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IX
SOME APRIL SPARROWS
FOR the
first three
weeks of April the ornithologist goes comparatively seldom into the
woods.
Millions of birds have come up from the South, but the forest is still
almost
deserted. May, with its hosts of warblers, will bring a grand change in
this
respect; meanwhile the sparrows are in the ascendant, and we shall do
well to
follow the road for the most part, though with frequent excursions
across
fields and into gardens and or chards. Of eighty-four species of birds
seen by
me in April, a year ago, twenty-one were water birds, and of the
remaining
sixty-three, twenty, or almost one third, were members of the spar row
family,
while only five were warblers. In May, on the other hand, out of one
hundred
and twenty-five species seen twenty-three were warblers, and only
eighteen were
sparrows. To re present the case fairly, however, the comparison should
be by
individuals rather than by species, and for such a comparison I have no
adequate data. My own opinion is that of all the birds commonly seen in
April,
more than half, perhaps as many as four fifths, are members of the spar
row
family. There are days, indeed, when the song sparrows alone seem to
outnumber
all other birds, and other days when the same is true of the snowbirds.
The large
and noble
sparrow family, which includes not only the sparrows, commonly so
called, but
finches, grosbeaks, crossbills, snow birds, buntings, and the like, is
represented in North America by more than ninety species, and in
Massachusetts
by about forty. It is preëminently a musical family, and, with us at
least,
April is the best month of the twelve in which to appreciate its
lyrical
efforts, notwithstanding the fact that one of its most distinguished
songsters,
the rose-breasted grosbeak, is still absent. Among the
more
gifted of its April representatives are the fox sparrow, — so named
from his
color, — the purple finch, the song sparrow, the vesper sparrow, the
tree
sparrow, the field spar row, and the white-throated sparrow — seven
common
birds, every one of them deserving to be known by any who care for
sweet
sounds. One of the
seven,
the purple finch, also called the linnet, is unlike all the others, and
easily
excels them all in the fluency and copiousness of his music. He is
readily
distinguishable — in adult male plumage — as a sparrow whose head and
neck
appear to have been dipped in carmine ink, or perhaps in pokeberry
juice. His
song is a prolonged, rapid, unbroken warble, which he is much given to
delivering while on the wing, hovering ecstatically and singing as if
he would
pour out his very soul. He is a familiar bird, a lover of orchards and
roadside
trees, but is not so universally distributed, probably, as most of the
other
species I have named. In
contrast with
the purple finch, all the six sparrows here mentioned with him have
brief and
rather formal songs. Those of the fox sparrow and the tree sparrow bear
a
pretty strong resemblance to each other, especially as to cadence or
inflection; the song sparrow’s and the vesper sparrow’s are still more
closely
alike, and will almost certainly confuse the novice, while those of the
field
sparrow and the white-throat are each quite unique. The fox
sparrow
visits Massachusetts as a migrant only, and the same might be said of
the
white-throat, only that it breeds in Berkshire County and single birds
are
often seen in the eastern part of the State during the winter. The tree
sparrow
is a winter resident, going far north to rear its young, and the
remaining four
species are with us for the summer. The fox
sparrow is
to be heard from the 20th of March (I speak roughly) to the middle of
April. In
respect to voice and cadence, he is to me the finest of our sparrows
proper,
though I do not think him so finished an artist as the song and vesper
sparrows. He may be recognized by his superior size and his bright
rusty-red
(reddish brown) color. Indeed, these two features give him at first
sight the
appearance of a thrush. He is one of the sparrows — like the song, the
vesper,
the savanna, and the Ipswich — which are thickly streaked upon the
breast. The tree
sparrow
passes the winter with us, as I have said, but abounds only during the
two
migrations. He is in full song for the greater part of April. His
distinctive
marks are a bright reddish (“chestnut”) crown, conspicuous white
wing-bars, and
an obscure round blotch in the middle of his unstreaked breast. The
white-throat,
commonly a very abundant migrant, arrives about the 20th of April and
remains
till about the middle of May. His loud, clear song is remarkable for
its
peculiar and strongly marked rhythm. It consists of two comparatively
long
introductory notes, followed by three sets of triplets in monotone—like
see,
see, peabody, peabody, peabody. This bird, too, perplexing as
the sparrows are
usually thought to be, is perfectly well marked, with a white throat
(not
merely a white chin, as in the swamp sparrow) and a broad white stripe
on each
side of the crown, turning to yellow in front of the eyes. The crown
itself is
dark, with a white line through the middle, and each wing is adorned
with two
white bars. In size the white-throat comes next to the fox sparrow. The song
sparrow
and the vesper sparrow not only sing alike, but look alike. The latter
may be
told at once, however, by his white outer tail feathers, which show as
he
flies. These are two of our commonest and worthiest birds. The vesper
sparrow,
more generally known, perhaps, as the bay-winged bunting, likes a drier
field
than the song sparrow, and is especially noticeable for his trick of
running
along the path or the road directly in front of the traveler. |