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Pygmy Nuthatch Distribution Map - Bird Distribution generated from Montana Bird Distribution Database Pygmy nuthatch call - Copyright by Borror Laboratory of Bioacoustics, Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, all rights reserved.
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About this Guide

The Montana Animal Field Guide is the product of a partnership between Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks and the Natural Heritage Program. The Natural Heritage Program was established by the Montana State Legislature in 1983, the program is located in the Montana State Library, where it is part of the Natural Resource Information System.


Pygmy Nuthatch
Pygmy Nuthatch
Pygmy Nuthatch

Sitta pygmaea
(Sittidae)

Global Rank: G5
State Rank: S4

Agency Status
USFWS:
USFS: none
BLM: none
 

General Description
Small nuthatch, length 9-11 cm; mass 9.3-11 g. Sexes alike; immatures similar to adults. Crown gray-brown, dark eye-line marks cap. Pale spot on nape. Face white or buffy white, breast and belly dull to bright buff to buffy white, blending into bluish gray on sides. Back, rump, and tail bluish gray; base of middle pair of rectrices white. Wings brownish slate with coverts edged with bluish gray and primaries edged, more or less, with white. A bird of frenetic movement - head first, up tree, down tree, along branches, right-side up and upside down - accompanied by constant chatter. (Kingery, Hugh E., and Ghalambor, Cameron K., The Birds of North America, No. 567, 2001).

Habitat
Lives in long-needled pine forests - principally ponderosa pines. Reaches its highest densities in mature pine forests little affected by logging, firewood collection, and snag removal (Kingery and Ghalambor 2001).

Food Habits
Feeds mainly on weevils and leaf and bark beetles, but also eats pine seed. At feeders, eats suet and sunflower seeds (Kingery and Ghalambor 2001).

Ecology
Near Missoula, territory sizes ranged from 1.8 to 3.9 hectares. Adult conspecific helpers were observed at nests.

Reproductive Characteristics
A cavity nester, can excavate own cavity, but will use woodpecker holes and natural cavities. Eggs are short subelliptical to short-oval in shape; color white, sparsely and variably speckled or spotted chestnut red, reddish brown or purplish brown. Clutch size typically 5 - 9, average 7 eggs (Kingery and Ghalambor 2001). Near Missoula, mean clutch size was 7.3 eggs, the median date of the 1st egg was May 14, and females spent 80.7% of the time on the nest. Near Fortine, adults were feeding young on July 24.

Citations & Sources
  • Lenard, S., J. Carlson, J. Ellis, C. Jones, and C. Tilly. 2003. P. D. Skaar's Montana Bird Distribution, 6th Edition. Montana Audubon, Helena, Montana. vi + 144 pp.
  • NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life [web application]. 2002. Version 1.6 . Arlington, Virginia, USA: NatureServe. Available: http://www.natureserve.org/explorer. (Accessed: March 20, 2003 ).
 

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This page is from the Montana Animal Field Guide. [http://fwp.mt.gov/fieldguide/speciesDetail.aspx?elcode=ABPAZ01030]
Thursday, August 28, 2008 - 5:26:47 AM