Dusky-capped Flycatcher
Mason Regional Park, Irvine, Orange County, California
29 December 2002
Joseph Morlan


Photos © 29 December 2002 by Joseph Morlan. All rights reserved.
Robbie Fischer and I decided to check for the Dusky-capped Flycatcher which had been seen for the last two weeks at Mason Regional Park in Irvine. We arrived by the small bridge and riparian corridor at the southwest end of the park when I heard the distinctive rising and falling whistled call of the Dusky-capped Flycatcher. I looked and saw it was Brian Daniels who was covering the area for the Orange County Coastal Christmas bird count. However, the bird did call and eventually we got great views of the bird. However it was foraging very actively and it was very difficult to digiscope. The shots here are the best I could do, but they show the diagnostic rufous fringing on the secondaries and the gray underside to the tail.

The following description is based on notes made while watching the bird:

A small Myiarchus. In strong sunlight, the back was brown with strong olive-greenish cast contrasting with a grayish nape and darker brown cap forming a short crest. The bill was fairly long and pointed, black in color. The eye was dark. The throat, breast and side of the neck were gray. The belly was a fairly bright lemon-yellow. The tail was dusky above with rusty edges to the bases of the outermost rectrices visible from above. From below the tail appeared entirely gray. The primaries and secondaries were edged with rusty while the tertials were narrowly edged with whitish. The tips to the wing-coverts were paler grayish-brown forming indistinct wing-bars. The feet were dark.

The most distinctive feature was the call which was given frequently. It was a clear breathy whistle rising and then falling, The bird foraged at medium elevations in the trees, but occasionally descended to the ground. The bird stopped to preen briefly when these photos were obtained.