller than a sparrow. A slender, streaked, brown bird, tinged with buff on flanks, usually seen creeping up tree trunks, using long, stiff tail for support.

Habitat Deciduous and mixed woodlands.

Nesting 6 or 7 white eggs, lightly speckled with brown, in a cup of bark shreds, feathers, sticks, and moss, usually placed against a tree trunk behind a peeling slab of bark.

Range Breeds from Alaska, Ontario, and Newfoundland southward throughout western mountains, Great Lakes region, North Carolina, and New England. Winters in breeding range and south to Gulf Coast and Florida.

Voice   A high-pitched, lisping tsee; song a tinkling, descending warble.

Discussion This inconspicuous bird is most often detected by its soft, lisping call as it works its way up a tree trunk, probing the bark for insects, always moving in an upward direction, circling tree trunks in spirals, then dropping down to the base of the next tree. In late winter and spring, one may sometimes hear its song -- a thin, musical warble.

Follow us on Twitter

 

 

 

©2007 eNature.com