NPSpecies

Information on Species in National Parks

NPSpecies-1.9.3.24963-20240824-030002

National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior

Natural Resource Stewardship and Science
arrowhead
  • Home
    • IRMA Portal
  • Search
    • Get a Park Species List
    • Find Parks Where a Species is Found
    • Advanced Search
  • Parks
  • Reports
  • Add-Edit
    • Make a Suggestion
Contact Us  Help 
[ Log On ] User Roles
Print
Scientific Name
Baeolophus ridgwayi
Scientific Name w/ Auth.
Baeolophus ridgwayi (Richmond, 1902)
Park
Grand Canyon National Park (GRCA)
Sensitive
No
Park Accepted
Accepted
Record Status
Approved
Park Preferred Common Names
Juniper Titmouse, Plain Titmouse
Park Synonyms
Parus inornatus, Baeolophus griseus
Taxonomic Hierarchy
KingdomAnimalia
SubkingdomBilateria
Infrakingdom Deuterostomia
PhylumChordata
SubphylumVertebrata
Infraphylum Gnathostomata
SuperclassTetrapoda
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyParidae
GenusBaeolophus
SpeciesBaeolophus ridgwayi
Occurrence
Present
Occurrence Notes
A common permanent resident of pinyon-juniper woodlands throughout the region. One collected below Supai Village on 18 Nov 1912 (Edward Nelson) was unexpected, as the species is almost never seen away from pinyon-juniper. Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Nativeness
Native
Abundance
Common
Seasonality Tags
  • Breeder
Geographic Regions Tags
  • Park Wide
Threatened Endangered Status
State Species of Concern statuses
Ozone Sensitive Status
NatureServe GRank
NatureServe SRank
Observations
0
References
5
Vouchers
4
External Links
0
Evidence counts shown include evidence for related synonyms.
Created By
Nicole Tancreto
Created Date
4/9/2007 12:00:00 AM
Last Modified By
mterwilliger@nps.gov
Last Modified Date
8/31/2016 5:36:59 PM
Notes
(Baeolophus ridgwayi) * Juniper Titmouse (formerly Plain Titmouse) is a common permanent resident of pinyon-juniper woodlands throughout the region. One collected below Supai Village on 18 Nov 1912 (Edward Nelson) was unexpected, as the species is almost never seen away from pinyon-juniper. Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Other Parks
Aztec Ruins National Monument (AZRU)
Bandelier National Monument (BAND)
Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park (BLCA)
Capitol Reef National Park (CARE)
Bryce Canyon National Park (BRCA)
Canyon De Chelly National Monument (CACH)
Carlsbad Caverns National Park (CAVE)
Canyonlands National Park (CANY)
Cedar Breaks National Monument (CEBR)
El Morro National Monument (ELMO)
El Malpais National Monument (ELMA)
Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve (CRMO)
Chiricahua National Monument (CHIR)
City Of Rocks National Reserve (CIRO)
Death Valley National Park (DEVA)
Fort Bowie National Historic Site (FOBO)
Chaco Culture National Historical Park (CHCU)
Curecanti National Recreation Area (CURE)
Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument (GICL)
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve (GRSA)
Great Basin National Park (GRBA)
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (GLCA)
Walnut Canyon National Monument (WACA)
Guadalupe Mountains National Park (GUMO)
Lake Mead National Recreation Area (LAKE)
Navajo National Monument (NAVA)
Mesa Verde National Park (MEVE)
Montezuma Castle National Monument (MOCA)
Saguaro National Park (SAGU)
Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument (SAPU)
Mojave National Preserve (MOJA)
Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument (SUCR)
Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site (HUTR)
Parashant National Monument (PARA)
Natural Bridges National Monument (NABR)
Petrified Forest National Park (PEFO)
Pipe Spring National Monument (PISP)
Lava Beds National Monument (LABE)
Hovenweep National Monument (HOVE)
Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument (TUSK)
Zion National Park (ZION)
Yucca House National Monument (YUHO)
Wupatki National Monument (WUPA)
US Department of the Interior  FOIA  Privacy Policy  Disclaimer and Ownership  NPS Home  USA.gov  Accessibility  Experience Your America TM
Tracing...