In Boston, black-capped chickadees begin searching for nest cavities around mid-March, weeks before most … The different Chickadee species live in several different habitat types. Black-capped chickadees are found in deciduous and mixed deciduous-evergreen forests, especially near forest edges. Black-capped chickadees are a beloved fixture at the Arboretum, one of our common year-round residents and the state bird of Massachusetts. Visitors can easily observe them flitting through the branches, often in small groups during fall and winter and in pairs during spring and summer.

Most live in forests, both deciduous forests that shed their leaves, and coniferous forests that do not. Carolina Chickadees may be found in deciduous and mixed deciduous-coniferous woodlands, swamps, riparian areas, open woods and parks, and also in suburban and urban areas. There are 7 chickadees that breed in Canada: Black Capped Chickadees, seen in woodlands and on birdfeeders, Mountain Chickadees, Chestnut Backed Chickadees, both live in Western Canada, Boreal Chickadees, which live in boreal forests throughout Canada, Gray Headed Chickadees, which are very remote in Canada, Carolina Chickadees and Mexican Chickadees, which are only found … Boreal chickadees (P. hudsonicus) live in the boreal forest throughout Canada. Chickadees and Titmice: Habitat: Mixed and deciduous woods; willow thickets, groves, shade trees. Feeders and nest boxes can be used to attract chickadees to suburban backyards. Most common in open woods and forest edge, especially where birches or alders grow; avoids purely coniferous forest.

Mountain chickadees (P. gambeli) and chestnut-backed chickadees (P. rufescens) are found in western Canada.

Where it overlaps with other chickadee species in the north and west, Black-capped is mostly restricted to deciduous groves.

Black-capped chickadees (Poecile atricapillus) live in woodlands throughout Canada, and regularly visit backyard birdfeeders.

Some of the different ecosystems that they inhabit include willows, open woodlands, riparian or waterside areas, and more.

Chickadees are found in deciduous and mixed forests, open woods, parks, willow thickets, cottonwood groves, and disturbed areas. Black-capped chickadees are found at feeders throughout much of the continent, from Alaska and Canada to the mountains of New Mexico and Tennessee. They are commonly found near willows and cottonwoods, and like to make their nests in the snags of alder and birch trees.