Yeah, Brian. They vary quite a bit in different parts of the world and
even in this country. This clip from Audubon bears it out.
"The entire North American population of the House Sparrow is descended
from a few birds released in New York City's Central Park in 1850. These
birds found an unoccupied niche-the many towns and farms of the settled
parts of the country-and quickly multiplied. As so often happens,
introduced species can become a problem, and the House Sparrow is no
exception. Because they compete for food and nest sites, some native
species have suffered. Within a short time after their introduction,
these sparrows adapted to the local environment. Thus the sparrows of
the rainy climate of Vancouver, British Columbia, are plump, dark birds,
whereas those inhabiting Death Valley, California, are slim, pale,
sand-colored birds. These changes took less than 60 years, and influence
our ideas about the speed of evolutionary change in birds."
That particular bird might be just a bit more strongly colored than
usual. VBG
Paul in Portland OR
On 5/14/2014 4:09 AM, bj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Paul Laughlin wrote:
Sorry, Brian, but I have to
respectfully
disagree with you. It fits the male House Sparrow in
breeding plumage,
nicely. I'll take Sibley over Wikipedia anytime. VBG
Since you say it is
not, perhaps you can identify what it actually
is?////////////////////////////
Some links here.
///////////////////////////
Paul that e-mail reply of mine got screwed
up some how. I have just read it in the digest, and I didn't keep a
copy.
What I wrote was that, after looking at all my few books, and
masses of photos from around the world, I concluded that it is an
atypical colour pattern which does show up in some localities. Some
authorities have it that it is a non-breeding male colour phase, BUT
there are 1 - 2 shots to be found of that colour phase actively mating.
So, I don't know about that, but I do accept that this is a variant I
have not actually seen with my own two eyes.
Cheers, Brian
--
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