Its natural habitats are tropical moist lowland and mangrove forests. It is threatened by habitat loss.
The Yap White-eye is classified as Near Threatened (NT), is close to qualifying for or is likely to qualify for a threatened category in the near future.
The name Yap White-eye can refer to either of the two species of white-eye found on Yap. * Yap Olive White-eye (Zosterops oleagineus) * Plain White-eye (Zosterops hypolais) Disambig gray.svg This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia. More
* Yap White-eye, Zosterops hypolais * Enggano White-eye, Zosterops salvadorii * Black-capped White-eye, Zosterops atricapillus * Everett's White-eye, Zosterops everetti * Yellowish White-eye, Zosterops nigrorum * Mountain White-eye, Zosterops montanus * Yellow-spectacled White-eye, Zosterops wallacei * Javan White-eye, Zosterops flavus * Lemon-bellied White-eye, Zosterops chloris * Ashy-bellied White-eye, Zosterops citrinellus More
The Yap White-Eye is not common, ditto Cicadabird, and you just have to explore good forest and get lucky. Plain White-Eye is very common, and Yap Monarch not too difficult. White-throated Ground-Dove was also fairly common. BIRDS I saw 109 species, including 10 introduced species, plus accipiter sp. I had 51 lifers, including 3 introductions. Most species can be found readily in the right habitat, with some exceptions, notably the Ground-Doves, Scrubfowl, cicadabirds, and Mariana Crow. More