Least Flycatcher
General Description
The Least Flycatcher is the smallest flycatcher found in Washington. Like other confusingly similar Empidonax flycatchers, the Least has two white wing-bars, a white eye-ring, olive upperparts, and yellowish-cream underparts.
Habitat
Least Flycatchers are found at lower elevations in deciduous or mixed woods, often along rivers. They breed in semi-open, mature, and maturing woods. It has been suggested that Least Flycatchers require large tracts of forest to thrive.
Behavior
On breeding territories Least Flycatchers are aggressive to intruders, both their own and other species. They are known to attack Brown-headed Cowbirds, and the low rate of cowbird parasitization of their nests seems to indicate that their defense is effective. Least Flycatcher territories are often clustered together.
Diet
This species forages by flying out from a dead branch and catching insects in the air. They also glean insects from leaves. They tend to forage from the high shrub-layer up into the canopy.
Nesting
Male and female select the nest-site in an upright fork of the lower-to-middle section of a small, deciduous tree. The female builds a cup-nest made of bark strips and fibers, grass, plant down, and spider and caterpillar webbing. She lays four eggs, incubating them for fourteen days. Both parents feed the young, who fledge at about fourteen days.
Migration Status
Atypical of most migratory birds, adult Least Flycatchers migrate south before molting in the fall. First-year birds molt before and during migration. Some populations appear to head east before they turn south to Mexico. Males arrive on the breeding grounds in the spring ahead of females, but no significant difference has been found in fall movement. They return to Washington in late May and leave by mid-August. Adults spend a very short period of time on the breeding grounds, only about two months. The entire time is needed to raise a single brood.
Conservation Status
Least Flycatchers are widespread and common throughout most of their range. However, Washington lies on the western edge of the range, and therefore Least Flycatchers are uncommon here. They are not found breeding in urbanized areas. They have been known to shift territories into the forest interior in response to disturbances such as logging. This suggests that large contiguous forest tracts with limited disturbances are required for this species to remain common.
When and Where to Find in Washington
Least Flycatchers are the least commonly occuring Empidonax flycatchers in Washington. They are found in Eastern Washington in forested habitat, especially in aspen groves. The best place to see them is Okanagan County. West of the Cascades there are only a few records, but at least two singing males have been reported in recent years.
  Abundance
Abundance
| Ecoregion | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oceanic | ||||||||||||
| Pacific Northwest Coast | ||||||||||||
| Puget Trough | ||||||||||||
| North Cascades | ||||||||||||
| West Cascades | ||||||||||||
| East Cascades | R | R | ||||||||||
| Okanogan | R | R | R | R | ||||||||
| Canadian Rockies | R | U | U | R | ||||||||
| Blue Mountains | ||||||||||||
| Columbia Plateau | R | R | R | 
Washington Range Map

North American Range Map


Family Members
 Olive-sided FlycatcherContopus cooperi Olive-sided FlycatcherContopus cooperi
 Western Wood-PeweeContopus sordidulus Western Wood-PeweeContopus sordidulus
 Alder FlycatcherEmpidonax alnorum Alder FlycatcherEmpidonax alnorum
 Willow FlycatcherEmpidonax traillii Willow FlycatcherEmpidonax traillii
 Least FlycatcherEmpidonax minimus Least FlycatcherEmpidonax minimus
 Hammond's FlycatcherEmpidonax hammondii Hammond's FlycatcherEmpidonax hammondii
 Gray FlycatcherEmpidonax wrightii Gray FlycatcherEmpidonax wrightii
 Dusky FlycatcherEmpidonax oberholseri Dusky FlycatcherEmpidonax oberholseri
 Western FlycatcherEmpidonax difficilis Western FlycatcherEmpidonax difficilis
 Black PhoebeSayornis nigricans Black PhoebeSayornis nigricans
 Eastern PhoebeSayornis phoebe Eastern PhoebeSayornis phoebe
 Say's PhoebeSayornis saya Say's PhoebeSayornis saya
 Vermilion FlycatcherPyrocephalus rubinus Vermilion FlycatcherPyrocephalus rubinus
 Ash-throated FlycatcherMyiarchus cinerascens Ash-throated FlycatcherMyiarchus cinerascens
 Tropical KingbirdTyrannus melancholicus Tropical KingbirdTyrannus melancholicus
 Western KingbirdTyrannus verticalis Western KingbirdTyrannus verticalis
 Eastern KingbirdTyrannus tyrannus Eastern KingbirdTyrannus tyrannus
 Scissor-tailed FlycatcherTyrannus forficatus Scissor-tailed FlycatcherTyrannus forficatus
 Fork-tailed FlycatcherTyrannus savana Fork-tailed FlycatcherTyrannus savana
 
        
       
    

