Sharp-tailed Sparrows at Scarborough Marsh

in #photography6 years ago

Hybrid 3.JPG
I believe that this is a hybrid between Nelson's Sparrow and Saltmarsh Sparrow. Locals use the old name for the two species before they were split into two species for these birds, "Sharp-tailed Sparrow." Note the whitish breast typical of Saltmarsh Sparrow but the indistinct blurred flank and belly streaks more typical of Nelson's Sparrow.

Today was my day to head toward Boston for an early flight tomorrow AM. On the way I stopped at Scarbourough Marsh, a large saltwater marsh in southern Maine, where both species that used to be Sharp-tailed Sparrow can be found breeding together. In 1995 the ABA formally split what had been the Sharptailed Sparrow species into two species, Nelson’s Sparrow and Saltmarsh Sparrow. These are similar looking species, but were determined to be separate species based on different songs, mostly separate range, and differences in appearance. The coast of southern Maine, and specifically Scarbourough Marsh is an area where both species can be found literally beside each other in the extensive saltmarsh habitat there.

SMSP2.JPG
On this Saltmarsh Sparrow note the whitish breast and belly lacking the orangish wash expected on a Nelson's Sparrow and the crisp dark streaking on the flanks. Also check out the leg bands.

I had not seen either species in Maine prior to today, and decided to spend my last few hours of birding in ME trying to find and identify these two birds. It was a battle, but I managed after a couple of hours of looking to hear and see both. The Nelson’s Sparrow has a louder and simpler song, that to me sounds like a hiss that sounds like it is hissing out its full lung volume and just runs out of air at the end. Saltmarsh Sparrow has a quieter song that is more varied, has some non-hiss sounds intermixed with a quiet hissing sound.

Saltmarsh Sparrow 1.JPG
Another look at the same Saltmarsh Sparrow.

The first one I saw was a Nelson’s Sparrow, with a classic song, and I got just a brief glimpse, with no passable photos. It just kept partly hidden making focus for a photo too difficult for me. I did see the rich orangish color of the breast and the blurred streakiness of the flank stripes, as well as hearing the song.
The other two birds I saw were in my opinion a Saltmarsh Sparrow and a likely hybrid. Here are the photos with my discussion of fieldmarks.

In addition to the sparrows I had good looks at Least Tern, Snowy and Great Egret, Arctic Tern, Glossy Ibis, and of course Red-winged Blackbird. Here are a few photos for fun.

Willet flying.JPG
A WIllet in flight. Note the very wide white wing stripe, so this is the Eastern subspecies of Willet.

Glossy Ibis in flight.JPG
There were a lot of Glossy Ibis flying around today.

GLIB landing.JPG
Here is another ibis landing.

Poor internet at the hotel tonight, so signing off. Until next time, good birding. Steem on!

Check out @birdersofsteem where birders can find and support each other.

Sort:  

in India we called 'gauraiya' for every type of Sparrow. and singing ability sparrow called 'maina'

Oh...how i talk recently "How many sparrow do you have!" 😃

Ibis , I first hear about such a bird. thanks for the info!

Lots of sparrows here. This is a screenshot of just one page of the sparrows in Washington State alone from eBird.
Sparrow screenshot.png
Identification can be a challenge, we call them LBJ's for "Little Brown Jobs" sometimes if we just get a glimpse, or in joking.

O! And also we have The little stint, that we called something like "wader-sparrow"

Oh my... and we have only 2 species of sparrows in siberia 😄

Some pretty nice information. And the photo's of the flying and landing ibis are pretty stunning.

@birdbanter this bird is very rare to found specifically Scarbourough Marsh. very pleasant photographs.
@josh92

great trip. interesting.


This post was shared in the Curation Collective Discord community for curators, and upvoted and resteemed by the @c-squared community account after manual review.

That's cool. Thanks.

Sharp-tailed Sparrow." @birdbanter bro I point out "limited interbreeding at a secondary contact zone in southern Maine. Although Rising and Avise (1993) suggested retaining these two taxa as subspecies of caudacutus, they do not interbreed freely and should be ranked at the species level."

The flight and the landing of birds is
looking so cute you have worked very
hard to find sparrows .

Beautiful birds photography. Thanks for sharing.

Photo is awesome sir

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.28
TRX 0.12
JST 0.032
BTC 66167.71
ETH 3014.78
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.73