NPS.gov / Park Home / Learn About the Park / Nature / Animals / Birds / Perching Birds
Treecreepers are small, climbing birds that are found in woodlands all around the Northern Hemisphere and sub-Saharan Africa. They are mainly solitary birds. To find food they spiral up tree trunks from the bottom looking for insects - this is why they are called treecreepers.
Brown Creeper (Certhia americana)• The Brown Creeper builds a unique nest that looks like a hammock. They usually build their nests behind a loose flap of bark on a dead or dying tree.• To search for food, Brown Creepers spend their time spiraling up tree trunks to search for insects. They use both feet at the same time to hop up the tree. • Brown Creepers love to eat insects and their larvae, spiders and spider eggs, and pseudoscorpions. They always start at the bottom of tree trunks to search for their food. • Wildlife managers sometimes use the Brown Creeper as an indicator species of how logging affects wildlife habitats. Identification Information• Size: Sparrow sized or smaller (Small)• Color: Brown Creepers are streaked with brown and khaki with a white belly that is usually hidden against a tree trunk. Brown Creepers are very good at blending and tend to be hard to see against the bark of a tree.
All of the above information is an abbreviated version of information gathered from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Please visit their website for more in-depth bird information.
|
Last updated: September 16, 2019