The yellow-breasted chat is a shy, skulking species of bird, often being heard but not seen.
Breeding The breeding habitat is dense, brushy vegetation or hedgerows. The nest is a bulky cup made of grasses, leaves, strips of bark, and stems of weeds, and lined with finer grasses, wiry plant stems, pine needles, and sometimes roots and hair. The nest is placed in thick shrub and often only about above the ground. The clutch is three to five creamy-white eggs with reddish-brown blotches or speckles. These are incubated by the female and hatch in 11 to 12 days. Both parents tend the young, which fledge in 8 to 11 days. Chats are apparently vigilant guards of their nests, as parasitism by
brown-headed cowbirds is not as frequent as with other cup-nest builders. They are not as monogamous, though, as other warblers. In one study in central Kentucky, DNA fingerprinting revealed that 17% of 29 yellow-breasted chat nestlings were not sired by the male of the social pair and three of nine broods contained at least one extra-pair nestling.
Food and feeding Yellow-breasted chats are omnivorous birds, and
forage in dense vegetation. Mostly, this species feeds on
insects and
berries, including
blackberries and
wild grapes. Insects up to moderate sizes, including
grasshoppers,
bugs,
beetles,
weevils,
bees,
wasps,
tent caterpillars,
ants,
moths, and
mayflies, are typically preyed upon and are gleaned from dense vegetation. Other
invertebrates, including
spiders, are occasionally eaten, as well. Uniquely for a passerine of its size, the chat occasionally grips food with its feet before it eats. ==Status==