Flamecrests are active and restless birds, hopping and fluttering about in the canopy. These lively
songbirds are mainly solitary but will move around actively in small, loose flocks of their own species as well as with
coal tits and
Eurasian nuthatches. The flight is weak and whirring. Their breeding biology is poorly known.
Feeding The flamecrest is primarily an
insectivore. The birds may be seen feeding on
insects and their larvae on the branches and leaf sheathes of trees in coniferous forests, hovering and
gleaning from leaf to stem. Weeds and berries may be taken occasionally. A study of the
foraging ecology of alpine forest birds on
conifers in the
Taroko National Park found that, when compared with
Eurasian nuthatches,
coal tits,
green-backed tits and
black-throated tits, flamecrests were the most generalised foragers, utilising almost all of the
crown of a tree, rather than specialising in parts of it as with the other species, with which it associates in
mixed-species foraging flocks during the non-breeding season.
Voice Flamecrests have fine, shrill and high-pitched calls,
zi zi yi. Although noisy at close range, the voice is soft and does not carry far. ==References==