THE BIRDS
BELL SPARROW. Amphispiza belli (Cassin)
Field characters.Size of
Junco or Linnet; tail as long as body. Upper surface plain dull brown,
becoming iron gray on head; area in front of eye, and conspicuous stripe
down side of neck from bill, black (pl. 8i); spot on each side of
brow, lower cheek, and throat and under surface of body, white; a
distinct black spot on center of breast. Voice: Song of male a
set utterance of tinkling quality, tweesitity-slip, tweesitity-slip,
swer; also a faint one-syllabled call note, seet.
Occurrence.Common
resident in Upper Sonoran Zone over western base of Sierras. Lives
almost exclusively in greasewood chaparral. Observed by us at Pleasant
Valley, near Coulterville, and near El Portal. To be seen in pairs or
scattered family parties.
The Bell Sparrow is closely associated with that type
of chaparral, made up almost purely of the greasewood, which clothes so
much of the dry foothill country flanking the west base of the Sierra
Nevada. Since this is a bird of dull colors and retiring habits, it will
not likely be seen by a person passing quickly along any of the dusty
roadways through this 'chamisal.' The bird student interested in forming
an acquaintance with this sparrow will need to tarry at some place in
the foothills and spend a few hours amid the greasewood itself.
In 1914 and 1915 we saw but little of the Bell
Sparrow, and that only incidentally, as we were endeavoring to get a
general idea of the fauna in the vicinity of El Portal and Pleasant
Valley; but in 1919 some time was spent at Blacks Creek, west of
Coulterville, in seeking a special acquaintance with this species. To do
this we left the beaten roadway and grassy clearings and pushed our way
up onto the slopes covered solidly with greasewood. Here we followed a
growth of young bushes which had sprung up where once a narrow clearing
had been made for miles across the country beneath a power line. Our
field notes of this day, May 12, 1919, are substantially as follows.
The hillside was a dry, south-facing one, of slaty
formation covered with a typical California chaparral composed of
greasewood (Adenostoma fasciculatum) with scattering bushes of
wedge-leafed ceanothus (Ceanothus cuneatus) and manzanita
(Arctostaphylos mariposa). Here a Bell Sparrow was found, its
headquarters proving to be on a subsidiary ridge running down into an
oak lined ravine. We located the bird first by hearing from a distance
its tinkling song. This may be variously written,
inksely-inksely-inksely-ser, or tweesitity-slip,
tweesitity-slip, swer, or sweesely-swer, sweesely-swer, swer,
according to different attempts at transcription. The rhythm of this
utterance was notable. The bird sang every 9 or 10 seconds, each song
lasting about 2-1/2 seconds. The song would be repeated for several
minutes from one perch and then the bird would change to another
location. It would perch on the topmost shoot of a greasewood bush,
facing away from the wind, its feathers blown outward somewhat, and
would rock back and forth in keeping its balance on the swaying twig.
This individual bird seemed to be centering his attentions on some
particular portion of the hillslope, for he circled about within a
radius of not over 150 feet, singing from one perch, then changing to
another. Between song periods he would disappear, presumably to forage,
within the mantle of brush, where also probably was his mate, though she
kept well out of our sight.
Searching around amid the smaller greasewood bushes
on the one-time clearing, we found 8 old nests belonging undoubtedly to
this species. These ranged from 6 to 30 inches above the ground, but
most of them were not more than 10 inches up. All were in small
greasewood bushes, not over 24 inches tall, and placed within the
cluster of upright stems. The nests were composed of small twigs of the
greasewood, with the dry whitish stems of some annual plant as a felting
for the interior. A typical weathered nest measured approximately 3
inches in outside diameter. So large a number of nests found in the one
area (not over 150 feet in diameter) would suggest continued occupancy
of the little tract of an acre or so for a number of years by this one
pair of birds or their ancestors.
No other bird of any species was encountered during
our stay in this area of an acre or more. It would seem that the Bell
Sparrow, at least at nesting time, closely restricts itself to a type of
territory such as is not sought out by other birds; it is not
consequently bothered by competition.
Moving on to the next little hillslope we observed
another singing male Bell Sparrow; a careful examination of the many
hillsides in the basin of Blacks Creek would probably have revealed a
pair of Bell Sparrows on each one. Hence, while the number of Bell
Sparrows to be found in any one limited area is small, the total
population in the entire greasewood belt of the western foothills must
be large. As already stated, not one of these birds is likely to come to
the attention even of the careful bird student save as he or she makes
particular effort to find the species.
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