Birdist Rule #71: Figure Out What Kind Of Chickadees You鈥檝e Got

Learn these seven species and you'll never go dateless again.

I鈥檝e probably said this about every bird at one time or another, but this time I mean it: Chickadees are the best birds. They鈥檙e just the best. They鈥檙e cute. They鈥檙e cool-looking. They make a lot of noise to let you know they鈥檙e coming. No one has ever been disappointed to see a chickadee.

But how much do you really know about the chickadee you see in your woods or at your feeder? Do you know, say, which of the seven chickadee species found in the United States it happens to be? You don鈥檛?! Do you realize how much cooler you鈥檇 be if you DID know? Maybe cool enough to finally make some headway with a certain special someone? Someone you鈥檝e always had a crush on but aren鈥檛 sure whether they feel the same about you? Well, rest easy, Romeo, I鈥檓 here to help. Let鈥檚 get detailed about chickadees.

Beginning with some puerile humor.

American chickadees are a part of the Paridae family, a group of more than 50 small, stocky birds that you generally find in the woods eating seeds or insects. Paridae species are found throughout the northern hemisphere and Africa, but they鈥檙e only called 鈥渃hickadees鈥 here. Everywhere else they鈥檙e called鈥攚ait for it鈥攖its.

Yes, giggle it out. It鈥檚 OK, I鈥檒l wait.

Done? Great鈥攏ow let鈥檚 move along and douse our little giggle fest with the cold, sobering water of historical fact. The word 鈥渢it鈥 has been used to describe any number of small animals, birds or otherwise鈥攕uch as, for example, the found in the U.K., or the endemic to the Philippines (sorry, I couldn鈥檛 help myself)鈥攇oing back as far back as . The word is apparently unrelated to the slang term for 鈥渂reast,鈥 which only (though variations on the word 鈥渢eat鈥 were found in Old English). So, anytime you feel a blush or giggle coming on because you have to talk about Coal Tits or something, just think of them as Coal Smalls and pull yourself together.

And just so we鈥檙e clear, the reason they鈥檙e chickadees here and tits everywhere else isn鈥檛 because our Puritan settlers couldn鈥檛 say such a naughty word. Actually, I鈥檓 not really sure why the change was made. John James 约炮视频 referred to what we now call chickadees as 鈥,鈥 another reference to their that ending up sticking for a American species in the Paridae family.  At some point some of these birds began being referred to as 鈥渃hickadees鈥 based on an imitation of a of the Black-capped Chickadee.

I, for one, am in favor of the name change to 鈥渃hickadee鈥濃攈owever it may have happened鈥攁s it is much more fitting for this group of little birds. First of all, they鈥檙e a distinct group that deserve their own name鈥攁ll the American chickadee species are round little birds with their faces quartered into black (or dark-colored) throats and caps, and bright white cheeks. Second, what a fun word! Say it: Chickadee! Chickadee! It鈥檚 an energetic, happy word, just like these birds. Tits be damned.

OK, now that we know that American chickadees are small, white-and-black-headed birds that are part of a worldwide family that is very seriously and un-funnily named tits, let鈥檚 move on to figure out which species of chickadee you鈥檝e got near you. You鈥檝e got to impress your crush, remember?

Like I said, there are seven different species of chickadees found in the United States, and chances are very good that no matter where you live, you鈥檝e got at least one species nearby. Let鈥檚 start with the hardest to find, to get them out of the way.

Gray-headed Chickadee

This is an easy one. You do NOT live near this bird. No one does. Limited to river valleys adjacent to the mountains of northern Alaska, the Gray-headed Chickadee is maybe the hardest-to-find breeding bird in the country. The only way to find one is by taking a in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, dodging wolves and grizzly bears and who knows what else. Trust me, that bird at your feeder is not a Gray-Headed Chickadee.

Mexican Chickadee

Do you live in the Chiricahua Mountains of Arizona or the Animas Mountains of New Mexico? You don鈥檛? OK, well, then you aren鈥檛 seeing Mexican Chickadees. They鈥檙e a cute little species, but their American range only extends to those two ranges. Done.

Boreal Chickadee

Like the extremely similar-looking Gray-headed Chickadee, the Boreal Chickadee lives in the far north鈥攖he boreal forests, to be exact, which extend out of Alaska (thankfully) and across Canada, dipping into northern Minnesota, Wisconsin, and northern New England. Boreal Chickadees are easily differentiated from the Black-capped Chickadee, which also lives in these places, by the brown cap that contrasts well with the black throat. I love Boreal Chickadees, primarily because when I see one it means that I am home in Maine. So, if you鈥檙e in northern New England or the upper reaches of the Great Lakes states, check for brown caps on those chickadees.

Chestnut-backed Chickadee

If you live in the Pacific Northwest, northern California, or the Idaho panhandle, you might be neighbors with these guys. Chestnut-Backed Chickadees are our most garishly colored chickadee, with their back and sides painted with a lovely rusty chestnut. There may be other species of chickadee in those areas, but the reddish coloring is an easy giveaway.

Mountain Chickadee

If you live in the Rocky Mountains or any of the mountains farther west, you might have Mountain Chickadees. Good for you. Mountain Chickadees are easy to identify because they鈥檙e the only chickadee with a white eyebrow stripe just above their eye. You can鈥檛 miss it. 鈥淚s that a chickadee?鈥 Your crush will say. 鈥淵es,鈥 you鈥檒l reply, wisely, 鈥渁nd that white eyebrow stripe tells me it鈥檚 a Mountain Chickadee.鈥 Your crush will be speechless with admiration.

Carolina Chickadee

If you live in the American South, Delaware or Maryland, you鈥檝e got Carolina Chickadees. If you see a chickadee, it鈥檚 a Carolina Chickadee. Alright? But wait鈥

Black-capped Chickadee

Black-capped Chickadee is our most widespread species, and looks nearly identical to the Carolina Chickadee. Black-caps are easily separable from the other chickadee species where their ranges overlap based on what I鈥檝e written above, but in places where they overlap with Carolinas, things get real sticky. Both birds are gray backed, have some buffy wash on the sides, and have the classic black-and-white chickadee facial pattern. There are a few minor differences鈥擝lack-caps are about a half inch larger, have more white on the nape and in the wings鈥攂ut those are tough to tell in the field.  One possible method of differentiation when you鈥檙e in the narrow zone of overlap between the two species 鈥 Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and New Jersey 鈥 is their voice: The song of the Carolina Chickadee is (typically) a four-part, evenly-spaced set of high-pitched notes: 鈥溾 The Black-capped song, on the other hand, is typically two notes: 鈥溾  

Learning those songs will be helpful, but still might not get you to an answer. In fact, if you鈥檙e seeing chickadees in the Black-capped/Carolina overlap zone you might not be able to land on a single species at all. Birds living close to each other are able to learn each others鈥 songs, so there goes that tip. And Carolinas and Black-caps in the overlap zone even mate with each other, producing hybrid offspring with traits of both species. Look, if Black-caps and Carolinas can鈥檛 even tell each other apart, what chance do you have? If you know you鈥檙e in the range of one or the other of these chickadees, you鈥檙e fine. If you鈥檙e in the overlap zone? Forget about it. Maybe use it as an opportunity to talk passionately to your crush about how love knows no bounds? Or maybe give a wink and ask if he or she would like to join you in forming an 鈥渙verlap zone鈥 of your own? No, don鈥檛 do that one.

So there you have it! Now you鈥檙e armed with some sexy knowledge that鈥檒l make you irresistible to your unrequited love. I promise. Please invite me to your wedding.