The sooty grouse is 15- 21 inches (38.153.3 cm) in length and weighs 1.5-3 pounds (0.68-1.4 kg).
The male sooty grouse is gray to bluish-gray with a yellowish-orange to red comb over its eyes. It has a yellow neck sac surrounded by white. The female is spotted brown with a dark tail.
Male sooty grouse in the Rocky Mountains have a red neck sac instead of a yellow one.
The sooty grouse is found in bush areas in coastal rainforests, burned areas, mountain forests, and subalpine forest clearings.
The female sooty grouse lays 5-10 eggs in a scrape lined with pine needles and grass. The nest is usually hidden under a bush, log, rocky overhang, or small tree.
The female incubates the eggs and cares for the chicks. The chicks hatch after 25 days and are precocial and soon begin foraging for food. They fledge in 7-10 days.
The average lifespan for a sooty grouse in the wild is 3 years
During mating season, the male sooty grouse often perches on a log or post and calls out with a loud booming hoot that can be heard for miles. The comb over his eyes stands up, and he fans out his tail and puffs out his neck to display his neck sac.
The sooty grouse was the blue grouse until 2006, when the blue grouse was split into two species, the sooty grouse and the dusky grouse.
The dusky grouse is found in the Rocky Mountains, from the southern Yukon and northern British Columbia, south into northern Arizona and western New Mexico.
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The sooty grouse is found from British Columbia south to California.
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