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This bird is similar to the Eastern Phoebe.
The breeding habitat of the Eastern Phoebe is open woodland, farmland and suburbs, often near water.
The Eastern Phoebe's call is a sharp chip, and the song, from which it gets its name, is fee-bee.
The Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe) is a small passerine bird.
The Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe) is similar, particularly in the worn plumage after breeding.
New arrivals could include some of the earliest of the songbirds: the golden-crowned kinglet (above), the eastern phoebe (right) and the rusty blackbird.
Ophion flowed due east through the middle of eastern Phoebe, apparently gouging out a hundred-kilometer watercourse known as Confusion Canyon.
It lacks the buff hue usually present on the lighter parts of the Eastern Phoebe's plumage, and thus has always clearly defined and contrasting wing-bars.
For them, time is measured not by the clock or the calendar but by the first trill of the junco or the coming of the Eastern phoebe.
The Eastern Phoebe is occasionally host to the nest-parasitic Brown-headed Cowbird (Molothrus ater).
This has included the following species, each of which represents the sole British record: Ancient Murrelet, Eastern Phoebe and Eastern Towhee.
The Eastern Phoebe is also present on the breeding grounds by March, while Eastern Wood Pewees don't arrive until very late April and early May.
It also does not bob its tail habitually, and appears on the breeding grounds much later though it leaves for winter quarters at about the same time as the Eastern Phoebe.
Great Creasted Flycatcher, Eastern Phoebe, Eastern Wood Pewee and Acadian Flycatcher are common nesters.
The Eastern phoebe was one of the first songbirds to arrive this spring in the Sourland Mountains, a 90-square-mile swath of central New Jersey known among naturalists as an oasis for birds on their way north for the spring.
The Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe) is a small passerine bird.
The Eastern Phoebe (Sayornis phoebe) is similar, particularly in the worn plumage after breeding.