Mountain chickadees live across a wide range of altitudes and ecosystem types in mountainous areas, resulting in varying levels of activity and behaviors like food-caching. There is some evidence that mountain chickadees have
spatial cognition with regard to where they have cached food. Individuals in urban areas appear to be able to habituate quickly to novel stimuli, potentially allowing the species to successfully nest in human-dominated environments. Juvenile birds often leave adult groups for summer foraging, but return to flock with older birds in the winter. Recent studies have indicated that in mixed flocks,
black-capped chickadees become dominant over mountain chickadees. They are also very active birds, and can be found grasping to small twigs, and often hang upside down. ==Gallery==