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Which Longspur? (1 Viewer)

lassa8

Well-known member
United States
Photographed in a field containing multiple longspur species in Missouri this month. After taking the photograph the bird turned and showed its clearly showed its breast, clinching my ID, but based on this photograph which species would you go with and why?
 

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To me and I probably wrong, its either an American Pipit or a Sprague's, I would say the latter because of the super goes all the way back and joins the other white band making an almost circular white setting for the cheek.

Andy

ps I dont know where Arizona is precisely, just that its SW so not sure if the range is good for Sprague's Pipit
 
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I'm not experienced with the Longspurs but it looks like a Smith's Longspur. Primary projection and spacing, rather thin bill, pale eye ring and the fine streaks on flanks seem to fit. Isn't it a scarcity in Arizona?
 
On pp, head pattern and mantle, it fits Smith's...and I assume that Missouri is within their regular wintering range.

cheers
 
I see what you mean by Smith's now. In my guide, ABC's All the Birds of North America, the super looks decidedly tan in colour. Maybe I need a better guide as its not the first time that colours don't appear to be true, at least in my eyes.

Andy
 
Most field guides tend to make the colours warmer ( I don't know why, unless the publishers think it maked the birds look better! )but the overall shape, particularly of the bill says Bunting / Longspur and then the general pattern of the markings gives you the species. It's best not to rely solely on the colours shown. Chris
 
Well done! It is, in fact, a Smith's Longspur. I'd say that they're slightly less than annual in this part of Missouri, but a nice little flock of ~12 birds (plus a few Lapland Longspurs) spent the weekend nearby.
 
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