Golden-crowned Kinglet
| Regulus satrapa |
Order PASSERIFORMES - Family REGULIDAE |
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- Description
- Sound
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
- Cool Facts
- Full detailed species account
A tiny, continuously active bird, the Golden-crowned Kinglet is most frequently found in coniferous woods. Despite being barely larger than a hummingbird, the kinglet winters northward to Canada and Alaska.
Description
- Tiny bird.
- Dull, olive-green on back.
- Whitish below.
- Wingbars.
- Black stripe through eyes, white eyebrow.
- Crown yellow, orange centered in male (often hidden), bordered in black.
- Short tail.
- In constant motion, continually flicking its wings.
- Size: 8-11 cm (3-4 in)
- Wingspan: 14-18 cm (6-7 in)
- Weight: 4-8 g (0.14-0.28 ounces)
Sex Differences
Sexes similar, but male with orange center to yellow crown (often hidden).
Sound
Song a series of rising thin, high-pitched notes, followed by a lower musical warble. Call a short series (usually three) of very high notes, "tsee, tsee, tsee."
»listen to songs of this species
Conservation Status
Common. Declining in West, increasing in East.
Other Names
Le Roitelet à couronne dorée (French)
Reyezuelo de Oro, Reyezuelo Moñidorado, Reyezuelo de Coronilla Dorada, Reyezuelo Coronadorada (Spanish)
Cool Facts
- Formerly breeding almost exclusively in the remote,
boreal spruce-fir forests of North America, the diminutive Golden-crowned
Kinglet has been expanding its breeding range southward into spruce plantings
in Pennsylvania, Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio.
- The Golden-crowned Kinglet usually raises two large
broods of young, despite the short nesting season of the northern boreal
forest.
- The female Golden-crowned Kinglet feeds her large
brood only on the first day after they leave the nest. She then starts laying
the second set of eggs while the male takes care of the first brood. Despite
having eight or nine young to feed, the male manages to feed them, himself,
and occasionally the incubating female too.
- Each of the Golden-crowned Kinglet's nostrils are
covered by a single, tiny feather.
Sources used to construct this page:
Ingold, J. L., and R. Galati. 1997. Golden-crowned Kinglet (Regulus satrapa). In The Birds of North America, No. 301 (A. Poole and F.
Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American
Ornithologists' Union, Washington, D.C.