south america
The Black-Crested Tufted titmouse lives in south-central Texas. It is common in deciduous woodlands, mesquite, suburbs, and at feeders.
The tufted titmouse (Baeolophus bicolor) is a small songbird from North America, a species in the tit and chickadee family (Paridae). Species: B. bicolor Family: Paridae Genus: Baeolophus Phylum: Chordata
The tufted titmice look too similar to tell apart so it is quite impossible to tell apart. The male and female tufted titmice do not have different looks.
Black capped chickadees, tufted titmouse.
Black capped chickadee , tufted titmouse , red breasted nuthatch
Check a field guide for "tufted titmouse".
They get eaten by owls, a lucky fox, and pretty much anything that is bigger than it.
Starling, English sparrow, mourning dove, house finch, goldfinch, Carolina chickadee, tufted titmouse, purple grackle, robin.
The Northern Cardinal is known for its distinct "birdy-birdy-birdy" call, which some people interpret as "Judy-Judy-Judy." It's a common sound in areas where these birds reside.
A titmouse is a species of bird.
Oh, you're describing a titmouse! There are two kinds of titmice that this one might be - it mainly depends on where you saw it. If you were back East (Texas north to Minnesota and east to the Atlantic, it was a Tufted Titmouse. If you were out West, Mew Mexico north to Wyoming and west to the Pacific, it was likely the Plain Titmouse. And if you were somewhere between there...well, it may have been a vagrant, migrating or simply in an overlap area. That's when it gets real fun telling them apart.