9 Types of Vireos in Colorado (With Identification Tips and Habitat Notes)

Colorado is home to some of the most diverse birding habitat in North America, and the vireo family takes full advantage of it. From pinyon-juniper woodlands draped across the Western Slope to cottonwood-lined river corridors cutting through the plains, these small but vocal songbirds occupy nearly every ecological niche the state has to offer. Nine species have been recorded here — some nesting reliably each summer, others passing through briefly on migration, and at least one showing up […]

https://animalofthings.com/vireos-in-colorado/

8 Types of Vireos in Florida (With Identification Tips for Each)

Florida's layered landscapes — from dense mangrove thickets along the Keys to towering live oak canopies in the Panhandle — make the state one of the most rewarding places in the eastern United States to encounter vireos. These small, methodical songbirds move deliberately through foliage, often heard long before they're seen, filling forests and shrublands with surprisingly loud, repetitive songs for their size. Whether a birder is tracking a rare vagrant blown in from the Caribbean or […]

https://animalofthings.com/vireos-in-florida/

Today's #BirdOfTheDay theme is #MoodyFaces, alternate is #borbs Here's a twofer. Yellow throated Vireo, Kansas 2024 #Birds #NaturePhotography #Nature #Wildlife #BirdPhotography #Vireos #FlyoverCountry

The steady, simple notes of the Hutton’s Vireo (Vireo huttoni) are sung about once per second—sometimes for 10 minutes straight!

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Huttons_Vireo/overview

#birds #vireos #nature #wildlife #california

Hutton's Vireo Overview, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Hutton’s Vireo is a small greenish songbird of the Pacific Coast that bears an uncanny resemblance to a Ruby-crowned Kinglet, even down to the off-center eyering. Over most of its range, Hutton’s Vireos live in coniferous, evergreen oak, and mixed woodlands, where they forage methodically for insects fairly high in the trees. Hutton’s Vireos are unusual among North American vireos in that they don’t migrate. Individuals in coastal regions tend to be richer green and yellow than those in arid inland regions, which are grayer.

Bell's Vireos have returned to their dogwood thickets on our local prairies. And they love to tell you about it!

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