THE BIRDS
SPURRED TOWHEES. Pipilo maculatus Swanson32
Field characters.Size
large for a sparrow, bulk between that of Junco and Robin; tail about as
long as body, and usually carried up at an angle with back. Whole upper
surface and forepart of body, black; small spots ('tear drops') in rows
on wings, larger spots ('thumb marks') at end of tail, and belly, white;
sides of body orange brown. (See pl. 48c). Male with black more
intense than in female; young quite different, streaked. Voice: A
cat-like mewing call or alarm note, and a trilled song sounding like
to-whee-e-e-e, the first syllable inaudible beyond a short
radius.
Occurrence.Fairly common
at lower altitudes both east and west of Sierra Nevada. On west slope
common in Upper Sonoran Zone but ranges up into Transition and downward
locally into Lower Sonoran (subspecies falcinellus). Also east of
the mountains in vicinity of Mono Lake (subspecies curtatus). In
late summer and until severe winter weather, individuals wander upward
through the Canadian Zone.32 Lives in brush thickets and
forages on ground beneath such cover, seldom venturing into the open.
Solitary.
32Two subspecies of the
Spurred Towhee inhabit the Yosemite region, occupying separate
territory, on the western and eastern flanks of the Sierra Nevada
respectively.
SACRAMENTO SPURRED TOWHEE, Pipilo
maculatus falcinellus Swarth. This is the race of the western slope
of the Sierras, ranging in the breeding season from the vicinity of
Snelling up as high as the floor of Yosemite Valley. In autumn, wanders
still higher, as to Aspen Valley at 7000 feet and on Illilouette Creek
at 6200 feet.
NEVADA SPURRED TOWHEE, Pipilo
maculatus curtatus Grinnell, the race of the Great Basin area,
enters the Yosemite region from the east and breeds in the vicinity of
Mono Lake, where found by us at Mono Lake Post Office, near the mouth of
Leevining Creek, and about the base of Williams Butte. One individual
was obtained in Glen Aulin, 7700 feet altitude, October 4, 1915, which
would seem to indicate a westward movement of this interior race in
autumn over the Sierran crest.
The differences between the two
races, falcinellus and curtatus, are so slight that only
specimens in hand can be distinguished. Curtatus, as compared
with falcinellus, shows a shorter hind claw, a smaller bill, a
shorter tail, a greater amount of white on shoulders, wing coverts, and
tail, and paler tone of coloration on sides and lower tail
coverts.
In the group of big ground-dwelling sparrows which
includes the towhees and fox sparrows, the Spurred Towhee exhibits an
extreme type in both structure and coloration. Its stout body, long
tail, short rounded wings, large legs and feet, and heavy curved claws
(pl. 48c) proclaim it to be a brush dweller and ground forager.
The short wings and long tail may serve to enable it to move about
rapidly within obstructing growths where locomotion must be accompanied
by many short turns and twists, while the heavy armament of claws makes
scratching a productive method of unearthing food.
The preferred haunt of the Spurred Towhee is a
ravine-side thicket within ready reach of water. The birds venture into
the open somewhat more than do fox sparrows but not so much as do the
brown towhees. During the warmer months the leaf-covered brush and tall
growths of grass and other annual plants form protecting shelters under
which the Spurred Towhees can forage unseen; but in midwinter and early
spring when rain and wind have battered down the grasses and shaken off
most of the leaves the birds are much more exposed. Even then their
broken pattern of coloration would be protective in effect were it not
for their almost incessant activity. But when a towhee takes flight from
one thicket to another its brilliant coloration flashes forth vividly; a
predominance of black is seen, but the white dots on the shoulders and
wings, and the white 'thumb marks' at the end of the fan-shaped spread
tail, introduce a decided element of contrast.
The spotted towhees closely resemble the fox sparrows
in manner of foraging. They habitually scratch in the earth and leaf
mold under thickets and berry tangles, repeatedly springing up and
kicking backwards with both feet at the same time. Often an observer's
attention is first attracted to the presence of the birds by the sight
or sound of the small showers of debris resulting from this vigorous
mode of foraging.
During the breeding season the males are accustomed,
particularly toward evening, to ascend by series of short hops and
flights to the tops of large bushes or small trees, and there to repeat
their monotonous but not unpleasant song, tu-wheeze. At other
seasons of the year they are content to remain within the shelter of the
brush. In the breeding season the birds are very excitable and readily
respond to squeaking noises. This trait is undoubtedly correlated with a
feeling of concern for mates or young; for in midwinter when the
reproductive instincts are at a low ebb the Spurred Towhees are not
easily to be 'squeaked' out into full view.
The nest of the Spurred Towhee is a deep cup-shaped
affair placed on or sunk in the surface of the ground. One found by Mrs.
Joseph Grinnell in Yosemite Valley was a deep cup of pine needles, bark,
and grass stems, lined with fine round grass stems and a little black
horsehair. It was situated among strawberry plants and under a small
chokecherry bush. The four eggs were finely marked with reddish brown on
a creamy ground color. Two days after discovery this nest was raided,
seemingly by some animal which had burrowed up into it from the ground
beneath. Whenever the nest was visited, even after the contents had
disappeared, the parents were always in attendance and scolded
violently. A second nest, of similar construction, was located under a
canopy of dried ferns at the base of a small stump. When first found, on
June 12, 1915, it contained 4 eggs. On the morning of June 24 it held
one young bird, and two more hatched out that same afternoon. The fourth
chick died while attempting to crack open its shell. Up to the time the
eggs were hatched the owners of this second nest, upon being disturbed,
slipped away quietly, but after their brood had emerged they changed
their behavior, and were then accustomed to stay about and insistently
voice their solicitude. The young in juvenile plumage have streaked
breasts, but by fall they have assumed the plumage of their parents.
In the fall after the breeding season and before the
arrival of winter snows, the Spurred Towhees wander higher in the
mountains, ranging throughout the greater portion of the Canadian Zone.
In late September and in October they have been seen on Illilouette
Creek above the falls, on the Snow Creek trail at 6000 feet, and at 7000
feet, near Aspen Valley. This spilling upward is thought to be due to
overpopulation of the lower zones as a consequence of the appearance of
the fully grown young of the year. It has been further suggested that
the young of the year, among animals generally, exhibit instinctively a
sort of wanderlust, of benefit to the species in that new territory is
thereby sought out and sustenance made available for an increased number
of individuals. Of course, when winter comes on, burying the food at the
higher levels, this wave of vagrant individuals is pressed back again;
but beneficial readjustments doubtless occur in the population even
within the regularly occupied area.
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