THE BIRDS
WESTERN GRASSHOPPER SPARROW Ammodramus savannarum bimaculatus
Swainson
Field
characters.Decidedly smaller than Junco; tail small, shorter
than body. Upper surface mixed black, tan, and chestnut; under surface
unstreaked, buffy white head with a light stripe over each eye and
another over crown, the three bounding two broader blackish stripes (pl.
8k). Keeps on ground where dodges about through grass and is extremely
averse to being routed out. Voice: Not heard by us; said to be
"grass hopper-like."
Occurrence.Found in
summer at Smith Creek, 6 miles east of Coulterville, June 6, 1915, June
16, 1916, and July 16, 1920. Inhabits grasslands.
Non-flocking.
The Western Grasshopper Sparrow as a species is so
reclusive and so local in its occurrence that we ourselves did not
chance to encounter it in our work in the Yosemite region. We record it
here on the basis of the experience of a resident of the region, Mr.
Donald D. McLean, of Smith Creek, 6 miles east of Coulterville. The
first specimen of the Western Grasshopper Sparrow taken by him was
obtained on June 6, 1915, in a grassy meadow bordering Smith Creek. In
1916 he found the species represented there by a number of individuals,
and on June 16 he succeeded in shooting two males. These three
individuals were added to the collection of birds of the Yosemite
section at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. The bird taken in 1915 was
found upon dissection to be in breeding condition and there is every
likelihood that the species nested in the region in both seasonsin
the latter year, in some numbers. The particular meadow which was
inhabited by the birds was covered chiefly with a species of
saw-grass.
In this instance we find illustrated one of the
fascinations in the study of bird life, namely, the ever-present
possibility of a new discovery. No amount of attention to any given
region, even by persons of relatively large experience will exhaust its
entire resources; something is always waiting for a subsequent diligent
observer to seek out.
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