Ash-throated Flycatcher
Myiarchus cinerascens
Synopsis: Nests in tree cavities in juniper woodlands and canyons east of the Cascades, as well as in oak woodlands in the Rogue Valley. Most notable are the records from the Siskiyou Mountains, and from coastal Curry, western Klamath, Gilliam, Umatilla, and Union Counties.

Habitat Associations:
strongest
Siskiyou Mtns Mixed Deciduous Forest (126433 acres)
strong
Ponderosa Pine-dominant Mixed Conifer Forest (69457 acres)
Ponderosa Pine-W. Juniper Woodland (118171 acres)
W. Juniper Woodland (2616651 acres)
some
White Oak Forest (68678 acres)
lesser
Jeffery Pine Forest/Woodland (38037 acres)
Conifer Woodland on Serpentine Bedrock (36353 acres)
Douglas Fir-Mixed Deciduous Forest (1684 acres)
Douglas Fir-White Fir/Tanoak-Madrone Mixed Forest (866791 acres)
Douglas Fir/White Oak Forest (17532 acres)
Ponderosa Pine Forest/Woodland (1279210 acres)
Ponderosa Pine/White Oak Forest & Woodland (160612 acres)
Siskiyou Mtns Shrubland on Serpentine Bedrock (10227 acres)
Manzanita-dominant Shrubland (5868 acres)
Mountain Mahogany Shrubland (1368 acres)
Big Sagebrush Shrubland (6169363 acres)
Northeast Canyon Grass & Shrubland (1168 acres)
Edges of Recently Cutover/Burnt Forest (436376 acres)
Urban/Residential (124463 acres)
Western Oregon Riverine Woodland (1116 acres)


Relative Detectability: Easy to detect from its song, and fairly easy to confirm nesting.

Challenge: Determine if this species is more widespread in Malheur, Grant, Baker, southern Morrow, southern Wheeler, northern Crook, southern Harney, and southern Lake Counties.