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Homethreatened and/or endangered

Western Tanager Piranga ludoviciana

       

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Western Tanager, male
© Brian E. Small

© Lang Elliot/Naturesound.com (audio)

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Family: Thraupidae, Tanagers view all from this family

Description 6-7 1/2" (15-19 cm). Adult male has brilliant red head, bright yellow body, with black back, wings, and tail. 2 wing bars; smaller uppermost bar yellow, lower one white. Female is yellow-green above, yellow below; wing bars similar to male's.

Habitat Open coniferous forests.

Nesting 3-5 bluish-green, speckled eggs in a frail, shallow saucer nest of woven rootlets, weed stalks, and bark strips, "saddled" in the fork of a horizontal branch of Douglas fir, spruce, pine, or occasionally oak, usually at a low elevation.

Range Breeds from southern Alaska and Mackenzie southward. Winters in tropics.

Voice   Song is robin-like in its short fluty phrases, rendered with a pause in between. The quality is much hoarser, however. Call is a dry pit-r-ick.

Discussion In late spring and early summer the Western Tanager, first recorded on the Lewis and Clark expedition (1803-1806), feeds on insects, often like a flycatcher, from the high canopy. Later it feeds on berries and other small fruits.

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