Hutton's Vireo
Vireo huttoni
Synopsis:
Nests widely in suitable woodlands from the crest of the Cascades
to the coast. More regular at lower elevations.
Habitat Associations:
strongest
Sitka Spruce-W. Hemlock Maritime Forest (382657 acres)
Jeffery Pine Forest/Woodland (53780 acres)
Conifer Woodland on Serpentine Bedrock (51874 acres)
Douglas Fir-Port Orford Cedar Forest (166447 acres)
Douglas Fir-White Fir/Tanoak-Madrone Mixed Forest (1018613 acres)
Douglas Fir/White Oak Forest (196688 acres)
Mixed Conifer/Mixed Deciduous Forest (1392749 acres)
Siskiyou Mtns Mixed Deciduous Forest (198240 acres)
strong
Douglas Fir-W. Hemlock-W. Red Cedar Forest (6172408 acres)
Douglas Fir-Mixed Deciduous Forest (2934 acres)
Douglas Fir dominant - Mixed Conifer Forest (1806863 acres)
Red Alder (102636 acres)
White Oak Forest (100020 acres)
South coast Mixed Forest (2888 acres)
Western Oregon Riverine Woodland (27749 acres)
lesser
Ponderosa Pine/White Oak Forest & Woodland (61690 acres)
Siskiyou Mtns Shrubland on Serpentine Bedrock (32403 acres)
Manzanita-dominant Shrubland (8373 acres)
Edges of Recently Cutover/Burnt Forest (1180470 acres)
Streamside/Wetland Shrubland (1266 acres)
Relative Detectability:
Easy to detect, especially by its song. Difficult to
confirm breeding.
Challenge:
Determine southern limit of its possible breeding range in
Jackson and eastern Klamath Counties.