Beautiful Western Tanager
by Robert Bales
Title
Beautiful Western Tanager
Artist
Robert Bales
Medium
Photograph - Photo
Description
One of the many birds we saw at the Owyhee State Park which is in the south eastern part of Oregon.
A clear look at a male Western Tanager is like looking at a flame: an orange-red head, brilliant yellow body, and coal-black wings, back and tail. Females and immatures are a somewhat dimmer yellow-green and blackish. These birds live in open woods all over the West, particularly among evergreens, where they often stay hidden in the canopy. Nevertheless, they’re a quintessential woodland denizen in summertime, where they fill the woods with their short, burry song and low, chuckling call notes.
Western Tanagers forage slowly and methodically along branches and among leaves or needles of trees. They eat primarily insects, supplemented with small fruits in fall and winter. They sometimes catch insects in the air. In spring and summer , males sing their hoarse, American Robin-like song frequently.
Western Tanagers breed in coniferous forests, though they are not particularly choosy about which conifer species. They breed in juniper-pine mixtures at low elevation, up to spruce-fir near treeline. During migration, you may find them in nearly any shrubby or wooded habitats, and even in fairly open country. Their winter habitat in Middle America is generally in pine-oak woodland and forest edge.
From The Cornell Labs
Uploaded
September 8th, 2017
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Viewed 951 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/17/2024 at 10:56 AM
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Comments (15)
Miroslava Jurcik
Superb shot of this beautiful bird, pin to Kingdom Animalia, Oregon ! l/f/t
Robert Bales replied:
Thanks so much Miroslava for the wonderful comment and the very nice Pin and LFT!!
Johanna Hurmerinta
Congratulations! Your fantastic art is featured in the FIVE STAR ARTIST group. LF. Please archive the image in "NEW! Featured Images Archive & Thank You Thread (June 2017 Onwards)"