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Indigo Bunting

Passerina cyanea

Photo by DonnaPomeroy
Published on Project Noah
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27.3215, -82.3612

Field Notes

Description:

The all-blue male Indigo Bunting sings with cheerful gusto and looks like a scrap of sky with wings. Sometimes nicknamed "blue canaries," these brilliantly colored yet common and widespread birds whistle their bouncy songs through the late spring and summer all over eastern North America. Look for Indigo Buntings in weedy fields and shrubby areas near trees, singing from dawn to dusk atop the tallest perch in sight or foraging for seeds and insects in low vegetation.

Habitat:

Look for Indigo Buntings in weedy and brushy areas, especially where fields meet forests. They love edges, hedgerows, overgrown patches, and brushy roadsides. When not singing from the tallest perches in the area, they can often be seen foraging among seed-laden shrubs and grasses.

Notes:

These photos are of a first year male.

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (7)

Pretty colors! Looks like it had been painted
Wow it looks like a sparrow before it gets the adult coloring very cool!
Thank you all. I sure wish I could see this young male in a few months, when the rest of his blue feathers grow in.

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