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Bushtits

What bird comes in flocks of 20 or more?
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Male bushtit working on nest
© Mike Hamilton

Weighing about as much as four paperclips, Bushtits are smaller than many hummingbirds. And they take full advantage of their diminutive size. While larger insect-eaters forage on the upper surfaces of leaves, Bushtits hang beneath them, plucking all the tiny insects and spiders hiding out of sight. They pair off to nest. (This male Bushtit is working on his nest.) Where they live in Western suburbia, a flock of Bushtits can help rid a garden of harmful aphids and scale insects. Shun the pesticides and let these guys do the work!

BirdNote listeners are taking a once in a lifetime journey to South Africa, and you can join us! Trip details and more at BirdNote.org.

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BirdNote®

Bushtit - A Very Tiny Songbird

Written by Dennis Paulson

This is BirdNote!

[Bushtit calls, as from a flock]

Only a few songbirds anywhere in the world are as small as Bushtits. Weighing in at 5.3 grams – that’s about the weight of four paperclips – they are smaller than many hummingbirds. Take a close look at a Bushtit, and you’ll marvel at how tiny it is.

[Bushtits calling]

But Bushtits take full advantage of their diminutive size. While larger insect eaters forage on the upper surfaces of leaves and twigs, Bushtits hang beneath them. That gives them exclusive access to all the tiny insects and spiders protected from the rain and hiding out of sight of other birds. Watch a foraging flock of Bushtits, and you’ll have to smile. A shrub or small tree may be full of little brown, long-tailed birds hanging upside-down like Christmas-tree ornaments.

[Bushtit calls]

After they finish nesting, Bushtits go about in flocks of 30 or more. One bird after another flies from bush to bush, like a troop passing in review. Their quiet calling helps them keep track of one another.   

Where they live in suburbia, a flock of 30 Bushtits can do a great job of ridding a garden of harmful aphids and scale insects. Good things do come in small packages!

[Bushtit calls]

BirdNote listeners are taking a once in a lifetime journey to South Africa, and you can join us! Trip details and more at BirdNote.org.

###

Bird sounds provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Calls of flock [120213] recorded by G.A. Keller.
BirdNote's theme music was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and John Kessler.
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Chris Peterson
© 2014 Tune In to Nature.org     May 2017/2019    Narrator:  Mary McCann

ID#         BUSH-04-2012-05-25

 

Dennis Paulson
Writer
Mary McCann
Narrator
Mike Hamilton
Photographer
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Tagsnesting West

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Bushtit - More at All About BirdsReduce your use of pesticides. Learn how!Has BirdNote had an effect on your life? Let us know how!

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Bushtit (Psaltriparus minimus)

Psaltriparus minimus

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