
Mountain Chickadee
The Mountain Chickadee (Poecile gambeli) is one of the most charming and lively small birds of the higher elevations surrounding the Coachella Valley, particularly in the San Jacinto, San Bernardino, and San Gabriel Mountains. While absent from the desert floor itself, this species is a familiar resident of montane forests, where its quick movements and cheerful calls enliven pine stands and mixed conifer woods.
Appearance
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Size: About 5β6 inches long, weighing around 11 grams.
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Coloration: Grayish above with lighter underparts. The back and wings are soft gray, while the flanks may be tinged with buff.
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Head: Distinctive black cap and throat, white cheeks, andβmost importantlyβa narrow white eyebrow stripe above the eye, which separates it from the nearly identical Black-capped Chickadee.
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Tail: Long and slightly notched, often flicked in animated fashion.
Behavior & Ecology
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Foraging: Mountain Chickadees are energetic insect hunters, gleaning caterpillars, beetles, and spiders from bark and foliage. They also consume seeds, including pine seeds and those from feeders.
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Caching: Like other chickadees, they cache food in bark crevices and recall hundreds of hiding spots thanks to remarkable spatial memory.
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Flocks: Often travel in small mixed-species flocks in winter, associating with nuthatches, kinglets, and warblers.
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Vocalizations: Their familiar βchick-a-dee-dee-deeβ call is harsher than that of lowland relatives, and their song is a descending, whistled βfee-bee-bayβ.
Nesting
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Sites: Nest in natural cavities, old woodpecker holes, or nest boxes if available.
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Material: Line nests with moss, fur, and plant down, making them soft and insulated.
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Breeding season: Typically MayβJuly in Southern Californiaβs mountains.
Adaptations
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Cold tolerance: Fluff their plumage and sometimes enter shallow nocturnal torpor to conserve heat during alpine nights.
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Memory: Seasonal brain plasticity allows them to expand memory capacity in fall when food caching peaks.
Role in the Ecosystem
Mountain Chickadees are vital insect predators in conifer forests, helping regulate pest populations. They also disperse seeds by carrying and caching them, sometimes forgetting stores that later sprout.
Where to See Them Near the Coachella Valley
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Common at Idyllwild and Mount San Jacinto State Park.
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Also found in Big Bear, Lake Arrowhead, and higher ridges of the San Bernardino Mountains.
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In winter, they may move slightly downslope but remain tied to forests with pines, firs, or cedars.