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The golden-crowned kinglet is a non-breeding resident in the winter in North Carolina. The golden-crowned kinglet is a widespread migratory bird throughout North America. Its breeding habitat is coniferous forests across Canada, the northeastern and western United States, Mexico and Central America. It migrates to the United States in the non ...
Golden-crowned Kinglets are boldly marked with a black eyebrow stripe and flashy lemon-yellow crest. A good look can require some patience, as they spend much of their time high up in dense spruce or fir foliage. To find them, listen for their high, thin call notes and song.
Learn about the tiny, striped bird that nests in northern conifers and migrates widely across North America. Find out its description, behavior, habitat, diet, nesting, and conservation status.
Learn about the tiny, hyperactive songbird with a golden crown that lives in coniferous forests. See photos, sounds, and resources from eBird, an online guide to birds and bird watching.
Golden-crowned Kinglets are boldly marked with a black eyebrow stripe and flashy lemon-yellow crest. A good look can require some patience, as they spend much of their time high up in dense spruce or fir foliage. To find them, listen for their high, thin call notes and song.
This songbird sports a conspicuously striped head. Discover what else makes the golden-crowned kinglet unique.
Learn about the tiny, active, and colorful bird that breeds in boreal forests and winters across North America. Find out how it adapts to cold weather, what it eats, where it nests, and why it is declining.