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Overview
Jelski's chat-tyrant

Jelski's chat-tyrant

Wikipedia

Jelski's chat-tyrant is a species of passerine bird in the family Tyrannidae, the tyrant flycatchers. It is found in Ecuador and Peru.

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Distribution

Region

Andes Mountains

Typical Environment

Occurs in the montane forests of southern Ecuador and northern to central Peru. It inhabits humid cloud forests, elfin forests, and edges with dense understory, including patches of Chusquea bamboo. Often found along forested ravines, mossy thickets, and secondary growth near primary forest. Prefers areas with abundant perches for flycatching and moderate canopy openings to hunt.

Altitude Range

2200–3600 m

Climate Zone

Highland

Characteristics

Size13–15 cm
Wing Span20–24 cm
Male Weight0.015 kg
Female Weight0.014 kg
Life Expectancy6 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Named for the Polish naturalist Konstanty Jelski, this small Andean flycatcher favors cloud forest edges and stunted elfin woods. It often flicks its tail and makes short sallies to catch insects from low to mid-level perches. Taxonomically it has been placed in Silvicultrix after formerly being included in Ochthoeca.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo
Bird photo
Bird photo

Behaviour

Temperament

shy and active

Flight Pattern

short rapid sallies from low to mid-level perches

Social Behavior

Typically found singly or in pairs, maintaining small territories within suitable forest edge habitat. During breeding, pairs build a cup or partial-cup nest concealed in banks, mossy cavities, or dense vegetation. Occasionally joins mixed-species flocks while foraging outside the breeding season.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

Delivers thin, high-pitched tseet and tsee-notes, interspersed with short trills. Calls are sharp and slightly buzzy, carrying through dense vegetation but not very loud.

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