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Size & Shape
The largest nuthatch, this is still a small bird with a large head and almost no neck. The tail is very short, and the long, narrow bill is straight or slightly upturned.
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Color Pattern
White-breasted Nuthatches are gray-blue on the back, with a frosty white face and underparts. The black or gray cap and neck frame the face and make it look like this bird is wearing a hood. The lower belly and under the tail are often chestnut.
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Behavior
White-breasted Nuthatches are agile birds that creep along trunks and large branches, probing into bark furrows with their straight, pointed bills. Like other nuthatches, they often turn sideways and upside down on vertical surfaces as they forage. They don’t lean against their tails the way woodpeckers do.
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Habitat
White-breasted Nuthatches are birds of mature woods and woodland edges. They’re particularly associated with deciduous stands, including maple, hickory, basswood, and oak, though they can be found in some coniferous forests.
Some photos I have taken near Murray Road of White Breasted Nuthatches in action:
White Breasted Nuthatch
October 19, 2011 by buffalostevep
Common in Newton County at river level or up on mountain tops and everywhere in between. One of my favorite birds to watch. The antics go on all day long. They spend a great deal of time going upside down, down a tree trunk; vocalizing the entire time. They are social; especially with fledglings. Sassy and also very pretty birds.
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