Habitats

Missouri birds use five general habitats: grasslands, towns and backyards, shrubby areas, forests and wetlands.

image of grasslandsGrasslands

These are open areas, such as pastures, hayfields and native prairies that are dominated by grass. Typically, fences, powerlines, and a few shrubs and trees provide perches. Birds include killdeers, Eastern kingbirds, horned larks, Eastern bluebirds, dickcissels, vesper and grasshopper sparrows, Eastern and Western meadowlarks, red-winged blackbirds and American goldfinches. Often you may see Red-tailed hawks, American kestrels, mourning doves and barn swallows in flight over grasslands.

image of urban back yard

Towns and Backyards

This habitat is characterized by lawns, gardens, scattered trees, hedges, shrubs, houses, high-rises, grain elevators and warehouses. Familiar occupants are rock and mourning doves, common nighthawks, chimney swifts, hummingbirds, phoebes, purple martins, house wrens, mockingbirds, robins, starlings, cardinals, chipping sparrows, Baltimore orioles and house sparrows.

image of shrubby area

Shrubby Areas

This habitat is densely vegetated, often with small trees, brush, weeds, briars and vines. Familiar occupants include Carolina wrens, gray catbirds, brown thrashers, white-eyed vireos, blue-winged warblers, prairie warblers, common yellowthroats, yellow-breasted chats, American tree sparrows, field and song sparrows.

image of forestForests

Birds favoring large forests include pileated woodpeckers, wood thrushes, ovenbirds and scarlet tanagers; those associated with the understory include Acadian flycatchers, Kentucky warblers and American redstarts; and those associated with the forested river's edge include Red-shouldered Hawks, Northern parulas and Cerulean Warblers.

image of wetlandsWetlands

Wetlands may have shallow water for dabbling ducks and waders, which might include teal, egrets and herons; mud flats for shorebirds, such as sandpipers and plovers; and open water for terns, gulls and diving ducks, including scaup and mergansers. Marshes accommodate bitterns, rails and Red-winged blackbirds, and forested shores play host to Louisiana waterthrushes and green herons.