Breeding Location:
Bushes, shrubs, and thickets, Forest, Swamps
Breeding Type:
Monogamous
Breeding Population:
Egg Color:
Creamy white with sparse brown spots
Number of Eggs:
2 - 4
Incubation Days:
13 - 15
Egg Incubator:
Female
Nest Material:
Sticks, grass, dried stems, and bits of bark and cobweb., Lined with grass, hair, and plant down.
Migration:
Migratory
Recommended Products:
Overview
Acadian Flycatcher: Small flycatcher with olive-gray upperparts, pale gray throat, distinctive pale yellow eye-ring, white lower breast, yellow belly, undertail coverts. Wings are olive-gray with two buff wing bars. Long broad-based bill with yellow-orange lower mandible. Black legs, feet.
Range and Habitat
Acadian Flycatcher: Breeds from southern Minnesota east through southern New England, south to the Gulf Coast and central Florida. Spends winters in the tropics. Preferred habitats include beech, maple, and hemlock forests, usually under the canopy but also in clearings, often in wooded ravines.
Breeding and Nesting
Acadian Flycatcher: Two to four brown-spotted, creamy white eggs are laid in a sloppy cup nest made of sticks, grass, dried stems, bits of bark, and cobweb. Nest is lined with grass, hair, and plant down, and built on a horizontal limb well out from the trunk. Incubation ranges from 13 to 15 days and is carried out by the female.
Foraging and Feeding
Acadian Flycatcher: Eats a wide variety of flying insects. Perches in shade on lower to mid-level branches in thick trees to await food, then dashes out to snatch insect in mid-air.
Readily Eats
Meal Worms
Vocalization
Acadian Flycatcher: Call is a soft "peace" or "peeet." On breeding grounds, male utters a mechanical "ti,ti,ti,ti" while moving from one perch to another.
Similar Species
Acadian Flycatcher: Least Flycatcher has smaller bill, more brown-olive upperparts, gray white underparts, bright white wing-bars and eye-ring, and different voice.
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