The Bay-breasted Warbler is a small songbird with a fine, pointed bill and rather long wings and tail.
Bay-breasted Warblers feed by hopping and flying around in the inner parts of trees and watching for insect prey, which they capture by gleaning and occasionally hovering. They readily join mixed-species flocks in the nonbreeding season, when they consume more fruit than insects.
Breeds in boreal forests, chiefly mature coniferous forests. Winters in wet lowland tropical forests. Migrants use many types of forest and edge habitats.
Cornell All About Birds
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