Bye-bye, birdie: Maine’s state warbler, the chickadee, is making way for other images on a new license plate that gives homage to an old flag growing in popularity and reappearing on hats, tote bags and T-shirts.

The plate unveiled Monday features a tall green pine — the state tree — and the North Star, icons featured on the state's first official flag in 1901. Maine residents will vote in November on whether to adopt a similar design for a new state flag.

KANSAS SCRAPS 'UGLY AS SIN' LICENSE PLATE REDESIGN REBUKED BY PUBLIC

Many plates featuring the chickadee, a design introduced in 1999, are now peeling and delaminating, and in need of replacement.

New Maine license plate design

Maine's new license plate design, set to be unveiled on Feb. 26, 2024, is seen in an illustration. (Maine Secretary of State’s Office via AP)

"Public safety is the No. 1 reason we’re retiring the chickadee plate and replacing it with a pine tree today. But we also love the new design," Secretary of State Shenna Bellows told reporters at the unveiling ceremony.

The chickadee flew in to replace a license plate featuring a crustacean that critics said looked more like a cooked crawdad than a Maine lobster, the state's signature seafood. The Bureau of Motor Vehicles won't have to worry as much about criticism with the new plate; motorists have the option of requesting a plate without a design.

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Rekindled interest in Maine's first official flag coincided with the state’s bicentennial in 2020. The flag was used for eight years before being replaced by the current banner, a coat of arms on a blue background.