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Ovenbird

A Mid-summer and Mid-wood Bird

By Mike Hallworth
Published: April 2011
small brownish-olive bird with streaked chest

Many people may have heard or recognize the, teacher teacher teacher teacher song of the ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla) as they walk through forested areas in North America during the spring and summer months. The ovenbird's song signifies late spring and early summer as they arrive to northern forests in late April and early May from their wintering grounds in southern Florida, Central America, and the Caribbean.

Males sing loud and often during the first few weeks after arriving to the northern forests to attract mates and let neighboring males know they have claimed a piece of forest for themselves. During this time they sing so loudly that Robert Frost wrote of their song in a poem titled "The Oven Bird" writing:

"There is a singer everyone has heard,
Loud, a mid-summer and a mid-wood bird,
Who makes the solid tree trunks sound again."

They have another type of song in addition to the teacher teacher teacher teacher that most people recognize. Male ovenbirds also sing a warble song with a few recognizable teacher teacher notes mixed in when chasing off males intruding into their territories and also during an aerial above-the-forest canopy flight usually around dusk.

The purpose of this aerial flight and their warbling song is not well understood. It may help attract mates or let neighboring ovenbirds know of their territory boundaries.

Although ovenbirds sing a familiar song, getting a good look at an ovenbird is not always easy. They have an impressively loud song, but their plumage is drab, at least in comparison to other North American warbler species. This drab plumage may act as camouflage as walk along the forest floor in search of arthropods in the leaf litter.

Good luck trying to determine whether you're looking at a male or female ovenbird. Unless the male is singing or the female is sitting on the nest, there is no way to tell them apart by looking at them. Ovenbirds are monochromatic, unlike many other North American warblers, both males and females look alike.

small brownish-olive bird in front of nest on ground

Drab plumage is not the only characteristic that makes the ovenbird well suited for life on the forest floor. Ovenbirds also place their nests on the ground, usually in open areas with little to no cover, but their nests are not as easy to find as you may think. Ovenbird females build a nest that is quite unique from other North American warblers in that she builds a "cover" for the cup of the nest.

When the nest is complete it resembles a Dutch oven: hence the name ovenbird. In these nests females lay between 3 and 5 eggs. Twelve days later the eggs hatch, and 8 days after hatching, the young leave the nest. Nesting on the forest floor comes with the risk of predation from a whole suite of species including squirrels, chipmunks, and other ground-dwelling nest predators.

small brownish-headed black bird

Habitat fragmentation has deleterious effects on ovenbirds during the breeding season. The ovenbird requires large tracts of intact forest to breed successfully. Habitat fragmentation affects ovenbird reproductive success by increasing the number of predators, increasing brood parasitism by brown-headed cowbirds (Molothrus ater) and reducing a male's ability to attract mates in small forest fragments. Although affected by forest fragmentation, the ovenbird breeding population has remained stable as identified by the Breeding Bird Survey.

Ovenbirds are only able to raise one successful nest a season. However if their first nest fails, they will attempt re-nests through the breeding season. By late July the successful nests will have fledged young and unsuccessful pairs will stop trying to re-nest. During this time they are difficult to detect as they are no longer singing and are preparing to migrate back to their wintering locations in the tropics.

Like other migratory warblers, ovenbirds spend the majority of the year in their tropical wintering areas. Not much is known about ovenbirds during this time of their life cycle. At one location in Jamaica, they forage along the dry forest floor of limestone forest in search ants.

They are quiet as they walk along the ground only chipping when they encounter other ovenbirds. Some ovenbirds hold territories during the winter while others do not. The ovenbirds that don't hold territories float around in search of areas with good food sources, such as ants and other arthropods.

Identifying where a breeding bird spends the winter months or vice versa has been challenging. Recently, technological advances have allowed researchers to determine where breeding ovenbirds spend the winter, and vice versa. Ovenbirds are large enough to carry archival light-level geolocators which record the light levels the unit experiences throughout the day.

These units are carried by the birds attached by a harness that sits on their back, something like a backpack. Unfortunately, the light-level data are only obtained by recapturing the same bird the following year. When the ovenbirds are recaptured, these data are downloaded and researchers are able to identify where (within 150 kilometers or so) the bird wintered and/or bred.

These data give researchers valuable information about the degree of connectedness between wintering and breeding locations which will add valuable knowledge about the life history of ovenbirds as well as help managers make informed conservation decisions. Stay tuned to find out which tropical location ovenbirds breeding in the White Mountains of New Hampshire spend their winter!

Comments (19):

  1. it is very coolto no

    4/20/2011

  2. I think that the birds have a beutaful sounds!

    4/27/2011

  3. oh they are so pleasant to hear, i would like to sleep with this music in my hear, very interesting, i would like to have this birds with me wherever i go

    5/4/2011

  4. that is so peaceful

    5/6/2011

  5. Great job and very interesting.

    5/9/2011

  6. it is very cool to know what they loom like and how they sing...very peaceful

    5/12/2011

  7. have heard this birdsong all my life but was totally unaware of the source. thanks for broadening my radar.

    5/14/2011

  8. When I moved to DC last year, I heard the most beautiful birdsong..... at 3 a.m.! I've asked many people, but no one could tell me the name of this fantastic little bird. I caught a glimpse of one....just as you described. It's absolutely thrilling to listen to their song. Thank you for identifying the singer! Dee Daly

    5/16/2011

  9. A very interesting and informative article about an adorable little bird that I was not familiar with and now I understand why they hate maple syrup!

    5/22/2011

  10. I love it. i have always heard it but never knew what bird made it. love your bird pichures. anna lael mcwhirter

    5/29/2011

  11. beautyfull yar

    5/31/2011

  12. Awesome. Can never seem to see one of these, though.

    8/1/2011

  13. i love it

    10/6/2011

  14. it is cool and i love the sounds

    10/6/2011

  15. wonderful.

    10/6/2011

  16. Awesome bird. Wish I could see it. Ovenbird sounds weird.

    10/26/2011

  17. so cute

    12/2/2011

  18. the birds are so cute 2 cute lov it

    12/2/2011

  19. it is awesome but fascinating and educational!!!!!!

    12/2/2011