Dozens of bird species live in or pass through Scarborough Woods. In less than 2 minutes on April 18, 2024, our Merlin app recorded the songs of 10 different bird species, including a blue-headed vireo and two warblers. Merlin is a free download provided by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

We invite you to help us document the bird species that frequent our 6.5-acre woods. We have begun our list below. Some bird species are year-round residents. Others stop over during migrations.

Photo of American redstart by Patrice Bouchard on Unsplash
  1. American Goldfinch
  2. American Redstart
  3. American Robin
  4. Baltimore Oriole
  5. Barred Owl
  6. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
  7. Blue-headed Vireo
  8. Blue Jay
  9. Brown-headed Cowbird
  10. Cedar Waxwing
  11. Brown Thrasher
  12. Brown-headed Cowbird
  13. Carolina Chickadee
  14. Carolina Wren
  15. Chimney Swift
  16. Cooper’s Hawk
  17. Crow
  18. Dark-eyed Junco
  19. Downy Woodpecker
  20. Eastern Phoebe
  21. Eastern Towhee
  22. Eastern Wood-Pewee
  23. Golden-crowned Kinglet
  24. Gray Catbird
  25. Great Crested Flycatcher
  26. House Finch
  27. House Sparrow
  28. House Wren
  29. Mourning Dove
  30. Nashville Warbler
  31. Northern Cardinal
  32. Northern Mockingbird
  33. Pileated Woodpecker
  34. Pine Warbler
  35. Red-bellied Woodpecker
  36. Red-eyed Vireo
  37. Red-headed woodpecker
  38. Red-shouldered Hawk
  39. Red-tailed Hawk
  40. Red-winged Blackbird
  41. Song Sparrow
  42. Tennessee Warbler
  43. Tufted Titmouse
  44. White-throated Sparrow
  45. Wild Turkey
  46. Yellow-rumped Warbler
  47. Yellow-throated Warbler

If you need help identifying bird calls, download the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Merlin Bird ID app on your smartphone. You can record the bird calls, and the app will tell you who’s singing.

“We love seeing native trees and plants begin to replace invasives in Scarborough Woods. We also love hearing the songs of so many birds.”

Two nature lovers
Rick & Cindy