| Scientific name | Phylloscopus coronatus |
| English name | Eastern crowned warbler |
| Japanese name | 仙台虫喰 |
| Class | Aves |
| Order | Passeriformes |
| Family | Phylloscopidae |
| Genus | Phylloscopus |
| Species | coronatus |
| Subspecies | -- |
| Full length | 12cm. |
| Distribution | Distributed in East Asia and Southeast Asia. |
A bird of the family Warbler with a distinctive song.
It is about 12cm long, with a greenish brown back. The belly is whitish. The eyebrows are pale brown. The beak is flesh-colored.
It does not sing "chochogyuyi" with the third syllable stretched out. It is famous for its "shochu ipppi gui" (one glass of shochu), and it does sound quite similar to that.
It lives in broadleaf forests and preys on insects and other creatures from the trees. In the Kanto region, it starts singing in low mountains and forests in spring. It sings while moving through the trees.
On a cloudy spring day, I discovered an individual singing vigorously on a side branch. It kept singing as it moved around little by little.
The video of Eastern crowned warbler.
It was chirping on a branch.
Introducing a picture of Eastern crowned warbler.