General
Black-throated Blue Warbler: Small warbler that is the most strikingly sexually dimorphic of all wood warblers. Male has dark blue upperparts, black throat and mask, white underparts, and prominent white wing patch at base of primaries. Female has olive-brown upperparts, olive-yellow underparts, white eyebrow, and white wing patch.
Range and Habitat
Black-throated Blue Warbler: Breeds from Ontario east to Quebec and Nova Scotia, south to Minnesota, Great Lakes, and Connecticut, and in the mountains to northern Georgia; spends winters in Gulf coast states and the Greater Antilles. Preferred habitats include mixed deciduous and evergreen woodlands with thick undergrowth, especially mountain laurel.
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"zwee-zwee-zwee-zweeee"
Interesting Facts
Black-throated Blue Warblers are ideal songbirds to study because their nests in the shrub layer are relatively easy to find and monitor, and their plumage allows one to readily determine the sex, and with practice, even the age of individuals.
They are among most trusting and tame of their family. If an observer moves very deliberately, a bird may be approached to within a few feet.
The sexes of the Black-throated Blue Warbler look so different that they were originally described as two different species.
A group of warblers has many collective nouns, including a "bouquet", "confusion", "fall", and "wrench" of warblers.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Dark-eyed Junco
Orange-crowned Warbler
Tennessee Warbler
Cerulean Warbler
American Redstart
Red-eyed Vireo
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