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Chipping Sparrow
Chipping Sparrow breeding plumage
About the photographs
Chipping Sparrow non-breeding plumage
Chipping Sparrow, juvenile
Chipping Sparrow nest
Chipping Sparrow eggs with Brown-headed Cowbird egg.
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A common small sparrow of yards, gardens, and forest openings, the Chipping Sparrow is probably best known for its dry, trilling song. One of the smallest sparrows, it commonly nests in ornamental evergreens. Cool Facts
Description
Breeding adult (Alternate Plumage): Cap chestnut brown; black near bill. White stripe above eye. Black stripe through eye, reaching the bill. Unstreaked gray chest blending into white belly. Neck and cheeks gray. Throat white. Back brown with black streaks. Small, conical black bill. Two whitish wing bars. Tail slim and slightly forked. Rump gray. Forehead has small white spot above bill. Sex DifferencesSexes appear similar; female averages duller, often with crown flecked with dark brown. ImmatureJuvenile has warm cinnamon color on back and top of head, fine streaks across chest, faint face pattern with indistinct dark eyeline. First winter bird similar to adult nonbreeding, but face pattern is less distinct, crown more heavily streaked with dark brown, rump streaked with cinnamon turning gray. Similar Species
SoundSong a long mechanical trill. »listen to songs of this speciesRangeSummer RangeBreeds from very eastern Alaska through Canada, southward to southern United States and into Mexico and Central America. Absent from southern Great Plains and Florida. Winter RangeWinters in Mexico, Central America, and the southern tier of the United States. Habitat
FoodGrass and other small seeds, small fruits, and insects. BehaviorForagingForages primarily on ground. Comes to bird feeders. ReproductionNest TypeNest a loosely woven open cup of rootlets, grasses, and other fine materials. Placed in small tree or shrub, usually a conifer. Egg DescriptionColor: Pale blue with sparse dark blotches. Clutch SizeUsually 4 eggs. Range: 2-7.Condition at HatchingHelpless with only tufts of down. Conservation StatusThe Chipping Sparrow has benefited from the modification of North America over the last several hundred years; populations appear healthy. Other NamesBruant familier, Pinson familier (French) Sources used to construct this page:Middleton, A. L. A. 1998. Chipping Sparrow (Spizella passerina). In The Birds of North America, No. 334 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA. |
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