Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Black-tailed Gnatcatcher

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Native to the deserts of the American Southwest and northern Mexico, these tiny, noisy relatives of the wrens are completely at home in the driest of deserts where they make their living among the mesquite and cacti and feeding on spiders and insects. This black-tailed gnatcatcher was found in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument within sight of the Mexican border in Arizona.

Copyright
VA 2-053-431
Image Size
6000x4000 / 13.9MB
Keywords
Ajo, Ajo Range, Animalia, Arizona, Aves, Chordata, OPCNM, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, P. melanura, Passeriformes, Pima County, Polioptila, Polioptila melanura, Polioptilidae, Small, Sonoran Desert, Twin Peaks, Twin Peaks Campground, animal, ave, avian, beak, beautiful, beauty, bird, birdwatching, black, black-tailed gnatcatcher, desert, eye-ring, fauna, feather, gnatcatcher, gray, insectivorous, natural, nature, ornithology, southwest, spring, vertebrate, white, white eye-ring, wild, wildlife, wing
Contained in galleries
Kinglets, Old World Warblers and Gnatcatchers
Native to the deserts of the American Southwest and northern Mexico, these tiny, noisy relatives of the wrens are completely at home in the driest of deserts where they make their living among the mesquite and cacti and feeding on spiders and insects. This black-tailed gnatcatcher was found in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument within sight of the Mexican border in Arizona.