Wrentit
Chamaea fasciata
Synopsis: Breeds widely along the coast, the coast slope, and in southwestern Oregon, becoming more sporadic in regenerating clearcuts and shrub thickets eastward into the western foothills of the Cascades. Records from the west Cascades and west side of the Willamette Valley are notable.

Habitat Associations:
strongest
Sitka Spruce-W. Hemlock Maritime Forest (367182 acres)
Coastal Lodgepole Forest (757 acres)
South coast Mixed Forest (2888 acres)
Coastal Headland Grass & Shrubland (2285 acres)
strong
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 (1012365 acres)
Douglas Fir/White Oak Forest (125355 acres)
Douglas Fir dominant - Mixed Conifer Forest (1456115 acres)
Red Alder (76966 acres)
Mixed Conifer/Mixed Deciduous Forest (1093626 acres)
Siskiyou Mtns Mixed Deciduous Forest (198754 acres)
Siskiyou Mtns Shrubland on Serpentine Bedrock (32403 acres)
Edges of Recently Cutover/Burnt Forest (791541 acres)
Coastal Dunes & Ponds with Widely Scattered Shrubs/Trees (43358 acres)
some
Douglas Fir-W. Hemlock-W. Red Cedar Forest (3724305 acres)
lesser
White Oak Forest (60585 acres)
Urban/Residential (186274 acres)


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

Challenge: Determine if species breeds more widely than shown within Jackson and western Klamath Counties.