Link: https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Wood-Pewee/id
Description: WEBEastern Wood-Pewees are medium-sized flycatchers with long wings and tails. Like other pewee species, they have short legs, upright posture, and a peaked crown that tends to give the head a triangular shape. Their long wings are an important clue to separate them from Empidonax flycatcher species.
DA: 66 PA: 82 MOZ Rank: 24
Link: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pewee
Description: WEBThe pewees are a genus, Contopus, of small to medium-sized insect -eating birds in the Tyrant flycatcher family Tyrannidae . These birds are known as pewees, from the call of one of the more common members of this vocal group. They are generally charcoal-grey birds with wing bars that live in wooded areas.
DA: 59 PA: 89 MOZ Rank: 20
Link: https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/eastern-wood-pewee
Description: WEBAt a Glance. In eastern woods in summer, the plaintive whistled pee-a-wee of this small flycatcher is often heard before the bird is seen. The bird itself is usually somewhere in the leafy middle story of the trees, perched on a bare twig, darting out to catch passing insects. The Wood-Pewee sings most often at dawn and dusk, and it may ...
DA: 62 PA: 72 MOZ Rank: 74
Link: https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Wood-Pewee/overview
Description: WEBThe olive-brown Eastern Wood-Pewee is inconspicuous until it opens its bill and gives its unmistakable slurred call: pee-a-wee!—a characteristic sound of Eastern summers. These small flycatchers perch on dead branches in the …
DA: 76 PA: 78 MOZ Rank: 1
Link: https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Eastern_Wood-Pewee/lifehistory
Description: WEBThe olive-brown Eastern Wood-Pewee is inconspicuous until it opens its bill and gives its unmistakable slurred call: pee-a-wee! —a characteristic sound of Eastern summers. These small flycatchers perch on dead branches in the …
DA: 10 PA: 93 MOZ Rank: 88
Link: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_wood_pewee
Description: WEBThe eastern wood pewee (Contopus virens) is a small tyrant flycatcher from North America. This bird and the western wood pewee (C. sordidulus) were formerly considered a single species. The two species are virtually identical in appearance, and can be distinguished most easily by their calls.
DA: 39 PA: 13 MOZ Rank: 46
Link: https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/western-wood-pewee
Description: WEBAt a Glance. Small and plain, but often very common, this flycatcher of western woodlands is best known by its voice. Its burry, descending whistle has a hazy sound, well suited to hot summer afternoons. The bird also sings at dawn and dusk, including late in the evening when most other songbirds are quiet.
DA: 94 PA: 89 MOZ Rank: 23
Link: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birds/facts/eastern-wood-pewee
Description: WEBBirds. Size: Length: 6.3 inches. IUCN Red List Status: ? Least concern. LC. NT. VU. EN. CR. EW. EX. Least Concern Extinct. Current Population Trend: Decreasing. This species is extremely similar to...
DA: 33 PA: 95 MOZ Rank: 75
Link: https://www.britannica.com/animal/pewee
Description: WEBPewee, any of eight species of birds of the genus Contopus (family Tyrannidae); it is named for its call, which is monotonously repeated from an open perch. In North America a sad, clear “pee-oo-wee” announces the presence of the eastern wood pewee (C. virens), while a blurry “peeurrr” is the call.
DA: 63 PA: 53 MOZ Rank: 77
Link: https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/greater-pewee
Description: WEBCategory. Perching Birds, Tyrant Flycatchers. Conservation. Low Concern. Habitat. Arroyos and Canyons, Forests and Woodlands. Region. California, Southwest. Population. 2.000.000. Range & Identification. Migration & Range Maps. Probably only a short-distance migrant; present all year in most of Mexican range.
DA: 91 PA: 61 MOZ Rank: 17