|   Characteristics The western tanager is  6-7 inches in length. The male western tanager has a bright red head, a bright yellow body and black wings. The female western tanager is greenish-yellow on top and yellow on her underside. Both the male and female have two wing bars.   The top wing bar is yellow and the bottom one is white. 
   Range The western tanager can be found in the western United States and Canada. It breeds from southern Alaska and the Northwest Territories of Canada south through the western United States. It winters in  in Mexico and South America and occasionally in Southern California. 
 
   Habitat The western tanager breeds in open coniferous forests and 
 mixed deciduous-coniferous forests. It can be found at elevations of up to 10,000 feet. It winters in 
 open mountain pine woodlands and in parks and gardens. |  |   Diet The western tanager eats fruits and insects.
            It forages for food in the  trees and shrubs.
            
            
            They also catch insects in the air.
 
 
 
   Life Cycle The female western tanager lays three to five eggs in a cup-shaped nest made of woven bark, grass, and weeds. The nest is placed in a fork of a tree. The female incubates the eggs. The eggs hatch in about two weeks. Both parents care for the chicks. 
      Behavior  The western tanager is a long-distance
    migrator. Every year it travels between its wintering grounds in Mexico
    and Central America to its breeding grounds in western North America. 
 
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