Home ::  The Tower ::  Rates ::  Contact ::  FAQs ::  Activities ::  Birds  ::  Gallery ::  Library
click to return home - 7628 Bytes

Birds to Watch
Highlights from our extensive Bird List

birds to watch at Panama's Canopy Tower
Below you will find a few of the birds you can see from The Canopy Tower and Semaphore Hill Rd. Click for a complete bird list,
547 species, as of October 2005!

Our friend Ken Allaire maintains a website of Rare Bird Reports from Canopy Lodge and Canopy Tower. Visit this site for the latest in unusual bird sighting in Cantral Panama.

Got broadband? Take a look at
our Experimental new Bird List slide show
tour all our site's 81 bird pictures (and counting!)
We also recommend you read some of the recent trip reports of the Canopy Tower and its environs, or take a moment to meet our bilingual birding guides.

The photographs on this page were taken from the top floor of the Canopy Tower by Art Wolfe, one of the best nature photographers in the world.


Hook-billed Kite
Chondrohierax uncinatus
Birding on a Budget?
Reduced Prices: Green Season Birding Package at Canopy Tower of Panama -- an affordable birding package for the budget minded birder.

Green Season
Birding Package

reduced prices for the
budget minded birder
Tiny Hawk
Accipiter superciliosus
Plumbeous Hawk
Leucopternis plumbea
Crested Guan
Penelope purpurascens
Pheasant Cuckoo
Dromococcyx phasianellus
Vermiculated Screech-Owl
Otus guatemalae
Crested Owl
Lophostrix cristata
Mottled Owl
Ciccaba virgata
Black-and-white Owl
Ciccaba nigrolineata
Great Potoo
Nictibius grandis
Common Potoo
Nictibius griseus
Rufous-crested Coquette
Lophornis delattrei
Long-billed Starthroat
Heliomaster longirostris
Lesser Swallow-tailed Swift
Panyptila cayennensis

Tropical Kingbird
Tropical Kingbird photo by Art Wolfe
Tyrannus melancholicus

The Tropical Kingbird is by far our most common flycatcher, a large family with about a hundred species in Panama. They are seen frequently perched on the highest branches of the trees around the tower, sallying for flying insects. Tropical Kingirds are not in any way restricted to forest, and they are also one of the commonest birds in downtown Panama City.
Flycatchers come in many sizes, and from the Canopy Tower you can see a good sample of the species found in Panama. From the tiny Paltry Tyrannulet and Common Tody-Flycatcher to the impressive Boat-billed Flycatcher you'll get enough flycatchers to satisfy your wildest cravings.

Green-and-rufous Kingfisher
Chloroceryle inda
Black-breasted Puffbird
Notharchus pectoralis
White-whiskered Puffbird
Malacoptila panamensis

Black-cheeked Woodpecker
Black-cheeked woodpecker photo by Art Wolfe
Melanerpes pucherani

This medium-sized woodpecker is the forest counterpart of the commoner Red-crowned Woodpecker (M. rubricapillus) found easily in open areas. This is an adult male, as shown by its all-red cap. They feed on the higher levels of the canopy, alone or in pairs. One or two are usually seen on the trees around the tower early in the morning, sometimes calling while perched out in the open.
But this is just one of the woodpeckers you'll get a chance to add to your life list. Both Lineated and Crimson-crested Woodpeckers are seen easily, and the smaller but equally impressive Cinnammon Woodpecker is also quite abundant, especially on Plantation Road.

Tawny-throated Leaftosser
Sclerurus mexicanus
Spotted Antbird
Hylophylax naevioides
Bicolored Antbird
Gymnopithys leucaspis
Ocellated Antbird
Phaenosticus mcleannani
Yellow-green Tyrannulet
(A species endemic to Panama)
Phylloscartes flavovirens
Olivaceous Flatbill
Rhynchocyclus olivaceus
Golden-crowned Spadebill
Platyrinchus coronatus

Masked Tityra
Masked Tityra photo by Art Wolfe
Tityra semifasciata

The bird shown in the picture is a female. The male is white, with a light gray wash on the back, and a black mask around the bare facial skin. Tityras are usually seen in pairs or in small groups, frequently on fruiting trees, and they tend to perch out in bare branches. Their calls, somewhat similar to the grunts of a pig, have earned them the vernacular name "Puerquitas", piggies.
The other tityra found in Panama, the Black-crowned Tityra, does not have red facial skin, and is not as common as the Masked is. Lately, it has been reported from the Metropolitan Nature Park.

Purple-throated Fruitcrow
Querula purpurata
Blue Cotinga
Cotinga nattererii
Golden-collared Manakin
Manacus vitellinus
Blue-crowned Manakin
Pipra coronata
Red-capped Manakin
Pipra mentalis
Black-bellied Wren
Thryothorus fasciatoventris
Song Wren
Cyphorhinus phaeocephalus
Green Shrike-Vireo
Vireolanius pulchellus
Bay-headed Tanager
Tangara gyrola

Blue-Gray Tanager
Blue-Gray Tanager photo by Art Wolfe
Thraupis episcopus

The Blue-gray Tanager is one of Panama's most widely distributed birds. Small flocks of this species, usually accompanied by a few Palm Tanagers can be found in almost all residential areas in Panama City, but they are both also common in the forest around the Tower. They are very fond of the fruit of Cecropia trees, as are most fruit-eating species.

Gray-headed Tanager
Eucometis penicillata
White-shouldered Tanager
Tachyphonus luctuosus
Rosy Thrush-Tanager
Rhodinocichla rosea

Scarlet Tanager
Scarlet Tanager photo by Art Wolfe
Piranga olivacea

A male Scarlet Tanager in full breeding plumage, as seen in spring migration, a particularly good time to watch birds at the Canopy Tower. Sometimes as many as five or six Scarlet Tanagers can be seen feeding on a fruiting tree, accompanied by Swainson's Thrushes, Rose-throated Grosbeaks and a myriad of vireos and warblers, all in fresh breeding plumages. Another great spectacle of spring migration is to see the huge flocks of Eastern Kingbirds as they pass through the country. For a few days each season, every fruiting tree is literally covered by these black-and-white birds.

Slate-colored Grosbeak
Pitylus grossus
Slate-colored Seedeater
Sporophila schistacea

Twice every year, great clouds of hawks migrate across the narrows of the Isthmus of Panama, putting on a great show for visitors at the Canopy Tower.

Hawk migration photo by John Cocanower

click to return to the Canopy Tower home page bird watching at Panama's Canopy Tower
Home ::  The Tower ::  History ::  Rates ::  Reserve ::  Contact Info ::  FAQs
Things to Do ::  The Birds ::  Guest Comments ::  Gallery ::  Library
bird watching at Panama's Canopy Tower

Sienna Moonfire Designs: website creation and maintenance
website by Sienna Moonfire Designs: siennamoonfire.com
originally created by the Caspar Institute
last updated 7 July 2007 :m: 18:22 pm Caspar (Pacific) time
this site generated with 100% recycled electrons!
send website feedback to the Canopy Tower webster

copyright © 1998-2007 by Raúl Arias de Para

photographs on this page copyright © 1999 by Art Wolfe