- Spizella arborea
Description
Description:Length: 15-16.5 cm. Adults: Bill bicolored; Crown rufous; nape bluish gray; back rich rufous, striped with black and light gray; wings show two white bars; throat and breast light dove-gray, with an indistinct, but sometimes quite distinct, black dot in centre of breast; sides washed with light or cinnamon-brown.
Range :
Breeds from northern Alaska, Mackenzie Delta, central Keewatin and northern Quebec, south to central Quebec, northern Manitoba and northern British Columbia. Winters from British Columbia, southern Ontario, and the Maritimes, south to the southern United States.
Habitat :
During winter the American Tree Sparrow is a bird of weed-grown fields, wastelands and roadside thickets and is seldom seen in heavily wooded areas.
Remarks :
It is usually seen flitting among thickets along the highway or busily engaged in gleaning seeds from the taller weeds not yet covered by snow. Sometimes it will be found at feeding stations. Dark-eyed Juncos seem to be its favourite traveling companions.
Identification
Photographed in Campton, New Hampshire.