Chestnut-backed Chickadee

Parus rufescens
STANFORD LOCATIONS:

Common resident throughout campus, nesting in natural cavities and old woodpecker holes in a variety of trees and habitat types. Territories often adjoin those of the Oak Titmouse, with which the chickadee competes for nest sites and, to some extent, food -- though chickadees tend to forage more often on finer foliage than titmice, which forage more frequently on branches. Heads often look blackish.
 
Nest
Location
Nest
Type
Eggs
Mating System
Dev.
Parental Care
Primary &
2ndary Diet
Foraging
Strategy
?
I: ? DAYS
ALTRICIAL
TREE
1.5 feet - 12 feet
(To 80 feet)
?
6-7
(5-9)
MONOG
F: ? DAYS
?
SEEDS
FRUIT
BARK GLEAN

BREEDING: Conif and mixed conif-decid forest, primarily in humid regions. ? broods.
DISPLAYS: ?
NEST: In natural or excavated cavity; lined with moss, fur, plant down, feathers.
EGGS: White, sparsely marked with reddish-browns. 0.6" (16 mm).
DIET: Includes spiders and their eggs; seeds include mostly conif.
CONSERVATION: Winter resident.
NOTES: Bird on nest hisses and flutters wings in response to disturbance. May compete for food resources with ecologically similar Hutton's Vireo where both are resident. In winter, form mixed-species flocks with other chickadees, kinglets, nuthatches, warblers, bushtits, Brown Creepers, and juncos.
ESSAYS: Bird Guilds; Bathing and Dusting; Mixed Species Flocking.
REFERENCES: Hertz et al., 1976; Wagner, 1981.

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Except for Stanford Locations, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988).