Orange-crowned Warbler

The Orange-crowned Warbler can be distinguished from other yellow songbirds by
its relative lack of field marks. The male's dusky orange crown is almost impossible to
see unless the bird is handled or seen at close range in good light. In addition, its call
is a single, slightly descending trill that is somewhat indistinct until you have heard it
a few times.
While foraging for insects, the Orange-crowned Warbler stays low in shrubs and
trees. It nests in open, deciduous woodlands, along rivers and wetlands and along
woodland edges in the city. Although it is primarily a migrant, this bird can be found
in small numbers in the winter months, when it is attracted to suet and peanut but-
ter at birdfeeders.

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