Black-capped Vireo
At a Glance
             All bird guide text and rangemaps adapted from Lives of North American Birds by Kenn Kaufman© 1996, used by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. 
          
        
        Category      
      
        Perching Birds, Vireos
      
    
        IUCN Status      
      
        Vulnerable
      
    
        Habitat      
      
        Forests and Woodlands, Shrublands, Savannas, and Thickets
      
    
        Region      
      
        Plains, Texas
      
    
        Population      
      
        220.000
      
    Range & Identification
Migration & Range Maps
     Generally arrives in Texas in April, departs in September. Migrates toward the southwest in fall, wintering along west coast of Mexico. 
  
  
Description
     4 1/2 -4 3/4" (11-12 cm). Male's black hood contrasts with white spectacles and throat, red eyes. Greenish back, yellow wash on sides, with two wing-bars. Female has slaty, not black, head; suggests Blue-headed Vireo but smaller, with much darker head. 
  
  
        Size      
      
        About the size of a Sparrow
      
    
        Tail Shape      
      
        Notched, Square-tipped
      
    Songs and Calls
     Harsh and varied phrases, sometimes musical. 
  
  
Habitat
     Oak scrub, brushy hills, rocky canyons. Breeds on hot dry hillsides with dense thickets of brush, especially scrub oaks, often with many openings or gaps rather than solid cover. Winters in Mexico in dense thickets and woodland edges, especially in foothills and lowlands. 
  
  
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    Behavior
Eggs
     3-4, rarely 2-5. White, unmarked (most other vireos lay spotted eggs). Incubation, by both parents, averages about 15 days, surprisingly long for small size of bird. 
  
  
Young
     Both parents feed nestlings. Young leave the nest about 10-12 days after hatching, and may be cared for by parents for more than another month. Sometimes male is left to care for first brood while female begins 2nd nesting attempt. 
  
  
Feeding Behavior
     Forages more actively than most vireos, moving among branches and twigs in dense cover, sometimes hanging upside down like a chickadee to take items from underside of foliage. 
  
  
Diet
     Mostly insects, some berries. Feeds mainly on insects in summer; diet not known in detail, but eats many caterpillars, beetles, small grasshoppers and crickets, and others, as well as spiders. Also eats some berries and small fruits. Winter diet poorly known, but may include more berries. 
  
  
Nesting
     Male defends territory by singing frequently through much of breeding season. In courtship, male sings while following female; may also perform short song-flight. Nest: Placed in low scrubby oak or other dense shrub, usually 2-6' above ground, rarely higher. Both parents help build nest, a small hanging cup suspended in the horizontal fork of a twig. Nest is made of grass, strips of bark, weeds, leaves, bound together with spiderwebs; inside is lined with fine grass. 
  
  
Conservation
Conservation Status
     Vulnerable. Disappeared from many former haunts by the 1980s owing to loss and degradation of habitat and heavy nest parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds. Listed as endangered in 1987. Cooperative efforts by federal and state agencies and private landowners helped to reverse its decline. By 2018, recovery efforts were successful enough that the vireo was removed from the endangered species list. 
  
  
Climate Threats Facing the Black-capped Vireo
    Choose a temperature scenario below to see which threats will affect this species as warming increases. The same climate change-driven threats that put birds at risk will affect other wildlife and people, too.
  
  
 
       
       
      