Cape May Warbler -- South Dakota Birds

Length: 4.75 inches Wingspan: 7 inches Seasonality: Migrant
ID Keys:  Male has crisp black stripes on yellow underparts, a chestnut ear patch, yellow on face and neck, and a large white wing patch.  Females similar but duller.

Cape May Warbler - Parula americanaCape May Warbler

Parula americana

The Cape May Warbler leads very different lives during the summer and winter months.  During the summer, they are most often found in spruce forests, where they have access to their favorite summer food item, spruce budworms.  They spend their winter on Caribbean islands and in southern Florida, where much of their diet may shift to nectar, sap, and juices obtained from puncturing fruit.  The Cape May Warbler is the only warbler with a tubular tongue adapted to feeding on nectar from flowers.

Habitat: During the summer breeding season, they are found in spruce forest, usually in open forests or near woodland edges.  During migration, they also prefer conifers but can be found in deciduous trees and brushy thickets as well.  They are often found in palm trees during their winter months in the Caribbean and Florida.

Diet: In the summer, they primarily feeds on insects, and are especially fond of spruce budworms.  During migration and in winter, they often feed on nectar, and juice obtained by piercing fruits.  They will also drink sap from sapsucker drill holes.

Breeding: Non-breeder in South Dakota

Song: A high-pitched see-see-see-see.

Migrations: Summers throughout central and southeastern Canada, the Great Lakes region, and northern New England.  Winters in the Caribbean and southern Florida.

Similar Species: Yellow-rumped Warbler, Palm Warbler

Status: Possibly has become more common in recent decades.  Populations seem to boom and bust with populations of spruce budworms, a favorite food item.

Cape May Warbler - South Dakota Range MapFurther Information: 1) USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter, Cape May Warbler

2) Cornell University's "All About Birds - Cape May Warbler"

3) E-nature.com: Cape May Warbler

Photo Information: May 13th, 2004 -- Aberdeen -- Dan Streifel.

 

 

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This page was last edited on 02/03/08