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Western Kingbird


© Fred J. Kane

Western kingbird Tyrannus verticalis

Previously The Western Kingbird was called "The Arkansas Kingbird."

The adult Western Kingbird stands about seven inches tall as an adult and has the largest population of North American yellow-bellied kingbirds. This bird has a big pale gray head and a large bill. Their tail is not forked and the outside tail feathers are ivory. Around its eye is a dark colored eyeliner, a yellow breast and its throat and upper part of its chest are dull colored. On the top of its head is a small red mark and a black tail. Both the male and female Western Kingfisher have similar colored plumage while the young birds have duller colored plumage.

The bird prefers open habitats of open country around ranches, farms, areas next to flowing water, grasslands, desert scrub, pastures, and savannahs always with trees, or shrubs. If nature doesn't provide their preferred habitat they will inhabit tall man-made structures in villages. Bird watchers often see this bird sitting on fences and posts, tall weeds, bare branches of a tree or low wires from which they fly out to capture insects. From these different perches the bird flies out or drops to the ground to catch insect prey. Almost half of the nests were on man-made structures, especially telephone poles. In the city of Houston they nest at or near electric power substations. Because Western Kingbirds often nest near and forage in cultivated lands, pesticides becomes a possible threat to their lives.

Western Kingbirds nest throughout all parts of Texas except in the far eastern portion of the state. When the Western Kingbird stays in Oklahoma it is in the summer months only. It spends most of the winter months in Florida and Mexico to Southwest Costa Rica. The Western Kingbird breeds in Western North America from Canada south to Mexico.

The first Western Kingbirds in fall normally appear in September or October and the last ones are seen in November and some in December Courting- The male when courting darts erratically into the air wavering, calling and beating its feathers.

The birds build their open cup shaped nest in the middle of a bush or cottonwood, oak, sycamore or willow tree about five to forty feet above the ground on a horizontal branch. Also they will build a nest of weeds, twigs and string on a utility pole, water tower or barn and line the nest with wool, cotton, hair or fine feathers.

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