5 Green Birds In Arkansas (With Pictures!)

Arkansas, Types of birds

5 Green Birds In Arkansas (With Pictures!)

Arkansas is home to its fair share of unique wildlife, whether reptilian, four legged and of course the numerous bird kind scattered across its skyline. In this article I’ll be going over 5 different green birds that can be found throughout Arkansas so continue reading if you wish to learn more about them.

  • Green Heron 
  • Red Eyed Vireo 
  • Mallard
  • Ruby Throated Hummingbird 
  • Painted Bunting 

5 Green Birds In Arkansas

1. Green Heron (Butorides Virescens)

Green heron

  • Size: 40 – 44cm
  • Weight: 230 – 250 grams
  • Wingspan: 54 – 58cm

You’ll find green herons in Arkansas throughout their breeding season. They will typically stick around in the warmer spring and summer months. 

These heron’s are recognised by their darker green back and wings, maroon chest and neck, with yellow legs and a relatively long and pointy black beak. Females on the other hand are mostly brown and gray in color.

Green herons tend to spend the majority of their time around wetlands like lakes, ponds, marshes, swamps, streamsides and rivers. 

As for what they consume, it includes a variety of different sources such as small fish like minnows, sunfishes, gizzard shads, crustaceans, aquatic insects, frogs, tadpoles, grasshoppers, snakes, earthworms, snails and other smaller rodents.

Green herons don’t have the longest of lifespans for a bird of their size, with the maximum known life expectancy said to be around 8 years.

2. Red Eyed Vireo (Vireo Olivaceus)

Red eyed vireo

  • Size: 11 – 13cm
  • Weight: 20 – 24 grams
  • Wingspan: 23 – 25cm

Red eyed vireos are spring and summer residents throughout Arkansas, which essentially encompasses the months that they breed in.

These vireos are recognised by there green feathers from the head, wings and back, white feathers on their breast and the stand out red eye. The females look very similar to the males.

As for where you’ll often see these birds perching or flying around, it would include environments with large expanses of deciduous forest, particularly deciduous trees with large leaves, like maple trees for example. 

Red eyed vireos tend to eat mostly insects like caterpillars, moths, beetles, wasps, bees, ants, bugs, flies, as well as the occasional fruit and berry.

Red eyed vireos tend to live for around 6 – 7 years, whilst the oldest recorded one died at 10 years and 2 months.

3. Mallard (Anas Platyrhynchos)

Mallard

  • Size: 50 – 65cm
  • Weight: 0.72 – 1.6kg
  • Wingspan: 81 – 98cm

Mallards can be spotted in Arkansas all throughout the year, specifically around ponds and lakes.

You’ll be able to recognise mallards by their dark, iridescent green head, brown neck, brown stripes upon the upper level of the wing with the remainder of their body a cream/white color. Females on the other hand are a mostly light brown patterned color with both male and females having orange webbed feet.

Mallards prefer calm, shallow sanctuaries, but can be found in almost any body of freshwater, which can include wetlands, saltwater and brackish water.

These ducks tend mostly to consume seeds, acorns and berries, plants, insects and shellfish.

In regards to lifespan, these mallards are known to live for around 5 – 10 years in the wild.

4. Ruby Throated Hummingbird (Archilochus Colubris)

Ruby throated hummingbirds

  • Size: 7 – 9cm
  • Weight: 2 – 6 grams
  • Wingspan: 8 – 11cm

Ruby throated hummingbirds are spring and summer residents within Arkansas, which is also when these hovering birds tend to breed.

A ruby throated hummingbird can be recognised by their plumage that is red, white and green. Their throat is the red part, its breast/stomach white in color and their wings and back an emerald green color. Females are mostly white and green in color.

As for what they eat, it ranges from small insects, fruits, sugar water from feeders, tree sap and of course the nectar produced by blooming flowers.

Ruby throated hummingbirds tend to stay near environments with flowerbeds as these birds have a very strong metabolism that requires them to feed multiple times per hour. Therefore, you can find them in fields, parks, backyards, and open clearings in forests.

As for how long these tiny little hummingbirds can live for, it’s known to be around 3 – 5 years on average with the longest recorded lifespan just short of 7 years.

5. Painted Bunting (Passerina Ciris)

Painted bunting

  • Size: 12 – 13cm
  • Weight: 13 – 19 grams
  • Wingspan: 21 – 23cm

Painted buntings can be spotted all across Arkansas when they happen to breed.

Although painted buntings come in a variety of colors where their neck, breast and lower back is red, their head is blue whilst their upper back and wing is green. Females on the other hand are almost completely green.

You can find painted buntings around thickets, woodland edges with riparian thickets, shrubbery and brushy areas.

As for what they eat, it includes seeds, primarily those of grasses and weeds, berries, smaller fruits and a variety of smaller insects.

Most painted buntings can live for an average of 5 – 6 years whilst some have been known to live for 10+ years.