The Scissor-tailed Flycatcher
(Tyrannus forficatus) has a long, forked tail. The bird is 13
inches long from beak to tip of tail. Typical of flycatchers,
it feeds on insects, making it a very valuable bird when it comes
to controlling insect pests. Insects consumed include moths,
butterflies, grasshoppers, locusts, beetles, and cotton worms.
Its breeding range includes the southcentral
United States, eastern Colorado and Nebraska, south to Texas.
This is the State Bird of Oklahoma. It can also be found in southern
Kansas and occasionally in southwestern Missouri, western Arkansas
and Illinois. It winters in Central America. Breeding season
is from March to October. Some birds remain in the Galveston
area year round.
This flycatcher prefers open country and
woodland edges. It is a restless bird, spending its days flitting
about in pursuit of insect prey.
The bulky nest is built on the limb of
a tree from available materials. The clutch size is from 3 to
5 white eggs blotched with brown. The incubation period is 14
days and the young fledge in two weeks. Two broods are sometimes
raised.
Class - Aves | Order - Passeriformes | Family - Tyrannidae
| Genus - Tyrannus Lacepede
Species - Tyrannus forficatus