Eastern Wood-Pewee

Contopus virens Order: PASSERIFORMES Family: Flycatchers (Tyrannidae)
Eastern Wood-Pewee Head Illustration_2

Head

  • Bill Shape: All-purpose
  • Eye Color: Brown.
  • Head Pattern: Plain
  • Crown Color: Olive-gray
  • Forehead Color: Olive-gray
  • Nape Color: Olive-gray
  • Throat Color: Dull White
  • Cere color: No Data
Splitbar

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Clingers Only Feeder
Weather resistant inexpensive feeder is ideal for small birds.
Suet Delight
Easy to hang and maintain, holds all kinds of packaged suet.
Ultimate Woodpecker Feeder
Only allows woodpeckers to feed made of Inland Cedar.
The No-No Copper Feeder
Beautiful copper feeder holds 2.5 lbs of sunflower seeds.
Attracting Clingers
Eastern Wood-Pewee Body Illustration_2

Body

  • Length Range: 16 cm (6.25 in)
  • Weight: 14 g (0.5 oz)
  • Size: Size 2. Small (5 - 9 in)
  • Color: White, Gray, Olive
  • Underparts: Dull white with olive-gray breast, sides and flanks.
  • Upperparts: Olive-gray
  • Back Pattern: Solid
  • Belly Pattern: Solid
  • Breast Pattern: Solid
Eastern Wood-Pewee Flight Illustration_2

Flight

  • Flight Pattern: Slow flight with shallow wing beats.
  • Wingspan Range: 27 cm (10.5 in)
  • Wing Shape: Pointed-Wings
  • Tail Shape: Squared Tail
  • Tail Pattern: Solid
  • Upper Tail: Dark olive-gray
  • Under Tail: Dark olive-gray
  • Leg Color: Black
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Family Flycatcher (Tyrannidae)_blue
Species Contopus virens
Length6.25 Inches
Wingspan10.5 Inches

Eastern Wood-Pewee

Eastern Wood-Pewee: Small flycatcher, gray-olive upperparts, pale gray underparts. Bill is dark except for yellow base of lower mandible. Wings are dark with two white bars. Black legs, feet. Feeds on insects, spiders and berries. Slow fluttering direct flight on shallow wing beats.

● Song: "pee-ah-wee", "pe-e-e-e-e-e"

● Foraging & Feeding: Eastern Wood-Pewee: Feeds on small flying insects, including flies, bees, butterflies, wasps, and beetles. Sallies out from an exposed perch to capture prey, usually returning to the same perch; occasionally takes insects from the ground or vegetation.

● Breeding & nesting: Eastern Wood-Pewee: Two to four white eggs with brown and purple blotches are laid in a shallow cup of woven grass, weeds, wool, bark strips, twigs, roots, mosses, pine needles, and leaves camouflaged with spider webs and lichens. Nest is built on a horizontal limb well out from trunk, frequently on a dead twig of a living tree. Incubation ranges from 12 to 13 days and is carried out by the female.

● Similar species: Eastern Wood-Pewee: Distinguished from Western Wood-Pewee by voice where ranges overlap.

Flight Pattern

Slow flight with shallow wing beats.
Eastern Wood-Pewee Body Illustration_2
● Range & Habitat: Eastern Wood-Pewee: Breeds from eastern Great Plains to the Atlantic Ocean, ranging from southern Canada (Saskatchewan to the Maritime Provinces) to northern Florida, the Gulf coast and central Texas. Spends winters in the tropics. Preferred habitats include northern hardwood, pine-oak, oak-hickory, bottomland hardwood, southern pine savannah, and midwestern forests; also found in orchards, parks, roadsides, and suburban areas.
BreedingMonogamous
PopulationFairly common
MigrationMigratory
Weight0.5 Ounces