Bewicks wren

Thryomanes bewickii

The Bewick's wren is a wren native to North America. It lives in thickets, brush piles and hedgerows, open woodlands and scrubby areas, often near streams.
Bewick's Wren  Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Thryomanes bewickii,United States

Appearance

At about 14 cm long, it is grey-brown above, white below, with a long white eyebrow. While similar in appearance to the Carolina wren, it has a long tail that is tipped in white.
Bewick wren White stripe along it's eyes. Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Thryomanes bewickii,United States

Naming

This is currently the only species of its genus, "Thryomanes". The Socorro wren, formerly placed here too, is actually a close relative of the house wren complex, as indicated by biogeography and mtDNA NADH dehydrogenase subunit 2 sequence analysis, whereas "Thryomanes" seems not too distant from the Carolina wren.
Bewick's Wren  Bewick's Wren,Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Thryomanes bewickii,United States

Distribution

Its range is from southern British Columbia, Nebraska, southern Ontario, and southwestern Pennsylvania, Maryland, south to Mexico, Arkansas and the northern Gulf States. The Bewick's wren does not migrate.
Bewick's wren Tiny birds usually move too fast in trees, so I can't get good pictures.  One of the rare times I could catch such a bird by filming it and taking stills. Google lens is right this time. Bewick's wren,Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Passeriformes,Thryomanes bewickii,Troglodytidae,United States

Behavior

The song is loud and melodious, much like the song of other wrens. The song is broken into two or three individual parts; one individual male may exhibit up to twenty-two different variations on the song pattern, and may even throw in a little ventriloquism to vary it even further.
Bewick's Wren  Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Spring,Thryomanes bewickii,United States

Reproduction

The nest is cup-shaped and located in a nook or cavity of some kind. It lays 5–7 eggs that are white with brown spots. The Bewick's wren produces two broods in a season. Pairs are more or less monogamous when it comes to breeding, but go solitary throughout the winter.
Bug hunting  Bewicks wren,Geotagged,Thryomanes bewickii,United States

Food

It eats insects and spiders, which it gleans from vegetation or finds on the ground. Wrens are sometimes observed foraging with chickadees and other birds.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyTroglodytidae
GenusThryomanes
SpeciesT. bewickii