The Field Sparrow (Spizella pusilla) is a small songbird in the family Emberizidae (Order Passeriformes) that occurs throughout most of eastern North America. It is one of the relatively few sparrows that commonly breed in the Southeast.
Field Sparrow in summer |
Field Sparrow in winter |
The most frequent foods offered to the nestlings include
many insects in both the adult and nymph stages, and various species of
spiders. After the young birds fledge,
the parents will care for them until they reach independence at about one month
of age. The adult diet consists mainly
of seeds, but some insects are taken, too.
The Field Sparrow is a widespread species, ranging from southeast and northwest Montana, central Minnesota, southern Ontario, southern Maine, and southern New Brunswick; south to northeast Colorado, western Oklahoma and Kansas, central Texas and northern Mexico, and through the Gulf Coast to central Florida. Some populations of the Field Sparrow are migratory, although most are not. In the northernmost regions of its range, it is present only during the breeding season, and in the southernmost regions (such as the Gulf Coast and much of Florida), it is present only as a winter resident. Be on the lookout for Field Sparrows in grassland and forest-edge habitats as the summer wanes and the fall season approaches!
Source:
Best, L. B.
1977. Nesting biology of the
Field Sparrow. Auk 94(2):308-319.
Love hearing them call in the summer time
ReplyDeleteI do, too. They were particularly common in the overgrown fields and scrubby woodlands that I used for my thesis research.
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