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ViewsWhite-throated SparrowFrom Opus
[edit] IdentificationThere are both tan-striped and white-striped forms.
[edit] Similar SpeciesWhite-crowned Sparrow, which has a light gray throat, and a very broad white median crown stripe with a black border. [edit] DistributionBreeds from northwest Canada east to Labrador and Newfoundland and south to Ohio, Pennsylvania and Maryland. Winters in the eastern USA from the Great Lakes south to Gulf Coast and Florida, and also in small numbers on the Pacific coast. The most frequently seen Nearctic sparrow in the Western Palearctic, recorded in Iceland and the British Isles, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Spain and Gibraltar. The first for Norway was recorded in July 2002. British records (c.24) most often on Shetland and usually in May-June but also recorded on the English east coast and the Isle of Man. [edit] TaxonomyThis is a monotypic species[1]. [edit] HabitatConiferous forest with dense undergrowth and brushy edges and clearings. On passage and in winter on farmland with hedgerows and thickets, woodland edges, parks and suburban gardens. [edit] BehaviourTransitional Plumage, White-striped form Photo by KCFoggin Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA, March 2009 Forages on the ground. Rather a skulking bird, hides in bushes. [edit] VocalisationSong: Weak, whistled notes sounding like Old Sam Peabody, Peabody [edit] References
[edit] External Links
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