Breeding Location:
Forests
Breeding Type:
Monogamous
Breeding Population:
Egg Color:
White, sometimes with red brown spots
Number of Eggs:
5 - 12
Incubation Days:
14
Egg Incubator:
Female
Nest Material:
Moss, Lined with animal fur, feathers, shredded bark.
Migration:
Nonmigratory
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Overview
Mountain Chickadee: Medium chickadee, gray upperparts, black cap and bib, white cheeks and nape, and pale gray underparts. The wings and tail are gray. Bill is black, legs and feet are gray-black. It has a white eyebrow, which differentiates it from all other North American chickadees.
Range and Habitat
Mountain Chickadee: Resident from interior British Columbia south through Rocky Mountain and Cascade-Sierra chains to southern California and western Texas. Preferred habitats include dry coniferous forests, especially Ponderosa and lodgepole pines. During the summer can also be found in high-elevation aspen forests. In winter, sometimes inhabits juniper stands and river bottoms.
Breeding and Nesting
Mountain Chickadee: Five to twelve white eggs, sometimes with red brown spots, are laid in a nest made of coarse materials such as moss, lined with plant material including grass, moss, feathers, and hair, and built in a tree or snag from 1 to 23 feet above the ground, or in a nest box. Incubation ranges from 11 to 12 days and is carried out by both parents
Foraging and Feeding
Mountain Chickadee: Eats insects, spiders, eggs of both, conifer seeds, and berries; gleans food from foliage and tree bark, often by hanging upside down.
Readily Eats
Suet, Sunflower Seed
Vocalization
Mountain Chickadee: Song is a three or four note downward whistle of "fee-bee-bay" or "fee-bee-fee-bee." Call is a throaty "chick-adee-adee-adee."
Similar Species
Mountain Chickadee: Bridled Titmouse has a tuft and black line encircling the face, connecting the eye-line with the bib. Black-capped Chickadee lacks white eyebrow, lower edge of black bib more ragged, and has pale olive-brown wash on sides, flanks, and lower belly.
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