Narcissus Flycatcher
Narcissus Flycatcher: Small flycatcher, black head, nape, back, wings, and yellow-orange throat, upper breast, and eye stripe; rump is yellow. Wings have white wing patch on inner secondary coverts; tail is long, black. Belly and undertail coverts are white. Black legs, feet. Weak fluttering flight.
● Song:
"pee-pee-ppeyou-eeto-foyee"
● Foraging & Feeding:
Narcissus Flycatcher: Feeds mostly on insects. Perches on an open exposed tree branch perch, immobile and erect, until it spots prey; then flies out to catch it in flight and returns to its perch to eat. Forages from the lower to middle branches of trees or in the tops of shrubs.
● Breeding & nesting:
Narcissus Flycatcher: Four to seven white eggs with red flecks are laid in a tree cavity where nest is built by the female from leaves and plant fibers and lined with finer grasses. Incubation ranges from 12 to 13 days and is carried out by the female. Both sexes feed the young. These birds have one brood per year.
● Similar species:
Narcissus Flycatcher: These birds are vagrant migrants to Aleutian Islands and Alaska where no other bird is found with similar appearance.