Brown Creeper

 
 
Description

Description: The Brown Creeper, the only member of the creeper family found in North America, is brown above and white below. It has a prominent white eye stripe , white wing bars, and white streaks on the back and on the wings. It has a thin, and slightly down-curved bill used to pick invertebrates from inside tree bark. It can be very hard to see as it creeps up tree trunks in a spiraling motion. It will rarely creep down a tree. The Brown Creeper is about five inches in length. Males and females are similar in appearance.

 

 
Diet
Insects, spiders, and some seeds. It is less likely than nuthatches and chickadees to visit feeders, though it is often found with such birds in winter flocks.
 
Range and Habitat
The Brown Creeper prefers coniferous or mixed woodlands. It is a year-round resident from southern Alaska, throughout sub-arctic Canada and the Rocky Mountain region of the western United States. In the east, it can be found year-round through the Appalachian Mountains. Populations of Brown Creepers are year-round residents in northern Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota as well. In the winter, the Brown Creeper can be found throughout sub-Arctic Canada and the United States.
 
 
Image provided by eBird (www.ebird.org) and created 8/27/2018. Darker purple represent areas of greater abundance
 
Status
The Brown Creeper is fairly common, but is easily overlooked as it blends in with tree trunks.